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Pros And Cons Of The United States Criminal Justice System

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“If the criminal justice system were a parent, we'd call it abusive and neglectful” (Weissmueller). The US Criminal Justice system isn’t perfect, as any justice system, but it is far from perfect. If you commit a crime, you get a punishment, simple. But the United States justice system doesn’t treat it as such. Committing crimes takes away your rights, and you’d be in jail for a long time for a minor offense. There too many people in jail, and those people are treated unfairly. The United States Criminal Justice System Isn’t doing justice, it’s lack of consistency and structure is costing Americans millions of dollars, and wasting lives. Of the many citizens of America, too many of them are in jails and prisons. According to the United States Census Bureau, there is a 323.1 million American population, and according to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics, there is a 2,220,300 prison population, with 4,751,400 people on probation or on parole. With these statistics, 1 in 35 adults are withstanding a federal, state, or county punishment. Overall, this is too many people. Charlie Savage states, “The American population has grown by about a third since 1980, but it's prison rate has increased nearly 800 percent.” This shows inconsistency in the system, and that a higher percent of people are in jail as of now. The American population isn’t as large as other countries’, and despite having “5 percent of the world's population,” America also has “25 percent of the world's

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