The number of inmates in state and federal prisons rose 2.1 percent last year, even as violent crime and property crime fell, according to a study by the Justice Department released yesterday.
The continuing increase in the prison population, despite a drop or leveling off in the crime rate in the past few years, is a result of laws passed in the 1990's that led to more prison sentences and longer terms, said Allen J. Beck, chief of corrections statistics for the department's Bureau of Justice Statistics and an author of the report.
The end game is to de-fund local law enforcement and then send in the Statist stormtroopers. Or flip the LLE to federal control once the $$$ is choked off at the local level.
Same play they want to run in local school boards and whatever the fuck else central planning can exert control over.
I can tell you there's a definite link. What utter bullshit.
Think about this for a second and how you act when police are present or you are in a place known for vigorous enforcement.
And the people who say this crap actually went to school and got a college degree. Literally, more than a quarter of a million dollars were spent on this person's education. And what you get is a CRC moron.
The end game is to de-fund local law enforcement and then send in the Statist stormtroopers. Or flip the LLE to federal control once the $$$ is choked off at the local level.
Same play they want to run in local school boards and whatever the fuck else central planning can exert control over.
Wash State test is 8 regional health sector - each sector has a county that is controlled by one radical progressive county. If the sheeple fall for that then they could implement 8 regional police forces...
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https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/08/us/despite-drop-in-crime-an-increase-in-inmates.html
Despite Drop in Crime, an Increase in Inmates
By Fox Butterfield
Nov. 8, 2004
The number of inmates in state and federal prisons rose 2.1 percent last year, even as violent crime and property crime fell, according to a study by the Justice Department released yesterday.
The continuing increase in the prison population, despite a drop or leveling off in the crime rate in the past few years, is a result of laws passed in the 1990's that led to more prison sentences and longer terms, said Allen J. Beck, chief of corrections statistics for the department's Bureau of Justice Statistics and an author of the report.
Think about this for a second and how you act when police are present or you are in a place known for vigorous enforcement.
Same play they want to run in local school boards and whatever the fuck else central planning can exert control over.