I was sent to prison for 3 years for possession of drugs in the 4th degree. My county made $46k per year I was in prison. The courts are 💯 complicit in this.
It's all a scam in the United States. Everything. It's not about public safety. It's about money. And they wonder why China is so far ahead😂😂😂😂😂😂😂. They don't lock up their people the way you do. They adducate there people. And then give them the opportunity to help build their nation.
A lot if the state prisons although owned by said states have private operators who collect a yearly fee per inmate. The warden of a state prison in South Carolina once bragged that he fed his prisoners for less than 2 dollars a day.
Yeah because it’s a company getting the contract to run that prison, not the state it self, more like state funded. He isn’t even a warden technically lol but let’s say for the sake of it he is. The prison costs x amount to run per year, and the prison gets x amount of funding per inmate per year, if you bring down the cost of operating the prison you have profits. When you’re talking about an average prison getting paid a $120k per year per inmate in California. The average prison could make millions in funding a year profits. In ironwood state pen in Blythe ca, had some riots recently where inmates attacked guards, and it’s because the inmates are smart and noticed the prison being ran with minimal guards in certain blocks, the prison was being ran with 8 guards a day per shift, basically 16 employees as guards a day, you break down the salary of a average guard and it’s insane the amount of profit margins these prisons have. Insane something is corrupt
@@TRAVIESO_NAyou know what is crazy… is it the same rules applying to this business? Where by law you have to do everything to maximize profits or you can get in trouble
About 30 years ago, I went to a meeting about a prison that was to be built in our little farming community. It was doctors and wealthy investors who were building the prison. One question was about the devaluation of our homes. The homes in the immediate area would be devalued by 20% while radiating out it would be less. It was when water was brought up that made the investors not choose Brownsville. Their second choice was Utica but they ended up building in Noble county, their third choice. They admitted to wanting to build the prison as an investment with the intention of eventually selling it to the state of Ohio. It was for 3rd degree felons aged 18 to 35.
The justice system targets 18-35 year olds. That’s your best years. You’re healthy despite poor living and eating choices. The greatest level of profits with the fewest health deaths.
I saw an article online that was written unanimously. The guy said he was invited to a business proposition with a bunch of black song artists to write songs encouraging violence and drugs. It was with a bunch of investors that were building new prisons. He said he declined even though he was promised a lot of money. The article is now gone. I can’t find it.
because it probably wasn't a solid story...no one with brain thinks music has a direct correlation to crime rates...this is nonsense people believe, then make up a dumb theory to fit their dumb belief.
Yep i saw that interview, it was Krayzie Bone he said from then on the dynamocs of hip hop changed dramatically to hate, gangs, drugs, violence, murders it wasnt too long ago that he nearly died from a strange illness but hes made a slow but steady comebac, thank goodness cos i love that dude and Bone thugs n harmony
I went to prison in Ohio in 1983. There was 8 prisons and 13,000 inmates. I got out 7.5 years later in 1990 and there was 32 prisons and 48,000 inmates. They were turning state prisons into private prisons. Who knows what behind the scenes deals were done. The food went from hot healthy food grown and prepared in the prison's, with descent portions, to nothing but processed foods that was delivered in trucks, was cold and less than half portions. Prices in the commissary went up nearly 50%. They were kind enough to raise our pay from $18 a month to $20 a month. Glad I gave that lifestyle up although I still suffer the consequences for that to this day. I still can't get any real job. Handyman jobs was all I could ever do, which I have now done for 28 years.
@@frightfactoryYT We could all be a bit better, Life is life, full of good and bad. Wouldn't trade the good for anything, and some of the bad has taught me important lessons. That's life huh? It goes by fast.
Florida has at least 1 state prison in every county. Some counties jave 2 prisons. I live in louisiana where we are still under napoleanic law from the 1700's
PBD is clearly using GPT to write his notes, does anyone else agree? and it is frustrating to me, if I wanted to hear what Ai has to say on this issue I would go ask it myself and just do that
Although Amazon do hire a lot of ex- convicts straight from the halfway house. They use them for their back breaking jobs. Most of them end up quitting after they get out of the halfway house. The prison system isn’t the only government system in it for the money.
In 1977/78 in Los Angeles, Ca, when I was 12 or 13 years old, my first two friends were gunned by some Crips near Adams and Western in the West Adams area. I was with them minutes before a car pulled up and blew. One friend was killed and the other was shot in the lower back and paralyzed. Within a few days, while brooding with my friends over the death of our friend a car pulled up. It was Bloods from across Western. We were unarmed, as we didn't have guns and cars at that age, but our attitude was that if they wanted to kill us, we'd fight them too. We were from the Complex (St. Andrews Gardens Low Income Housing Complex). We were known as "Complex Boyz", but we weren't a "gang" like Bloods and Crips. We didn't allow any of them in the Complex. Older Bloods pulled up on us in the parking lot and one got out of the low rider with a brown bag. He dropped the bag on the ground and stepped back. It was weird because we knew of them, but not personally. We "warred" with their young guys from 20's, no guns though, just fighting. At some point, we walked toward the "bag", which was several brown paper grocery store bags stuffed inside of each other to make a thick sack like bag. Inside of the bag were several loaded hand guns, with an assortment of bullets at the bottom of the bag. I, along with the two or three others, reached in and picked up a loaded handgun. It was a revolver. I grabbed a few extra bullets also. One of the Bloods that provided the guns said something like, "Handle your business". We'd been shot at once, prior to the killing, while walking through the gas station on the corner of Adams and Western, however, no one was hit. We were "veterans" of a sort at 11 through 13, however, once blood was spilled, our anger was up. Crips drew first blood, now we were armed also. Shortly following, many of those guys became Bloods, while I never "banged". Fast forward. Over the years, I've heard that the CIA and government may have had a hand in making firearm more accessible to those in the "black community". That seemed "far fetched" to me. However, after having served four years in the USMC, graduating college and becoming a licensed CPA having built and Audit and Consulting practice, I look back on that experience and wonder, 'why would gang members hand out a bag of FREE GUNS. Firearms cost money, whether legal or illegal. This was prior to the "crack epidemic" in LA, which provided the gangs with money. That was the dawn of Los Angeles streets erupting in "gun"/gang violence. It began in 1977/78. How long does it take to complete construction on a prison? That was six years prior to the first "for-profit" prison. I recall thinking that they way guns came on the scene in LA back then, was "as if" someone parked a truck loaded with guns in the "hood" and walked away. Overnight things changed in LA. I often wonder why the Crip gang has exploded across America. As a CPA/Auditor, I don't latch on to theories, other that those that I come up with myself, however, the "Private Prison" industry is highly suspect in my Opinion.
Glad you decided to become a good member of society my veteran brother. My army reserve unit use to do range qualifications at camp pendleton. The marines stole our bus and threw up on it. We retaliated and took their colors and coffee pot.
very cool to read that you made it out and made a nice life for yourself. Experiencing your city turn dark and violent at such a young age would make most people hopeless. The thought of so many communities turning into war zone being by design makes me sick.
Black people have been talking about this for years but no one cared because it disproportionately impacted us. “CIA contra crack cocaine”. The whole prison system was built so they can re enslave black people
The other reality is the self-loathing and lack of faith people have in themselves and their fellow human beings in this country. Remember this is the mentality that destroys the people and their villages to save them. That's the foundation of Murder& Suicide Inc. Remember this country thinks it's exceptional as it does its neighbor in the Middle East that's because they think God wants them to destroy everything god has created whatever god that they think they absolutely know is. How do you say treat others as you would want to be treated but is that really a good idea in this country? Read read the gospels according to Jesus. If you think you believe in Jesus but you don't act like him he says you are a liar. Next is profit motive and to get people out of your way This is why people take Man's Best Friend their dog to the pound at the drop of a hat just like all the other life they come out of high including their fellow human beings. This is the Hallmark of the libertarian and Republican party and increasingly the Democrats that act like them. Their masters choice. Who profits and who dies most? To judge the people in the United States just look at who is institutionalized be at a mental institution a child protection service or a prison. Look at the countries we destroy. Now what god is blessing that. Jesus would say it is a sin o gog of satin... Mendacity Absurdity Atrocity Sin City. in a town and city and state near you The only way tyranny is coming to is if it's dressed in the uniform. These people don't even know the Bill of Rights except number two. Undeservedly they admire people like Buffett and this host Mis leaders. What would the US look like under proper management? G*d only knows? By their fruits and their company you shall know them. IMHO
Right. I was about to comment that the connection between the record labels being big shareholders of prisons is that they’ve been programming people into becoming criminals, and by extension: slaves.
False. Yall can't have it both ways. You can't say rap glorifies prison and then turn around and saying people who listen to rap don't cooperate with cops because they don't want see others in prison. Yall just spin whatever narrative comes to your mind in any particular conversation without critical thought. NOBODY glorifies prison. That's the dumbest 💩 people believe about us. The whole no snitching movement came from not wanting to see other brother incarcerated. Now yall saying we glorify prison. Make up you mind.
Having done prison ministry in a San Bernardino juvenile hall for a number of years, one of the most heartbreaking stories I heard was about mother who called the cops on her son over drug possession. She did it to teach him a lesson, but the result entrapped her son in a private prison that he could never escape. He eventually took his own life.
This is why i love PBD! He touches topics that are traditionally from the left but legitimate… the illegitimate topics get destroyed however this is why we need to genuinely listen to both sides. I confuse the hell out of my algorithm… it cant figure me out lol
I retired from the prison system. There is so much business-to-business corruption. Business who get lock in deals and make hundreds of millions off of inmates even in state prisons and federal prisons. Not just private prisons.
@@ARK2022 they earn money from the state and county by housing inmates in their private prisons. It's in their best interest to incarcerate as many people as they can for as long as possible.! The state/county gives contracts to companies for food, medical, cable tv, phones, etc. It's a cash cow if you can get a contract like that for millions.
@@NWcpl ohh ok. So they charge in the name of maintenance of prison. Huge the bill so huge the money from state. Is anything left in US which is genuinely working without profit?😀
Here's how the prison racket works. They force prisoners to work for 50c an hour. Then they serve small portions of food that don't sustain most adults. So the money you earn from working in the prison gets spent on commissary food. The cash stays in the system. They make you work so you can buy enough food to keep you from malnutrition. Totally f×cked up eh..
@@shaunmc013 yes but evade so many problems with America.. way more going on than taxes in our corrupt systems of healthcare, prison, political, list goes on and on
I worked in the juvenile system. Fatherless homes was the #1 issue. Most of these kids are smart but, never received any positive encouragement. Our system is broken, these ppl need to learn a skill while they are incarcerated. I always encouraged my taggers to look into painting cars or gas tanks on motorcycles.
Fatherless homes was both a goal and a benefactor to the prison system. It's pretty obvious where the cause of this situation came from, and how eagerly its getting fixed by the establishment.
Such a lame and over used trope. I guess its easier to blame fatherless homes than it is to blame crippling poverty. Jeffrey Dhamer had a father. And so did Jared from subway. And many catholic priest are from two parent homes. Not having a father present isn't any different from having a bad father at home. A drunk abusive father is WORSE than an absent one. We should probably stop suggesting that all the ills of society come from not having a father. Plenty of bad people from good homes and vice versa
As a nonviolent "felon" I did 1 yr in a private prison... That was ten yrs ago and I can't protect myself and my family legally,this is a giant problem .... I don't break laws,I just wanna live right but I still gotta worry about going back because I have a pistol on me ....maybe if the justice system wasn't injustice I'd be a legal citizen
Felons gave up any and all constitutional rights when you committed a felony. Ask my Vietnam veteran father.. they don’t care if you served your country. Don’t get caught with seeds and stems down in your floor mats out in Texas! He can’t even own a gun, and he never committed any crime.
@@chadscatharsis3287 I live in a big dangerour city. I go everywhere and the only time a gun was pulled on me was by a cop. If you don't bother anybody, nobody will bother you. Now I have seen some things go south, but I wasn't involved. that was their thing.
As California attorney general, Kumswalla Harris spent years subverting a 2011 Supreme Court ruling requiring the state to reduce its prison population. The overseeing judicial panel nearly found the state in contempt of court. She bragged about the prison population and went so far as to knowingly hide evidence just to keep innocent people in prison.
They have privatized prisons and people don’t see the connection with that and America having the highest prison population, law enforcement targeting communities and politicians making things legal and illegal for lobbyist and profit. Also this doesn’t include private companies that supply or subcontract these private and government prisons
My 12 year old grandson told me the other day that schools resemble jails /prisons especially the cafeteria… he said the kids talk about it among themselves. I found that pretty interesting. He even mentioned the color of the walls 🤷♀️
Schools look like prisons to protect them. Shootings, people selling drugs, child abduction. And, staff and students that are on campus for reasons they should be in jail - to sell drugs, to be activists.
@@igg-v3c In the south its a lot less well where I live. Same with other trade jobs. My friend in Ohio does bids for jobs and gets insane pay for remodeling while the same exact thing in DFW metroplex is nothing. The bass player in my dad's band is journeyman and only makes around $30 a hour. Back in 2016-2017 it was $27 a hour. My dad not journeyman but did everything they did had decades of experience as a lead maintenance man and remodeling made $17 a hour starting out with a company vehicle and assistant. Maintenance man at another place up until 2014 made $13 a hour. Welder at the train tracks with a training course $11 a hour back in 2008. Pay here sucks compared to up north at least in my county and neighboring ones.
@@igg-v3c My reply got deleted somehow. In North Texas and southern states its much lower my whole family does trade jobs and people I know. Plumbers HVAC maintenance men construction ect. My dad's bassist is journeyman and makes barely around $33 a hour with over 10 years there. Starting pay is only around $27 journeyman. Lead maintenance man like $20 a hour here for apartments and mobile homes. Some construction jobs less than $15 a hour. Dad welded at the trainyard with a course required in 2008 made only $11 a hour. Construction supervisor/foreman up until 2007 only made $17 a hour.
I'm from CT and did 17 years in prison here. How they justify spending 52k a year per inmate is an absolute farce! BULLSHIT is what they feed you in there lol and bull shit is cheap.
Fascinating info-especially having observed these realities from the inside. Mass incarceration is a stunning reality. Cramming three and four guys into a room certified for one. 23 hour lockdowns simply because the facility can’t keep the people they hire, or the staff on shift don’t want to do any work. Extending the stay of eligible parolees for reasons beyond the inmate’s control. Instigating situations where by a CO can put a misconduct report on an inmate (called “targeting”) without any actual infraction having occurred. If I hadn’t been there and seen these things with my own eyes, I would never have believed that they happen. Thank you for speaking out, Pat.
It's called communism. Under the Federal Reserve system the American taxpayers funded Nazi Germany and the creation of the former Soviet Union. We also fund all the wars and supply weapons to both sides through the military industrial complex.
BlackRock also has a joint venture with China Construction Bank, a state-owned bank, to help it enter China's mutual fund market. Hua Fan, who has over 25 years of experience in the investment industry, was appointed as BlackRock's Head of China in 2022.
@@deja699 THANK GOD TO JOE BEDIN AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY FOR PUTTING MORE FEDERAL JAILS AND PRIVATE JAILS BACK ABOUT 40 YEARS AGO.. TO GIVE THE BLACKS A PLACE TO SLEEP AND PLACE TO WORK.. BEING THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY MEMBERS NO LONG HAVE PLANTATIONS.. AND LOST THERE FREE LABOR NOW THEY HAVE JAILS AND CHIAN GANGS AND SWEAT SHOPS MAKING AUTO PLATES
The US legal system is biased to let guilty people go free. Sure, there are innocent people caught up into the system, but when a guy gets put away from rape, he’s raped many women before he gets put away. 80% of murders in some cities never get solved, etc, etc.
In an ironic and roundabout way, they've found a way to keep their slaves 😂 They're just called "prisoners" now lol We all knew something was funny when they changed the system, started demonizing harmless helpful plants like cannabis and started locking people up for it.
@@Easymadeithe’s bringing up race because the statistics that PBD is speaking on has affected black Americans more than other Americans. Would be my guess… 🤷🏽
@Easymadeit Because this 100% started racial and if you'd paid any bit of attention you would know this. I get tired of people saying "this isn't about race" when race definitely plays a major part here and ALWAYS has. You would be the same type of person to dismiss anything a black person might be dealing with, but then quickly point out racism in regards to Caitlin Clark.
I did time in Georgia in State Prison & Private prisons now I live in Las Vegas. State prisons are like 3rd world country slums no AC in the summer no heat in the winter &, you can lose your life over the hands of another inmate or simply living conditions. Private prisons resemble county jails and have the BEST treatment as far as being incarcerated they have AC in the summer heat in the winter, in private prisons you can get G.E.D, plumbing, HVAC, medical,Cdl, welding trade, food is better & waay more correction opportunities. State prisons are understaffed & inhumane & rat infested idk how they’re still standing. Big business
@@sssssnake222 no 💩 shirlock… I’m speaking to the people who always say private prisons need to be shut down & keep the state prisons. When it’s the other way around
Here you go. Here is a list of politicians who have been identified as owning stocks in private prison companies through indirect investments such as ETFs:Senator Ron Wyden (Democrat - Oregon)Owned between $15,000 and $50,000 worth of iShares Core S&P Small-Cap ETF (IJR), which includes shares of GEO Group and CoreCivic [❞] [❞].Rudy Yakym (Republican - Indiana)Trades 16 issuers with a volume of 918K, including private prison stocks [❞].Marjorie Taylor Greene (Republican - Georgia)Trades 92 issuers with a volume of 2.82M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Max Miller (Republican - Ohio)Trades 41 issuers with a volume of 724K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Debbie Dingell (Democrat - Michigan)Trades 25 issuers with a volume of 702K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Nicole Malliotakis (Republican - New York)Trades 10 issuers with a volume of 414K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Markwayne Mullin (Republican - Oklahoma)Trades 194 issuers with a volume of 7.04M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Bill Keating (Democrat - Massachusetts)Trades 71 issuers with a volume of 1.29M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Bob Latta (Republican - Ohio)Trades 10 issuers with a volume of 105K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Pete Sessions (Republican - Texas)Trades 141 issuers with a volume of 5.07M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Mitch McConnell (Republican - Kentucky)Trades 14 issuers with a volume of 179K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Abigail Spanberger (Democrat - Virginia)Trades 3 issuers with a volume of 24K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Mark Green (Republican - Tennessee)Trades 171 issuers with a volume of 48.58M, potentially including private prison stock
Rappers have been talking about this for more than a decade. Lupe Fiasco made a song called Prisoner 1&2. It might be the best song about the prison industrial complex ever made. People really should hear it.
Listen to Wise Intelligence speech from Poor Righteous Teachers and he will tell you when the switch was made to destroy hip-hop/rap music. As Hillary Clinton once said, hip-hop/rap music is an important tool used by the government to control the people.
@@LibanMohamud-sk7vd His music is awesome but didn't he sent a cease and desist letter to a republican candidate who used his songs? I think Eminem did the same to Vivek
My brother was recently held without trial for about 15months. At about 12 months they started pushing him to plea to something and he felt if he didn't take it he would never get out. Now they picked him up again and he's been in jail without trial since Feb 19th. He's being held on a loophole of too mentally ill to go to court. They likely get extra money for housing mentally ill. So in the last 3 years he has been held about 20 months without trial. They just evaluate him every month and say he is too mental to be in court. It never gets to the point of even looking to see if there is a case. They also wouldn't let him make a single phone call for several weeks. Couldn't call a lawyer or family. Public Defender doesn't fight for him.
THERE ARE LOTS OF THIS ... THEY WOULD LOST IN JURY TRAILS ... THEY HOLD YOU INTIL YOU CON\FESS TO KILLING MAM WHO IS ALIVE AND WELL .... THIS WAY THEY NEVER NEED TO PAY DAMAGES
@@dr-rexmangrca113 He didn't kill anyone. He regularly tells people they will pay when they die . Meaning they will be judged adversely by God. It is obvious he means ppl will pay in the afterlife, but that gets twisted into he is making terrorist threats in order to hold him until he is sane enough for court. Mental patients don't get cured, they can be controlled to an extent with drugs.
Oh shit, accepting a plea deal removes all civil rights including all evidence that supports the defendent. Theres been an increase with hospitalizations (retaliation, fraud, and eliminate their voice). Thank you for story 😢
They do not care that he is a human. He has become a number and all the people make their sick living off off of "this number, non human". I feel for you and your family. Best wishes and peace
The system sucks and everything they do is to deceive, and to take what they can from whom ever they can anyway they can, from lying, to paying people under the table to get the results they want.!! The crooked system needs to be destroyed and rebuilt with people that have integrity..if that means anything.. .
interesting the record label and prisons owned by the same company the records come out more and more violent amd then more and more people end up in prisons
Your "Kind" has a bad way of glossing over your own issues and making it all about everyone else. I'm entirely with you that the prison industry is a racket and their goal is to imprison as many people as possible. The point you happen to miss is that they'd happily imprison anyone and everyone if they could: my kind, your kind, it doesn't matter. It's that your own culture is jacked up and isn't helping and you don't want to admit it.
Thank you for this exposé PBD! My business partner and I often hire recently released/ex-convicts In our demolition company in the Pacific Northwest/Washington state. We have definitely taken advantage of the WOC/work opportunity tax credit, which not only benefited us, but also benefited the guys hire, as well as society since we are giving individuals an opportunity to make a living wage and build skills for a lifelong career We appreciate your coverage of extremely impactful subjects like this! Keep doing what you do, brother
The more awaken u become the more you see in in every single angle, they’ve designed it at our expense & all about greed! The “Lost Century” (doc) on Prime by Dr Steven Greer was EXTREMELY EYE OPENING! Highly suggested to watch!
Just one of the reasons why Pennsylvania is the fifth most corrupt state in the country. Imagine what Washington DC, New York, Michigan, New Jersey, etc., are doing In 2007, a frantic call from an alarmed parent prompted Juvenile Law Center to investigate irregularities in Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County juvenile court. We discovered that hundreds of children routinely appeared before Judge Mark Ciavarella without counsel, were quickly adjudicated delinquent (found guilty) for minor offenses and immediately transferred to out-of-home placements. We petitioned the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 2008 to vacate the juveniles’ adjudications of delinquency and expunge their records. Though the court denied our initial petition, once the United States Attorney alleged that Ciavarella and another Luzerne County judge had accepted nearly $2.6 million in alleged kickbacks from two private for-profit juvenile facilities, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted our request for extraordinary relief. The US Attorney also filed federal criminal charges against both judges. The scope of the violations of the children’s rights in Luzerne County turned out to be more egregious than anyone could have imagined. From 2003 to 2008, the Luzerne County judicial corruption scandal altered the lives of more than 2500 children and involved more than 6000 cases. Over 50 percent of the children who appeared before Ciavarella lacked legal representation; 60 percent of these children were removed from their homes. Many of them were sent to one or both of the two facilities at the center of the corruption scandal. Believed to be the largest judicial corruption scandal in our history, the story was featured in a 2009 episode of ABC’s “20/20.” For their involvement in the “kids-for-cash” scandal, Judge Michael Conahan, the facilities’ former co- owner Robert Powell, and the developer Robert Mericle pled guilty to federal criminal charges; Judge Mark Ciavarella was found guilty of various federal crimes following his trial in 2011. In 2009, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court vacated the adjudications of all youth who appeared before Ciavarella between 2003-2008, dismissed their cases with prejudice and ordered all of their records expunged. In addition to the federal criminal prosecutions and the proceedings before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, we partnered with pro bono co-counsel Hangley Aronchick Segal Pudlin & Schiller to file a federal class action lawsuit on behalf of the children and parents who suffered emotional trauma and financial loss as a consequence of the corruption scheme. The suit seeks monetary damages from the former judges, private facilities, the former co-owner of the facilities and the developer. The suit makes claims under federal civil rights laws and the federal Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. We remain dedicated to improving Pennsylvania’s juvenile justice system and preventing the recurrence of such widespread violations of children’s rights in the future.
"IN THE UK🇬🇧 TODATE, SUPPLY (PRISONERS) HAS OVERWHELMINED DEMAND (PRISON CELLS). WHILST IT COST MORE TO LOCK 🔐 UP THAN REHABILITATION BACK INTO SOCIETY, IT NEVER HAPPENS. A SET UP TO FAILURE BUSINESS SYSTEM." ❤🇬🇧❤
Excellent analysis. PBD brings the unique contribution of highly clarifyingly explaining charts and trends that he maybe? learned in the insurance industry. I don’t agree with absolutely all his values, but wow! he’s good at that! There’s several+ things in Am that definitively need changing/improving and that always begins with widespread knowing…
Privatising medicine and health, privatising the prison system and privatising war will go down as the dumbest things we've done as a society. Some aspects of life just shouldn't be driven by a cut throat profit motive.
Yeah it is definitely slavery. I just wasn’t going to be super opinionated in my comment so that people would think. In reality we are all slaves in a corporate military structure.
I used to work for Oklahoma prison system in budget office. About 1/3 of our budget goes to private. This includes legal cost and medical costs which private P don’t pick up . The private prison also gets least risk prisoners, the most expensive like maximum security they don’t get. So when you compare cost private seems cheaper because state has to pick up legal and medical and all max security prisoners which are much more expensive.
I spent 17 years in Connecticut prisons I can promise you I got NO golf cart hell we barely got fed. For the first third of my of my time we used to get 4 pieces of bread at lunch. You know they started giving us 3 slices and brothers in there were like wtf. Right but think about it...16 to 20 thousand inmates how many loves of bread equal 16 thousand slices. ALL that money they say it takes to house us there and we work for 17 cents SEVENTEEN CENTS a day for an inmate job. SLAVE LABOR!!! CT is a shit hole to live in and even worse to do time in!!
Mind games Mind games workplace relationships attitudes 30 games Whos Branding them i dont know but son i start talking they give me answers. Black hears i don't know once seen a church girl whos a trouble maker with it. Broken hearts spiritual.crosses dont know they all look tuff both racs so won't ask ASK
Thank you. This is a two sided business. Supply and demand. You create a supply and there will be a demand for prisons and prison workers. It's absolutely corrupt on the government side in how people are being prosecuted and the policies involved, but we have a major issue with the culture of crime as well. We can't hope for the situation to get better if we aren't attacking it from both sides, from the bottom and the top.
Well a lot happened 40 years ago. The War on Drugs. Everything that led up to the 1994 crime bill. And lets not forget the closure of almost every major Mental Health Hospital between 1960-1980. Historians will not be kind to the 1970'-1990's when it comes to crime and what the US did to handle it.
@@conservingcommonsense4980 You have no idea. The amount of shadow banned comments is quite off the chart! This is what we get from the SCOTUS's decision to give Social Media providers the right to fight any information/disinformation that they don't like!
Everything that is evil for us is voted on in secrecy by our government. Like the federal reserve system of 1913 and the creation of the IRS and their tax mandates.
What people fail to realize ice cube, NWA and artists like them helped filled them prisons with the music they make. And why do schools, looks like prison, I never realize that! So all Blackrock and all these companies are doing is business as usual, investing for a ROI...
Old school rap was telling stories from life on the streets but not out making it look appealing to the youth. Dr. Dre the Cronic was about the party lifestyle having fun smoking herb getting high. Look at the old MTV videos from the 80s way less guns violence then the rap music of today. NWA had a song F the poilce against the authority Ice T also had a song High Roller that ends in tragedy. Its more art and stories about the life they grew up around. Snoop Dogg started a football league for kids many help the youth by supporting music art projects in school as well. Kids should learn to pick up a mic then a gun to try to excell past life on the street. Rappers these days seem to glamorize gun violence more and that thug life is to be looked up on. Remember Ice Cube wrote "Its been a good day" Tupac was a man from the streets but also a poet rap hip hop had more meaning back in the day then just bling and violence. Many conspiracy theorists believe in CIA cypots in music when its just creative expression just like Hollywood or the entertainment industry. Dre isn't the problem its a lack of fundamentals and learning and an ability to compete financially in a global market place so turning to crime as an easy way out.
No dou> bt!! I never knew Alice Devion had gone viral. I decided to back up my assets and property with her when we met at a conference in New Jersey🇺🇸 for the first time...
Excellent Video! It costs a lot of money for sure but it bankrupts us morally! For America to be great, we must realign ourselves with real values and see money as a means, not an end in and of itself.
I don’t wonder at all, there’s pawns like yourselves that work for the system. The cognitive dissonance to collect a paycheck while admonishing the public for your work with “yall wonder why the justice system is corrupt” ITS YOU
And the developing countries always thought America is civilized,human rights defenders,corrupt free,democratic..now with the war in Gaza..our eyes have opened...we now know what America stands for..
It can only happen is cowards like yourself take the job and take that check knowing it's wrong. No better than the true criminals you looked after. Sad
I'm embarrassed to admit that I was in a county prison. I volunteered to work in the Worker's Cafeteria. I saw what the food boxes said, Not For Human Consumption!!!! It was mostly stale bread. A main dish for dinner would be watered-down masses potatoes, a side of 2 pieces of stale bread and if you got lucky possibly jello. To drink was unsweetened Kool-aid. When ypu volunteered in " The Lounge, you could eat what the Worker's at the prison ate or a Salad bar. They prided themselves on spending less than a dollar a day for a 3 meals for the prisoner's. Some of the mattresses had all of the stuffing pulled out, so you were just laying on a hard layer of vinyl and metal, no sheets, no pillows and wool blankets, in the summer. This is probably one that one of those Corporations own. They don't give you your medicine. Like Oxygen, breathing inhalers or anything. As a Volunteer worker, of course they don't pay you. I got up an hour earlier than everyone else to shower and scrub my cell. I used my own shampoo and scrubbed the floor by hand because I didn't want that filthy mop that had been used, with dirty water and the shampoo made it smell much better. It was a crazy experience. One that I'd never wish to repeat. It's not because of any help with Any kind of rehabilitation. If you have no help from someone on the outside, you won't even have soap, shampoo or deodorant. Nothing. No underwear, socks or bras. Everything coats a lot of money and they make a fortune from Commissary.
I would say most of these prison's would have never have been needed if the US didn't shutter most of the Mental health hospitals between the 1960-1980s..... Privatization was just inevitable due to all the waste and bloat associated with literally everything our government touches or regulates.
Bro, there are private prisons on the UK as well. At present, there are 14 private prisons contractually managed by private companies such as G4S Justice Services, Serco Custodial Services, and Sodexo Justice Services. This comprises 14 out of a total 117. If we're not careful, we will end up like America, where they lock people up for profit.
The perceived security budget is hugh and wastage to tax payers money. Yet there is no budget for Philanthropic to address poverty, affordable homes and homes for homeless, food subsidy (affordable food), jobs developments (salary funds) and building infrastructure to the many cities we have.
Poverty can be a crime here in America! I feel sympathy and empathy for our country. low income people are suffering to survive, and I appreciate Deborah Lee Clark. You've helped my family with your advice. imagine investing $30,000 and receiving $105,460 after 28 days of trading.
I began investing in stocks and Def earlier this year, and it is the best choice l've ever made. My portfolio is rounding up to almost a million, and I have realized that when a stock makes it to the news. Chances are you're quite late to the party, the idea is to get in early on blue chips before it becomes public. There are lots of life changing opportunities in the market, and maximize it.
Just listen to a GEO group quarterly conference call. They act like it’s a hotel and will discuss items such as “occupancy miss to budget”. It’s interesting and downright frightening. These companies don’t want vacancies, they thrive off of full prisons and the ability to deploy capex to build more. The margins are incredible with little to no actual investment in inmate rehabilitation.
The owners of these prisons are in partnership with the record companies of Hip Hop. They write death music which influences the behavior .............. straight line to prison.
Goodness gracious , I'm so excited seeing Ms. gladdis chada been mentioned here also. Didn't know she has been good to other people too. This is wonderful because I also started with a UA-cam referral like this.
From $27K to $355K that's the minimum range of profit return every week I thinks it's not a bad one for me, now I have enough to pay bills and take care of my family.i cant thank you enough
Instead of this country building things cars steel ships consumables we now have an economy based on smoke and mirrors. As PBD says prisons big business education big business hospitals big business big tech and the military industrial complex big business. Our infrastructure is crumbling roads power networks bridges dams water systems are all out of date and many are failing. Young people go to college and get into ridiculous debt for an overpriced “education” so they can sit in a cubicle all day and stare at a screen. Meanwhile dams are being washed away by summer storms. Every year California burns, and young people want to be “influencers”. It is crazy.
CDC sends inmates out to private prisons in Oklahoma and other states. So your a commifornia convict but your locked up in Oklahoma?! How’s that work?! Don’t know but they do it!!!
Im a mason by trade, and let me just tell you... I've built nore prisons and jails than schools and hospitals. Tennessee used to build a new one every three years. CCA was making money hand over fist in those days.
I was sent to prison for 3 years for possession of drugs in the 4th degree. My county made $46k per year I was in prison. The courts are 💯 complicit in this.
It's called communism.
How about you don’t break the law 🤣
If ya don’t want them to make profit
@@hectormorales6175 keep licking them boots 🤣😂🤣🤦🤦🤦
@@hectormorales6175
Your day will come. The shoe will be on the other proverbial foot.
@@johnholstun5128
“Communism is when capitalism”
Conservatives are so uneducated and ignorant.
I have been saying this over a decade....the industrial prison establishment in the US is INSANE.
@abarton5346>and this should be illegal. The people running this scam should be in prison......
It's all a scam in the United States. Everything. It's not about public safety. It's about money. And they wonder why China is so far ahead😂😂😂😂😂😂😂. They don't lock up their people the way you do. They adducate there people. And then give them the opportunity to help build their nation.
My favorite Documentary was by Penn & Teller on this subject. I suggest you check them out.
Also, this guy wrote a song about it. A few people have heard of it: ua-cam.com/video/yM2wO6eQdns/v-deo.html
@abarton absolutely. This shit ain’t new. It’s a business for a long time.
A lot if the state prisons although owned by said states have private operators who collect a yearly fee per inmate. The warden of a state prison in South Carolina once bragged that he fed his prisoners for less than 2 dollars a day.
Yeah because it’s a company getting the contract to run that prison, not the state it self, more like state funded. He isn’t even a warden technically lol but let’s say for the sake of it he is. The prison costs x amount to run per year, and the prison gets x amount of funding per inmate per year, if you bring down the cost of operating the prison you have profits. When you’re talking about an average prison getting paid a $120k per year per inmate in California. The average prison could make millions in funding a year profits. In ironwood state pen in Blythe ca, had some riots recently where inmates attacked guards, and it’s because the inmates are smart and noticed the prison being ran with minimal guards in certain blocks, the prison was being ran with 8 guards a day per shift, basically 16 employees as guards a day, you break down the salary of a average guard and it’s insane the amount of profit margins these prisons have. Insane something is corrupt
The problem is a racist capitalist country USA that puts profits over people and needs a permanent underclass for this purpose.
They eat less then my dog 😂
@@TRAVIESO_NAyou know what is crazy… is it the same rules applying to this business? Where by law you have to do everything to maximize profits or you can get in trouble
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzdcvv
About 30 years ago, I went to a meeting about a prison that was to be built in our little farming community. It was doctors and wealthy investors who were building the prison. One question was about the devaluation of our homes. The homes in the immediate area would be devalued by 20% while radiating out it would be less. It was when water was brought up that made the investors not choose Brownsville. Their second choice was Utica but they ended up building in Noble county, their third choice. They admitted to wanting to build the prison as an investment with the intention of eventually selling it to the state of Ohio. It was for 3rd degree felons aged 18 to 35.
The justice system targets 18-35 year olds. That’s your best years. You’re healthy despite poor living and eating choices. The greatest level of profits with the fewest health deaths.
I wish you would do another one on the food industry.
Asap. And thank you for sharing and being knowledgeable.
I saw an article online that was written unanimously. The guy said he was invited to a business proposition with a bunch of black song artists to write songs encouraging violence and drugs. It was with a bunch of investors that were building new prisons. He said he declined even though he was promised a lot of money. The article is now gone. I can’t find it.
I read that article, welcome to Racist America. Which should be this country's new name, Racist America.
because it probably wasn't a solid story...no one with brain thinks music has a direct correlation to crime rates...this is nonsense people believe, then make up a dumb theory to fit their dumb belief.
Yep i saw that interview, it was Krayzie Bone he said from then on the dynamocs of hip hop changed dramatically to hate, gangs, drugs, violence, murders it wasnt too long ago that he nearly died from a strange illness but hes made a slow but steady comebac, thank goodness cos i love that dude and Bone thugs n harmony
@@michelleripia8146 Hate, gangs, drugs, violence and murder. The calling card of the Paleskins on this Earth.
I heard that from Krazie Bone from Bone thugs and Harmony
I went to prison in Ohio in 1983. There was 8 prisons and 13,000 inmates. I got out 7.5 years later in 1990 and there was 32 prisons and 48,000 inmates. They were turning state prisons into private prisons. Who knows what behind the scenes deals were done. The food went from hot healthy food grown and prepared in the prison's, with descent portions, to nothing but processed foods that was delivered in trucks, was cold and less than half portions. Prices in the commissary went up nearly 50%. They were kind enough to raise our pay from $18 a month to $20 a month. Glad I gave that lifestyle up although I still suffer the consequences for that to this day. I still can't get any real job. Handyman jobs was all I could ever do, which I have now done for 28 years.
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzh
@@frightfactoryYT We could all be a bit better, Life is life, full of good and bad. Wouldn't trade the good for anything, and some of the bad has taught me important lessons. That's life huh? It goes by fast.
How many times was your manhood taken
Florida has at least 1 state prison in every county. Some counties jave 2 prisons.
I live in louisiana where we are still under napoleanic law from the 1700's
Everything in America is a business including this government
Everything is a corporation in USA
Operating under the color of LAW
Umm… the USA is a corporation itself. Look it up.
Other countries don't actually report the prison population.
PBD is clearly using GPT to write his notes, does anyone else agree? and it is frustrating to me, if I wanted to hear what Ai has to say on this issue I would go ask it myself and just do that
They love returning costumers. lol
Although Amazon do hire a lot of ex- convicts straight from the halfway house. They use them for their back breaking jobs. Most of them end up quitting after they get out of the halfway house. The prison system isn’t the only government system in it for the money.
Corporate greed has destroyed the image of america 😢
In 1977/78 in Los Angeles, Ca, when I was 12 or 13 years old, my first two friends were gunned by some Crips near Adams and Western in the West Adams area. I was with them minutes before a car pulled up and blew. One friend was killed and the other was shot in the lower back and paralyzed. Within a few days, while brooding with my friends over the death of our friend a car pulled up. It was Bloods from across Western. We were unarmed, as we didn't have guns and cars at that age, but our attitude was that if they wanted to kill us, we'd fight them too. We were from the Complex (St. Andrews Gardens Low Income Housing Complex). We were known as "Complex Boyz", but we weren't a "gang" like Bloods and Crips. We didn't allow any of them in the Complex. Older Bloods pulled up on us in the parking lot and one got out of the low rider with a brown bag. He dropped the bag on the ground and stepped back. It was weird because we knew of them, but not personally. We "warred" with their young guys from 20's, no guns though, just fighting. At some point, we walked toward the "bag", which was several brown paper grocery store bags stuffed inside of each other to make a thick sack like bag.
Inside of the bag were several loaded hand guns, with an assortment of bullets at the bottom of the bag. I, along with the two or three others, reached in and picked up a loaded handgun. It was a revolver. I grabbed a few extra bullets also. One of the Bloods that provided the guns said something like, "Handle your business". We'd been shot at once, prior to the killing, while walking through the gas station on the corner of Adams and Western, however, no one was hit. We were "veterans" of a sort at 11 through 13, however, once blood was spilled, our anger was up. Crips drew first blood, now we were armed also. Shortly following, many of those guys became Bloods, while I never "banged".
Fast forward. Over the years, I've heard that the CIA and government may have had a hand in making firearm more accessible to those in the "black community". That seemed "far fetched" to me. However, after having served four years in the USMC, graduating college and becoming a licensed CPA having built and Audit and Consulting practice, I look back on that experience and wonder, 'why would gang members hand out a bag of FREE GUNS. Firearms cost money, whether legal or illegal. This was prior to the "crack epidemic" in LA, which provided the gangs with money. That was the dawn of Los Angeles streets erupting in "gun"/gang violence. It began in 1977/78. How long does it take to complete construction on a prison? That was six years prior to the first "for-profit" prison. I recall thinking that they way guns came on the scene in LA back then, was "as if" someone parked a truck loaded with guns in the "hood" and walked away. Overnight things changed in LA. I often wonder why the Crip gang has exploded across America. As a CPA/Auditor, I don't latch on to theories, other that those that I come up with myself, however, the "Private Prison" industry is highly suspect in my Opinion.
Glad you decided to become a good member of society my veteran brother. My army reserve unit use to do range qualifications at camp pendleton. The marines stole our bus and threw up on it. We retaliated and took their colors and coffee pot.
very cool to read that you made it out and made a nice life for yourself. Experiencing your city turn dark and violent at such a young age would make most people hopeless. The thought of so many communities turning into war zone being by design makes me sick.
Glad you just woke up. Welcome to the reality of America.
PBD the MLM queen likes to stir up insights from 30 years ago and pretend he’s the first to discover it
He is talking about important issues. Why you guys hating?
Remove the food with snacks
Eat real food when they get out
Get a job
Black people have been talking about this for years but no one cared because it disproportionately impacted us. “CIA contra crack cocaine”. The whole prison system was built so they can re enslave black people
The other reality is the self-loathing and lack of faith people have in themselves and their fellow human beings in this country. Remember this is the mentality that destroys the people and their villages to save them. That's the foundation of Murder& Suicide Inc.
Remember this country thinks it's exceptional as it does its neighbor in the Middle East that's because they think God wants them to destroy everything god has created whatever god that they think they absolutely know is.
How do you say treat others as you would want to be treated but is that really a good idea in this country?
Read read the gospels according to Jesus.
If you think you believe in Jesus but you don't act like him he says you are a liar.
Next is profit motive and to get people out of your way
This is why people take Man's Best Friend their dog to the pound at the drop of a hat just like all the other life they come out of high including their fellow human beings.
This is the Hallmark of the libertarian and Republican party and increasingly the Democrats that act like them.
Their masters choice.
Who profits and who dies most?
To judge the people in the United States just look at who is institutionalized be at a mental institution a child protection service or a prison.
Look at the countries we destroy.
Now what god is blessing that.
Jesus would say it is a sin o gog of satin...
Mendacity
Absurdity
Atrocity
Sin City.
in a town and city and state near you
The only way tyranny is coming to is if it's dressed in the uniform.
These people don't even know the Bill of Rights except number two.
Undeservedly they admire people like Buffett and this host
Mis leaders.
What would the US look like under proper management?
G*d only knows?
By their fruits and their company you shall know them.
IMHO
Much of Rap Music today rap about crime and glorifies prison. Political rap is suppressed while Gangsta Rap is revered.
Social engineering.
The secret meeting that changed hip-hop
It has ruined Black communities
Right. I was about to comment that the connection between the record labels being big shareholders of prisons is that they’ve been programming people into becoming criminals, and by extension: slaves.
False. Yall can't have it both ways. You can't say rap glorifies prison and then turn around and saying people who listen to rap don't cooperate with cops because they don't want see others in prison. Yall just spin whatever narrative comes to your mind in any particular conversation without critical thought. NOBODY glorifies prison. That's the dumbest 💩 people believe about us. The whole no snitching movement came from not wanting to see other brother incarcerated. Now yall saying we glorify prison. Make up you mind.
Having done prison ministry in a San Bernardino juvenile hall for a number of years, one of the most heartbreaking stories I heard was about mother who called the cops on her son over drug possession. She did it to teach him a lesson, but the result entrapped her son in a private prison that he could never escape. He eventually took his own life.
That in itself is evil. Thank you for letting us know the truth about this evil private prison
This is why i love PBD! He touches topics that are traditionally from the left but legitimate… the illegitimate topics get destroyed however this is why we need to genuinely listen to both sides. I confuse the hell out of my algorithm… it cant figure me out lol
Infinite Gratitude, Peace, Love,
Healing, Justice
I retired from the prison system. There is so much business-to-business corruption. Business who get lock in deals and make hundreds of millions off of inmates even in state prisons and federal prisons. Not just private prisons.
From where do they earn? I didn't understand from these video.
@@ARK2022 they earn money from the state and county by housing inmates in their private prisons. It's in their best interest to incarcerate as many people as they can for as long as possible.! The state/county gives contracts to companies for food, medical, cable tv, phones, etc. It's a cash cow if you can get a contract like that for millions.
@@NWcpl ohh ok. So they charge in the name of maintenance of prison. Huge the bill so huge the money from state.
Is anything left in US which is genuinely working without profit?😀
Do more videos like this brother very informative and the data collection is really the key to these segments
Playing with people freedom is insane.
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzhhh
Here's how the prison racket works. They force prisoners to work for 50c an hour. Then they serve small portions of food that don't sustain most adults. So the money you earn from working in the prison gets spent on commissary food. The cash stays in the system. They make you work so you can buy enough food to keep you from malnutrition.
Totally f×cked up eh..
You are as free as they allow you to be. Think about if I move to London, I still have to pay taxes here..
Believing you have freedom is the real insanity
@@shaunmc013 yes but evade so many problems with America.. way more going on than taxes in our corrupt systems of healthcare, prison, political, list goes on and on
Healthcare and prisons should NEVER be for profit. EVER
They always where since at least record history
@@christopherjoyce9788 Europe does not have it that way.
Always follow the money!!
😂Always follow the Fiat Currency!!
I worked in the juvenile system. Fatherless homes was the #1 issue. Most of these kids are smart but, never received any positive encouragement.
Our system is broken, these ppl need to learn a skill while they are incarcerated. I always encouraged my taggers to look into painting cars or gas tanks on motorcycles.
that would to dangerous to America.
Fatherless homes was both a goal and a benefactor to the prison system. It's pretty obvious where the cause of this situation came from, and how eagerly its getting fixed by the establishment.
Such a lame and over used trope. I guess its easier to blame fatherless homes than it is to blame crippling poverty. Jeffrey Dhamer had a father. And so did Jared from subway. And many catholic priest are from two parent homes. Not having a father present isn't any different from having a bad father at home. A drunk abusive father is WORSE than an absent one. We should probably stop suggesting that all the ills of society come from not having a father. Plenty of bad people from good homes and vice versa
Also when black boys get a certain age, they need to be taught by black men teachers. Not white female teachers.
@eSo improve your society and protect everyone from family to child to father lijaharvinger1178
As a nonviolent "felon" I did 1 yr in a private prison... That was ten yrs ago and I can't protect myself and my family legally,this is a giant problem .... I don't break laws,I just wanna live right but I still gotta worry about going back because I have a pistol on me ....maybe if the justice system wasn't injustice I'd be a legal citizen
Same here
I'm a multi time felon and in this society of chaos I don't leave the house without "something" wink wink
Felons gave up any and all constitutional rights when you committed a felony. Ask my Vietnam veteran father.. they don’t care if you served your country. Don’t get caught with seeds and stems down in your floor mats out in Texas! He can’t even own a gun, and he never committed any crime.
@@chadscatharsis3287 I live in a big dangerour city. I go everywhere and the only time a gun was pulled on me was by a cop. If you don't bother anybody, nobody will bother you. Now I have seen some things go south, but I wasn't involved. that was their thing.
As California attorney general, Kumswalla Harris spent years subverting a 2011 Supreme Court ruling requiring the state to reduce its prison population. The overseeing judicial panel nearly found the state in contempt of court. She bragged about the prison population and went so far as to knowingly hide evidence just to keep innocent people in prison.
They have privatized prisons and people don’t see the connection with that and America having the highest prison population, law enforcement targeting communities and politicians making things legal and illegal for lobbyist and profit. Also this doesn’t include private companies that supply or subcontract these private and government prisons
Great content brother this is beautiful im definitely subscribing! God bless this brother
All you need to do is watch Krazie Bone interview about private prisons....concerning gangster rap
Hopefully David watches it, very eye opening
My 12 year old grandson told me the other day that schools resemble jails /prisons especially the cafeteria… he said the kids talk about it among themselves. I found that pretty interesting. He even mentioned the color of the walls 🤷♀️
That was true, even back in the 60's---at least, where I grew-up.
Is this accurate ? How would kids know what the inside of a prison looks like?
Schools look like prisons to protect them. Shootings, people selling drugs, child abduction. And, staff and students that are on campus for reasons they should be in jail - to sell drugs, to be activists.
@@arthrodeabecause... the internet.
It's called the school to prison pipeline it's a real thing not a liberal talking point. Even conservatives have said it's a issue
Bro 50k for an inmate is actually so criminal and corrupt. That’s literally a salary of a journeymen plumber that works 40 hour a week. That’s INSANE
I don’t know what state you’re working in but a journeyman license plumber in Illinois makes $50 an hour
@@igg-v3c In the south its a lot less well where I live. Same with other trade jobs. My friend in Ohio does bids for jobs and gets insane pay for remodeling while the same exact thing in DFW metroplex is nothing. The bass player in my dad's band is journeyman and only makes around $30 a hour. Back in 2016-2017 it was $27 a hour. My dad not journeyman but did everything they did had decades of experience as a lead maintenance man and remodeling made $17 a hour starting out with a company vehicle and assistant. Maintenance man at another place up until 2014 made $13 a hour. Welder at the train tracks with a training course $11 a hour back in 2008. Pay here sucks compared to up north at least in my county and neighboring ones.
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzhhjk
@@igg-v3c My reply got deleted somehow. In North Texas and southern states its much lower my whole family does trade jobs and people I know. Plumbers HVAC maintenance men construction ect. My dad's bassist is journeyman and makes barely around $33 a hour with over 10 years there. Starting pay is only around $27 journeyman. Lead maintenance man like $20 a hour here for apartments and mobile homes. Some construction jobs less than $15 a hour. Dad welded at the trainyard with a course required in 2008 made only $11 a hour. Construction supervisor/foreman up until 2007 only made $17 a hour.
I'm from CT and did 17 years in prison here. How they justify spending 52k a year per inmate is an absolute farce! BULLSHIT is what they feed you in there lol and bull shit is cheap.
I always learn so much from Pat's videos. Keep up the great informative work.
You know that he started an MLM as well?
You know that he started an MLM as well?
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzhhjk
This is absolutely the best format/style of content PBD does
Man you are very smart.. this is the type of content that will help !! Thank you !
Thank you for shedding light on this with your platform!
Fascinating info-especially having observed these realities from the inside. Mass incarceration is a stunning reality.
Cramming three and four guys into a room certified for one. 23 hour lockdowns simply because the facility can’t keep the people they hire, or the staff on shift don’t want to do any work. Extending the stay of eligible parolees for reasons beyond the inmate’s control. Instigating situations where by a CO can put a misconduct report on an inmate (called “targeting”) without any actual infraction having occurred.
If I hadn’t been there and seen these things with my own eyes, I would never have believed that they happen.
Thank you for speaking out, Pat.
It's called communism. Under the Federal Reserve system the American taxpayers funded Nazi Germany and the creation of the former Soviet Union. We also fund all the wars and supply weapons to both sides through the military industrial complex.
BlackRock also has a joint venture with China Construction Bank, a state-owned bank, to help it enter China's mutual fund market. Hua Fan, who has over 25 years of experience in the investment industry, was appointed as BlackRock's Head of China in 2022.
Blackrock vanguard Lockheed Dupont Amazon all this effing straight evil.
My brother is in federal prison. To put 40 dollars on his commissary account costs me 6 dollars in fees.
PLUS THE 34 LEFT HE GET RIGHT TO BUY 10 DOLLARS WORTH ... 2WITH 24 FOR PROFIT FOR THE MASTER AHOLE
Thats nice of you anyway. Bless.
It's not easy being a criminal.
@@deja699 THANK GOD TO JOE BEDIN AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY FOR PUTTING MORE FEDERAL JAILS AND PRIVATE JAILS BACK ABOUT 40 YEARS AGO.. TO GIVE THE BLACKS A PLACE TO SLEEP AND PLACE TO WORK.. BEING THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY MEMBERS NO LONG HAVE PLANTATIONS.. AND LOST THERE FREE LABOR NOW THEY HAVE JAILS AND CHIAN GANGS AND SWEAT SHOPS MAKING AUTO PLATES
@sssssnake222 I'm not a criminal. I'm a law-abiding disabled war-time veteran. I love my brother unconditionally. Your comment is misplaced.
Dr. Dre knows all about this.. he was the one person to push this gangster rap shit.. my hats off to cube for pointing this out
Black people been saying this for the longest. It shouldn't have taken people this long to listen.
The US legal system is biased to let guilty people go free. Sure, there are innocent people caught up into the system, but when a guy gets put away from rape, he’s raped many women before he gets put away. 80% of murders in some cities never get solved, etc, etc.
In an ironic and roundabout way, they've found a way to keep their slaves 😂
They're just called "prisoners" now lol
We all knew something was funny when they changed the system, started demonizing harmless helpful plants like cannabis and started locking people up for it.
Why do you have to make it about race? Ignorant to think black people were the only ones saying this
@@Easymadeithe’s bringing up race because the statistics that PBD is speaking on has affected black Americans more than other Americans. Would be my guess… 🤷🏽
@Easymadeit Because this 100% started racial and if you'd paid any bit of attention you would know this. I get tired of people saying "this isn't about race" when race definitely plays a major part here and ALWAYS has. You would be the same type of person to dismiss anything a black person might be dealing with, but then quickly point out racism in regards to Caitlin Clark.
EXCELLENT video Pat & Team.
I did time in Georgia in State Prison & Private prisons now I live in Las Vegas. State prisons are like 3rd world country slums no AC in the summer no heat in the winter &, you can lose your life over the hands of another inmate or simply living conditions. Private prisons resemble county jails and have the BEST treatment as far as being incarcerated they have AC in the summer heat in the winter, in private prisons you can get G.E.D, plumbing, HVAC, medical,Cdl, welding trade, food is better & waay more correction opportunities. State prisons are understaffed & inhumane & rat infested idk how they’re still standing. Big business
Of course they are, it's called punishment. If you don't commit the crime, you won't have to do the time.
@@sssssnake222 no 💩 shirlock… I’m speaking to the people who always say private prisons need to be shut down & keep the state prisons. When it’s the other way around
I am often critical of this man but this video alone has changed my personal opinion of him
Do a skit on all the politicians owning stock in them..
This
Here you go.
Here is a list of politicians who have been identified as owning stocks in private prison companies through indirect investments such as ETFs:Senator Ron Wyden (Democrat - Oregon)Owned between $15,000 and $50,000 worth of iShares Core S&P Small-Cap ETF (IJR), which includes shares of GEO Group and CoreCivic [❞] [❞].Rudy Yakym (Republican - Indiana)Trades 16 issuers with a volume of 918K, including private prison stocks [❞].Marjorie Taylor Greene (Republican - Georgia)Trades 92 issuers with a volume of 2.82M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Max Miller (Republican - Ohio)Trades 41 issuers with a volume of 724K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Debbie Dingell (Democrat - Michigan)Trades 25 issuers with a volume of 702K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Nicole Malliotakis (Republican - New York)Trades 10 issuers with a volume of 414K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Markwayne Mullin (Republican - Oklahoma)Trades 194 issuers with a volume of 7.04M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Bill Keating (Democrat - Massachusetts)Trades 71 issuers with a volume of 1.29M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Bob Latta (Republican - Ohio)Trades 10 issuers with a volume of 105K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Pete Sessions (Republican - Texas)Trades 141 issuers with a volume of 5.07M, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Mitch McConnell (Republican - Kentucky)Trades 14 issuers with a volume of 179K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Abigail Spanberger (Democrat - Virginia)Trades 3 issuers with a volume of 24K, potentially including private prison stocks [❞].Mark Green (Republican - Tennessee)Trades 171 issuers with a volume of 48.58M, potentially including private prison stock
Exactly
💯
Best podcast PBD has done!!!!
Rappers have been talking about this for more than a decade.
Lupe Fiasco made a song called Prisoner 1&2.
It might be the best song about the prison industrial complex ever made.
People really should hear it.
Lupe is a GOAT
System of a Down had a song about this too that came out in 2001. It’s called The Prison Song
Listen to Wise Intelligence speech from Poor Righteous Teachers and he will tell you when the switch was made to destroy hip-hop/rap music. As Hillary Clinton once said, hip-hop/rap music is an important tool used by the government to control the people.
@@LibanMohamud-sk7vd His music is awesome but didn't he sent a cease and desist letter to a republican candidate who used his songs? I think Eminem did the same to Vivek
Many rappers also rap about violent crime and drug trafficking, go figure they go to jail for actually doing the things they rap about.
My brother was recently held without trial for about 15months. At about 12 months they started pushing him to plea to something and he felt if he didn't take it he would never get out. Now they picked him up again and he's been in jail without trial since Feb 19th. He's being held on a loophole of too mentally ill to go to court. They likely get extra money for housing mentally ill. So in the last 3 years he has been held about 20 months without trial. They just evaluate him every month and say he is too mental to be in court. It never gets to the point of even looking to see if there is a case. They also wouldn't let him make a single phone call for several weeks. Couldn't call a lawyer or family. Public Defender doesn't fight for him.
THERE ARE LOTS OF THIS ... THEY WOULD LOST IN JURY TRAILS ... THEY HOLD YOU INTIL YOU CON\FESS TO KILLING MAM WHO IS ALIVE AND WELL .... THIS WAY THEY NEVER NEED TO PAY DAMAGES
@@dr-rexmangrca113 He didn't kill anyone. He regularly tells people they will pay when they die . Meaning they will be judged adversely by God. It is obvious he means ppl will pay in the afterlife, but that gets twisted into he is making terrorist threats in order to hold him until he is sane enough for court. Mental patients don't get cured, they can be controlled to an extent with drugs.
Oh shit, accepting a plea deal removes all civil rights including all evidence that supports the defendent. Theres been an increase with hospitalizations (retaliation, fraud, and eliminate their voice).
Thank you for story 😢
They do not care that he is a human. He has become a number and all the people make their sick living off off of "this number, non human". I feel for you and your family. Best wishes and peace
The system sucks and everything they do is to deceive, and to take what they can from whom ever they can anyway they can, from lying, to paying people under the table to get the results they want.!! The crooked system needs to be destroyed and rebuilt with people that have integrity..if that means anything.. .
interesting the record label and prisons owned by the same company the records come out more and more violent amd then more and more people end up in prisons
Bingo! Connect the dots.
The lyrics are not that smart either.
The secret meeting that changed hip-hop
Man, We Been Saying This Shit Since The Early 90’s, For You To Speak On This, It Must Be Effecting Your Kind.
Your "Kind" has a bad way of glossing over your own issues and making it all about everyone else. I'm entirely with you that the prison industry is a racket and their goal is to imprison as many people as possible. The point you happen to miss is that they'd happily imprison anyone and everyone if they could: my kind, your kind, it doesn't matter. It's that your own culture is jacked up and isn't helping and you don't want to admit it.
YEAH HIS KIND IS OTHER HUMANS.
IKR!!
His kind is everyone's kind who knows what it is like to understand poverty and suffering.
@@JourneymanLinemanIdentity politics 🙄
It goes way deeper
Thank you for this exposé PBD!
My business partner and I often hire recently released/ex-convicts In our demolition company in the Pacific Northwest/Washington state. We have definitely taken advantage of the WOC/work opportunity tax credit, which not only benefited us, but also benefited the guys hire, as well as society since we are giving individuals an opportunity to make a living wage and build skills for a lifelong career
We appreciate your coverage of extremely impactful subjects like this! Keep doing what you do, brother
It's a problem when you start seeing human lives as a form of currency
The more awaken u become the more you see in in every single angle, they’ve designed it at our expense & all about greed!
The “Lost Century” (doc) on Prime by Dr Steven Greer was EXTREMELY EYE OPENING!
Highly suggested to watch!
Same as the weapon companies..no wonder America has.so many wars.invading nations and now supplying weapons to kill Paleatinians..nothing surprising
Too late, hence 666
Just one of the reasons why Pennsylvania is the fifth most corrupt state in the country. Imagine what Washington DC, New York, Michigan, New Jersey, etc., are doing
In 2007, a frantic call from an alarmed parent prompted Juvenile Law Center to investigate irregularities in Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County juvenile court. We discovered that hundreds of children routinely appeared before Judge Mark Ciavarella without counsel, were quickly adjudicated delinquent (found guilty) for minor offenses and immediately transferred to out-of-home placements. We petitioned the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 2008 to vacate the juveniles’ adjudications of delinquency and expunge their records.
Though the court denied our initial petition, once the United States Attorney alleged that Ciavarella and another Luzerne County judge had accepted nearly $2.6 million in alleged kickbacks from two private for-profit juvenile facilities, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court granted our request for extraordinary relief. The US Attorney also filed federal criminal charges against both judges.
The scope of the violations of the children’s rights in Luzerne County turned out to be more egregious than anyone could have imagined. From 2003 to 2008, the Luzerne County judicial corruption scandal altered the lives of more than 2500 children and involved more than 6000 cases. Over 50 percent of the children who appeared before Ciavarella lacked legal representation; 60 percent of these children were removed from their homes. Many of them were sent to one or both of the two facilities at the center of the corruption scandal. Believed to be the largest judicial corruption scandal in our history, the story was featured in a 2009 episode of ABC’s “20/20.”
For their involvement in the “kids-for-cash” scandal, Judge Michael Conahan, the facilities’ former co- owner Robert Powell, and the developer Robert Mericle pled guilty to federal criminal charges; Judge Mark Ciavarella was found guilty of various federal crimes following his trial in 2011. In 2009, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court vacated the adjudications of all youth who appeared before Ciavarella between 2003-2008, dismissed their cases with prejudice and ordered all of their records expunged.
In addition to the federal criminal prosecutions and the proceedings before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, we partnered with pro bono co-counsel Hangley Aronchick Segal Pudlin & Schiller to file a federal class action lawsuit on behalf of the children and parents who suffered emotional trauma and financial loss as a consequence of the corruption scheme. The suit seeks monetary damages from the former judges, private facilities, the former co-owner of the facilities and the developer. The suit makes claims under federal civil rights laws and the federal Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. We remain dedicated to improving Pennsylvania’s juvenile justice system and preventing the recurrence of such widespread violations of children’s rights in the future.
"IN THE UK🇬🇧 TODATE, SUPPLY (PRISONERS) HAS OVERWHELMINED DEMAND (PRISON CELLS). WHILST IT COST MORE TO LOCK 🔐 UP THAN REHABILITATION BACK INTO SOCIETY, IT NEVER HAPPENS. A SET UP TO FAILURE BUSINESS SYSTEM." ❤🇬🇧❤
That explains that “Gotcha Policing “ under the guise of serve and protect!
Excellent analysis. PBD brings the unique contribution of highly clarifyingly explaining charts and trends that he maybe? learned in the insurance industry. I don’t agree with absolutely all his values, but wow! he’s good at that! There’s several+ things in Am that definitively need changing/improving and that always begins with widespread knowing…
Privatising medicine and health, privatising the prison system and privatising war will go down as the dumbest things we've done as a society.
Some aspects of life just shouldn't be driven by a cut throat profit motive.
Great point
XAI44X's guys aint paperhanding this one
ty for speaking on this Pat!!! real ones will love you
The truth that you speak, is so profound, so insightful. It is journalistically groin grabbingly good.
It’s like slavery, except they don’t force them to “work” so it’s okay. If prison is a business, more people in jumpsuit is a good thing
Idk where your from but in Texas your forced to work with no pay so yeah it's slavery brother
Incorrect, there are publicly traded corporations that use imates to manufacture goods.
It's contract slavery.
Everyone in prison is forced to work. Pay attention. Private ownership was banned not public. It is slavery.
Yeah it is definitely slavery. I just wasn’t going to be super opinionated in my comment so that people would think. In reality we are all slaves in a corporate military structure.
I used to work for Oklahoma prison system in budget office. About 1/3 of our budget goes to private. This includes legal cost and medical costs which private P don’t pick up . The private prison also gets least risk prisoners, the most expensive like maximum security they don’t get. So when you compare cost private seems cheaper because state has to pick up legal and medical and all max security prisoners which are much more expensive.
This is a crime in itself.
Thanks for bringing awareness
Just started the video and I'm already hoping he brings up Michael Jordan and his investments in the Prison systems
I spent 17 years in Connecticut prisons I can promise you I got NO golf cart hell we barely got fed. For the first third of my of my time we used to get 4 pieces of bread at lunch. You know they started giving us 3 slices and brothers in there were like wtf. Right but think about it...16 to 20 thousand inmates how many loves of bread equal 16 thousand slices. ALL that money they say it takes to house us there and we work for 17 cents SEVENTEEN CENTS a day for an inmate job. SLAVE LABOR!!! CT is a shit hole to live in and even worse to do time in!!
I totally agree with you. I’m in Connecticut and I can’t believe that we have to pay state tax on SS checks.
You can have all the bread you want, depending, your choice.
@@sandrahooley There was a time that my demons gave me no choice. Sobriety gives me the choice today!
rule 1 dont go to prison
Mind games
Mind games workplace relationships attitudes 30 games
Whos Branding them i dont know but son i start talking they give me answers. Black hears i don't know once seen a church girl whos a trouble maker with it. Broken hearts spiritual.crosses dont know they all look tuff both racs so won't ask ASK
You are the best..all the best
Thanks for explaining one issue of many why the descendants of slaves want Reparations. We were targeted
Great upload 👌
Less crime puts prisons out of business
No it doesn’t
Thank you. This is a two sided business. Supply and demand. You create a supply and there will be a demand for prisons and prison workers. It's absolutely corrupt on the government side in how people are being prosecuted and the policies involved, but we have a major issue with the culture of crime as well. We can't hope for the situation to get better if we aren't attacking it from both sides, from the bottom and the top.
Less stupid laws also = Less crimes too, which then means less 'private' prisons. Not exactly less prisons overall. It's a vicious cycle.
@@Seriously5505yes it does,they hire more guards based on the size of the prison population
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzefg
Isn’t that interesting. The same year the Chevron doctrine was introduced and voted in without our knowledge
Well a lot happened 40 years ago. The War on Drugs. Everything that led up to the 1994 crime bill. And lets not forget the closure of almost every major Mental Health Hospital between 1960-1980. Historians will not be kind to the 1970'-1990's when it comes to crime and what the US did to handle it.
Very interesting. Careful though, don't notice too much.
@@conservingcommonsense4980 You have no idea. The amount of shadow banned comments is quite off the chart! This is what we get from the SCOTUS's decision to give Social Media providers the right to fight any information/disinformation that they don't like!
Everything that is evil for us is voted on in secrecy by our government. Like the federal reserve system of 1913 and the creation of the IRS and their tax mandates.
What people fail to realize ice cube, NWA and artists like them helped filled them prisons with the music they make. And why do schools, looks like prison, I never realize that! So all Blackrock and all these companies are doing is business as usual, investing for a ROI...
Tons of old school rap from them was a CIA psyop to make this happen
So people making music is what filled the prisons and not the people making policy lol
Old school rap was telling stories from life on the streets but not out making it look appealing to the youth. Dr. Dre the Cronic was about the party lifestyle having fun smoking herb getting high. Look at the old MTV videos from the 80s way less guns violence then the rap music of today. NWA had a song F the poilce against the authority Ice T also had a song High Roller that ends in tragedy. Its more art and stories about the life they grew up around. Snoop Dogg started a football league for kids many help the youth by supporting music art projects in school as well. Kids should learn to pick up a mic then a gun to try to excell past life on the street. Rappers these days seem to glamorize gun violence more and that thug life is to be looked up on. Remember Ice Cube wrote "Its been a good day" Tupac was a man from the streets but also a poet rap hip hop had more meaning back in the day then just bling and violence. Many conspiracy theorists believe in CIA cypots in music when its just creative expression just like Hollywood or the entertainment industry. Dre isn't the problem its a lack of fundamentals and learning and an ability to compete financially in a global market place so turning to crime as an easy way out.
The secret meeting that changed hip-hop
Yes, the rappers were complicit as long as they got the fame, money and women. Black males have been selling out their communities for centuries.
Insightful! Thank you as usual
Thanks for talking about this PBD. Seems like no one else will
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Excellent Video! It costs a lot of money for sure but it bankrupts us morally! For America to be great, we must realign ourselves with real values and see money as a means, not an end in and of itself.
Great importance, these topics! 👍🌞
Patrick I have watched you explode. To see you approach these topics is incredible. Keep at it man. I hope I can meet you someday.
I'm surprised you're just figuring this out. I've worked for TDCJ-ID and the Federal Prison. And y'all wonder why the justice system is corrupt.
Same WDOC here retired.
I don’t wonder at all, there’s pawns like yourselves that work for the system. The cognitive dissonance to collect a paycheck while admonishing the public for your work with “yall wonder why the justice system is corrupt”
ITS YOU
And the developing countries always thought America is civilized,human rights defenders,corrupt free,democratic..now with the war in Gaza..our eyes have opened...we now know what America stands for..
I dont wonder.
It can only happen is cowards like yourself take the job and take that check knowing it's wrong. No better than the true criminals you looked after. Sad
I'm embarrassed to admit that I was in a county prison. I volunteered to work in the Worker's Cafeteria. I saw what the food boxes said, Not For Human Consumption!!!! It was mostly stale bread. A main dish for dinner would be watered-down masses potatoes, a side of 2 pieces of stale bread and if you got lucky possibly jello. To drink was unsweetened Kool-aid. When ypu volunteered in " The Lounge, you could eat what the Worker's at the prison ate or a Salad bar. They prided themselves on spending less than a dollar a day for a 3 meals for the prisoner's. Some of the mattresses had all of the stuffing pulled out, so you were just laying on a hard layer of vinyl and metal, no sheets, no pillows and wool blankets, in the summer. This is probably one that one of those Corporations own. They don't give you your medicine. Like Oxygen, breathing inhalers or anything. As a Volunteer worker, of course they don't pay you. I got up an hour earlier than everyone else to shower and scrub my cell. I used my own shampoo and scrubbed the floor by hand because I didn't want that filthy mop that had been used, with dirty water and the shampoo made it smell much better. It was a crazy experience. One that I'd never wish to repeat. It's not because of any help with Any kind of rehabilitation. If you have no help from someone on the outside, you won't even have soap, shampoo or deodorant. Nothing. No underwear, socks or bras. Everything coats a lot of money and they make a fortune from Commissary.
The privatisation of the Prison service was/is a terrible thing to do
Even the house of Lords in Britain didn't vote that crap in!
This is result of Law and Order party, with lack of social society investment . 50yrs of making.
@@Keithmablerepublicans never speak about it
Maybe because they’re benefitting from it
I would say most of these prison's would have never have been needed if the US didn't shutter most of the Mental health hospitals between the 1960-1980s..... Privatization was just inevitable due to all the waste and bloat associated with literally everything our government touches or regulates.
Bro, there are private prisons on the UK as well. At present, there are 14 private prisons contractually managed by private companies such as G4S Justice Services, Serco Custodial Services, and Sodexo Justice Services. This comprises 14 out of a total 117. If we're not careful, we will end up like America, where they lock people up for profit.
@@tony_5156And democrats are better?
Well done! Thank you
The perceived security budget is hugh and wastage to tax payers money. Yet there is no budget for Philanthropic to address poverty, affordable homes and homes for homeless, food subsidy (affordable food), jobs developments (salary funds) and building infrastructure to the many cities we have.
Poverty can be a crime here in America! I feel sympathy and empathy for our country. low income people are suffering to survive, and I appreciate Deborah Lee Clark. You've helped my family with your advice. imagine investing $30,000 and receiving $105,460 after 28 days of trading.
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PBD its Jordan White from Minnect... lets do a show. We can dig deep into this. I served a few years in the system too.
2x is too small but definitely daily possible with the XAI44X
Just listen to a GEO group quarterly conference call. They act like it’s a hotel and will discuss items such as “occupancy miss to budget”.
It’s interesting and downright frightening. These companies don’t want vacancies, they thrive off of full prisons and the ability to deploy capex to build more. The margins are incredible with little to no actual investment in inmate rehabilitation.
The owners of these prisons are in partnership with the record companies of Hip Hop. They write death music which influences the behavior .............. straight line to prison.
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I didn't know there were ANY private prisons. I find that very uncomfortable.
They've been around for at least 20 years.
Scary bc that changes the perspective on everything.
Maybe the guy that hanged himself, Jeffrey is there,who would know?
Pied Piper ua-cam.com/video/a71IvRm9Uiw/v-deo.htmlxyzdfvhh
8% of all prisons are private my guys. On average a prisoner costs $45,571 per year.
homelessness, drugs, and prisons, billion/trillion dollar industries....no one wants to solve the issue.
Sin pays
This is such a good video
Instead of this country building things cars steel ships consumables we now have an economy based on smoke and mirrors. As PBD says prisons big business education big business hospitals big business big tech and the military industrial complex big business. Our infrastructure is crumbling roads power networks bridges dams water systems are all out of date and many are failing. Young people go to college and get into ridiculous debt for an overpriced “education” so they can sit in a cubicle all day and stare at a screen. Meanwhile dams are being washed away by summer storms. Every year California burns, and young people want to be “influencers”. It is crazy.
CDC sends inmates out to private prisons in Oklahoma and other states. So your a commifornia convict but your locked up in Oklahoma?! How’s that work?! Don’t know but they do it!!!
Im a mason by trade, and let me just tell you... I've built nore prisons and jails than schools and hospitals. Tennessee used to build a new one every three years. CCA was making money hand over fist in those days.
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Thank you for shinning light on this issue because it is a issue that needs to be looked at.
1984 is such an ironic year for the prison population to begin exploding.
This is a large part of what deterred me from Criminal Justice all together.
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