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Is America Really Free

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The United States of America: Land of the Not So Free It is becoming a well-known fact that the United States is the world leader, not in education, but in the number of incarcerated persons. The United States of America claims to be the “land of the free and the home of the brave,” but more and more each day, the United States is becoming the “land of the jailed and the home of the criminal.” This epidemic of incarcerated persons is the result of one of the following things: 1. America is too much in love with the idea of segregating the good people and the bad people or 2. America has put too many people in jail and some of them could be released. As of 2014, according the U.S. Census Bureau, the United States’ population is at a jaw-dropping …show more content…

The answer is simple: America is infatuated with sending people to prison. America, as a whole, is convinced that it can get rid of the bad people in society by putting them into a special building that was constructed for the sole purpose of housing the ones who do bad things. Americans feel like they need heroes and the bad people are getting in the way of this heroism. Just think about all of the superhero movies, comic books, and merchandise that the United States churns out every year. Superheroes are a great concept to market because they directly, with some exaggeration, mimic what goes on in police forces and the United States’ justice system. A figure of the law apprehends the criminal and the criminal is locked away for their deed. Superheroes are also a great way to brainwash society into thinking that the only bad people that are sent to jail are murderers, robbers/burglars, rapists (although they are not talked about in comics), and people trying to take over the world with the use of a laser beam in outer space. Besides these four categories of criminals, what is another class of criminal that is sent to prison in …show more content…

What if, when they leave prison, they realize that they are no longer accepted in the world they once belonged to? These people then become repeat offenders and cycle in and out of jail. Many repeat offenders are asked the same question, “Why?” The answer, to them, is simple: they have nowhere else to go. In prison, they gain a sort of respect from their fellow inmates. This respect cannot be gained from their peers outside of prison. The ex-convict has been, and always will be, someone who broke the law and cannot be trusted to do the right thing. While some may be accepted by their families, others may not. Prison has a way of driving an immovable wedge between families, no matter how close they were before. No one is proud of their family member for going to jail. It is a badge of shame that the ex-convict and the family members will have to wear for the rest of their lives. As long as criminal activity is running rampant in the United States, families will continue to be torn apart.

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