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Video from Rachel last night - AZ private prisons to benefit from immigration law

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malaise Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 09:56 AM
Original message
Video from Rachel last night - AZ private prisons to benefit from immigration law
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26315908/#38685023

Brewer and her goons are cashing in on private prisons.
The escape and the murder of an elderly Oklahoma couple should stop her in her tracks.
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Oceansaway Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 10:09 AM
Response to Original message
1. K&R...n/t
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SargeUNN Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 10:20 AM
Response to Original message
2. Now you know why Brewer signed 1070
KPHO broke the story about Paul Sesseman (Spelling incorrect but not sure what is right) Dep. Cheif of State for Brewer being a former lobbyist for Corrections Corp. of America and his wife still is. When they asked Brewer why she didn't reveal this she ended the press conference and didn't answer.
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malaise Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 10:21 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. This should be the biggest news story in America
right now.
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Michigan-Arizona Donating Member (516 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 10:51 AM
Response to Reply #2
5. Heard today her number's jumped since signing 1070
Heard that on my local Tucson new's this morning. Thank god we're maybe heading back to Michigan, if we can sell our home here.
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tinrobot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 10:42 AM
Response to Original message
4. Profiting off of fear as usual....
Typical Republicans.
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shireen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 11:00 AM
Response to Original message
6. outstanding coverage! nt
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Karenina Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 11:16 AM
Response to Original message
7. Look what I found on the Google...
Karenina Mon Sep-10-07 11:41 PM
Response to Original message

1. HALLO!!!

This has been in the pipeline for quite some years. Prisons are serious BIG BIDNESS. Look what I just found in my cyberkeller!

http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0233/solomon.php

The Gatekeeper: Watch on the INS
by Alisa Solomon
Detainees Equal Dollars
The Rise in Immigrant Incarcerations drives a prison boom
August 14 - 20, 2002

t was a shaky spring for the correctional workers of Hastings, Nebraska (pop. 24,064), as the stagnation in the nation's prison population and the increasingly high costs of incarceration jostled the sleepy town, some two hours' drive from Lincoln. On April 9, the 84 employees of the Hastings Correctional Center were told that the 186-bed facility would be closing at the end of June. State funds were scraping bottom, and the $2.5 million annual price tag for the prison was too big a burden to carry. "We really didn't know what we would do," says Jim Morgan, who had been working at HCC for 15 years and lives to this day in the house where he was born. "There aren't a lot of job opportunities out here, and most of us have homes and kids and couldn't even think about moving somewhere else." For two months, the workers scrambled, filling out applications at nearby meatpacking and cardboard-container plants and anticipating long hours in the unemployment office.

Then salvation came from, of all places, the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Days after HCC closed as a state prison in June, it reopened as an INS detention center.

"It's a win-win," says Morgan. The INS is desperate for more beds for its ever expanding detainee population. And the state of Nebraska, collecting $65 per detainee per day from the INS, rakes in more than $1 million a year over and above the cost of running the place.

County jailers have long known that housing INS detainees pumps easy income into the coffers. Nearly 900 facilities around the country provide beds for the INS, and in interviews over the years, several county sheriffs and wardens have described such detainees as a "cash crop."

Passaic County Jail in New Jersey learned the lucrative lesson after 9-11, as INS transfers boosted its detainee population from 40 to 386 by December 18. The INS paid $77 per day per detainee, compared to New Jersey reimbursements of $62 for state prisoners; some $3 million in INS payments poured into Passaic last year.

Now, in places like Hastings all around the country, prisons are seeking to cut such deals on a larger scale. At the end of July the Bureau of Justice Statistics reported a decline in the state prison population, reversing a decade-long trend that produced a prison-building boom across America. The only incarcerated populations sustaining reliable growth now are INS detainees and federal prisoners, many of them noncitizens. Those with an interest in keeping multitudes behind bars—whether public employees working in the prisons that expanded in the '90s, or for-profit companies that have seen their stock prices plunge in the last couple of years—are coming to regard immigrants as their redeemers.

Like agriculture, restaurants, hotels, and other realms of American business, the prison-industrial complex now also looks to illegal immigrants as the most promising means of keeping them afloat. The danger, anti-prison activists say, is that the pressure to fill empty cells will add even more fuel to the demand to round up immigrants.

MUCH more at link above...
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red red red Donating Member (166 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 11:54 AM
Response to Reply #7
9. This explains a lot...
we should have followed the money trail when SB1070 was passed! It all makes sense now - its not all about hatred as much as it is about money! :banghead: No wonder the Pugs want 'smaller government' - it pays (them) better!
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Bozita Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 12:15 PM
Response to Reply #7
10. Good post! Thanks.
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Uncle Joe Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Aug-13-10 11:33 AM
Response to Original message
8. This is a must view. I believe the very idea of for profit prisons to be immoral bordering on evil
and it can only lead to an ever increasing draconian government.

First they come for one vulnerable segment of the population, because they're the weakest but it damn sure won't stop there.

There is no good that can come from for profit prisons, politicians will be corrupted by the money and the "Land of the free" will become one giant prison, even more so than it already is.

Thanks for the thread, malaise.

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