View Single Post
  #1  
Old 03-26-2009, 05:29 PM
Honus Honus is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,292
My Senators can beat up your Senators

IMHO, Virginia has the best two Senators of any state. We used to have the great John Warner, a first class public servant if ever there was one, but we also had the loathsome George Allen, whose mean-spiritedness was matched only by his inability to do anything productive as Governor or Senator. Then Senator Allen had his macaca moment - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r90z0PMnKwI - paving the way for the election of the excellent Jim Webb. John Warner has since retired, but he was replaced by Mark Warner (no relation), who seems to excel at everything he tries.

Now we have Senator Webb doing something we rarely see in Washington - trying to actually govern instead of playing silly political games:
Quote:
WEBB EYES PRISON REFORM.... Back in December, Sen. Jim Webb (D-Va.) said he'd launch an initiative to reform the U.S. prison system in the spring. Here we are in late March, and Webb is right on time.

Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) will launch an effort to reform the nation's prison system today at noon, his staff says, introducing a bill -- the National Criminal Justice Act of 2009 -- that would create a bipartisan commission no reform. The commission would undertake an 18-month review of the U.S. prison system, offering recommendations at the end.

Prison reform is a difficult thing to achieve, politically. Nearly every politician wants to be perceived as "tough on crime," and suggesting that too many Americans are being incarcerated can seem to run against that. (Webb has, in fact, pointed out that the U.S. has attained the highest incarceration rate in the world.) Add tough discussions of prison conditions, inmate crime, and abuse, and it's not an easy task for a politician to undertake.

That's certainly true, but if anyone is well positioned to try, it's Webb. If and when the right goes after Webb as "soft," one assumes the senator -- a decorated Marine veteran and former Navy Secretary under Reagan -- won't have to waste too much time proving otherwise.

Webb has reportedly considered this a key issue for many years, and is taking an approach that sounds a lot like common sense. He told the Washington Post in December, "I think you can be a law-and-order leader and still understand that the criminal justice system as we understand it today is broken, unfair, locking up the wrong people in many cases and not locking up the right person in many cases."

In speeches and in a book that devotes a chapter to prison issues, Webb describes a U.S. prison system that is deeply flawed in how it targets, punishes and releases those identified as criminals.

With 2.3 million people behind bars, the United States has imprisoned a higher percentage of its population than any other nation, according to the Pew Center on the States and other groups. Although the United States has only 5 percent of the world's population, it has 25 percent of its prison population, Webb says. [...]

Webb aims much of his criticism at enforcement efforts that he says too often target low-level drug offenders and parole violators, rather than those who perpetrate violence, such as gang members. He also blames policies that strip felons of citizenship rights and can hinder their chances of finding a job after release. He says he believes society can be made safer while making the system more humane and cost-effective.

It's obviously a crowded policy landscape, so no one should expect sweeping proposals anytime soon. Indeed, Webb's National Criminal Justice Act wouldn't recommend specific reforms, but rather, would establish a commission to launch an investigation and then recommend specific reforms.

That said, Webb is not only right to tackle the issue, he's showing political courage in addressing a problem most would prefer to ignore. Good for him.

http://washingtonmonthly.com/
So, I say my Senators can beat up your Senators.
Reply With Quote