Revitalizing Democracy

The Case

More Prisoners Does Not Mean Less Crime

It's not that simple. A 2005 report by The Sentencing Project noted that while increased incarceration rates were accompanied by a decrease in crime between 1991 and 1998, crime rates had increased between 1984 and 1991, a period in which the rate of incarceration was even higher. The director of the Pew Center on the States recently wrote, "Rigorous studies show that increased imprisonment can claim credit for only 25 percent of the nation's crime drop over the past 15 years. The other 75 percent comes from a wide variety of factors, inside and outside the criminal justice system." Those factors include support for improved policing and community crime prevention programs—federal support for which was cut by the Bush administration. We already lock up a larger percentage of our population than any other country in the world. We need to invest more in the programs and techniques that we know prevent crime and lead to healthier communities.more »

Facts & Resources

The Dream Gone Bad: The Facts

The cost of living keeps rising.

Since 2001, the overall costs of living has increased 21.5 percent, driven by big increases in such life essentials as gas, home heating oil and food. more »

The Voices

Constitution Day and Our Civil Liberties

September 17 is Constitution Day, marking the anniversary of the signing of the U.S. Constitution in 1787. But we have less to celebrate today because the Bush administration has so tarnished our constitutional rights.more »

Lose Your Home, Lose Your Vote

The hypocrisy of this is amazing. Republicans refuse all attempts to regulate the financial industry claiming that free market is god. Then they intervene at taxpayers' expense when it all blows up due to lack of regulation, and now they're purging voter rolls because of home foreclosures they indirectly were responsible for. more »

Latest from our Bloggers