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Essay On Prison Overpopulation

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As each decade passes the American prison system population ever increases. Prison overcrowding is a huge detriment to society as a whole, even to those who don’t know what is going on. Prison crowding as one might expect can lead to inhumane and even unconstitutional conditions for prisoners (Mayeux). This problem causes prisoners to come out of state prisons less educated than when they went in, and more likely to commit the same or similar crimes in which got them in prison in the first place. Illinois on a more local level has the most overpopulated state prison system in the entire U.S. Illinois’ overpopulation has gotten to over 150% capacity of state prisons, that being higher than any other state (Green). The state and the state’s …show more content…

But the interesting part of Whitman’s journal is that it was written in 1918 (Whitman). So yeah this idea was discussed by millennials, but not millennials of today, instead, it was discussed by millennials of the 1900’s. So what does that mean? That means we are dealing with the same problems in prisons as people were in the early 1900’s and have the exact same ideology. This means that while people generally have had the right ideas to strive for, no one has made any action within 100 years. Something must change in order to keep history from repeating itself in the next 100 years.
To this day many people recognize the ever-increasing problem of overcrowding. Huffington Post writer, Lizzie Schiffman has a few ideas to point out the current problem. Schiffman starts her article out by saying, “The AP’s analysis totaled the prison population over the weekend at 49,154 inmates: significantly over the 33,700 people the state’s prisons were designed to hold” (Schiffman). This statistic highlights the main problem in Illinois and gets the information out to the public eye. Doing the math on it, that is 15,454 people who are misplaced in Illinois’ prison systems. This should not be happening in Illinois or the U.S. as this will cause more and more prisoners living in unconstitutional conditions in the land of the ‘free’ (Mayeux). Another huge problem is that while most would think to change up crime laws in order

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