“We Already Know That The Massive Waste Of Life In Our Prisons Is Morally Troubling”

If he keeps thinking so much, Kwame Anthony Appiah's head will explode. (Image by David Shankbone.)

In a recent Washington Post article (“What Will Future Generations Condemn Us For?“), Cosmopolitanism author Kwame Anthony Appiah pinpoints contemporary behavior that he believes will be seen as shameful in the future. He settles on four topics. An excerpt about one troubling area:

Our Prison System

We already know that the massive waste of life in our prisons is morally troubling; those who defend the conditions of incarceration usually do so in non-moral terms (citing costs or the administrative difficulty of reforms); and we’re inclined to avert our eyes from the details. Check, check and check.

Roughly 1 percent of adults in this country are incarcerated. We have 4 percent of the world’s population but 25 percent of its prisoners. No other nation has as large a proportion of its population in prison; even China’s rate is less than half of ours. What’s more, the majority of our prisoners are non-violent offenders, many of them detained on drug charges. (Whether a country that was truly free would criminalize recreational drug use is a related question worth pondering.)

And the full extent of the punishment prisoners face isn’t detailed in any judge’s sentence. More than 100,000 inmates suffer sexual abuse, including rape, each year; some contract HIV as a result. Our country holds at least 25,000 prisoners in isolation in so-called supermax facilities, under conditions that many psychologists say amount to torture.”

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