I finished reading Inside: Life Behind Bars In America, and while the Steven Bomb distracted me for a few days, I should probably still talk about it.
I brought up the book often while I was reading it, Michael Santos, the author, brought up a wide variety of stories about his time incarcerated in American prisons. He spent time in high security, all the way down to minimum security camps, over the course of a three decade sentence for distributing cocaine in the 80s.
What he lived through was a nightmare. Men, often undereducated, whose hopes of release were so slim that they saw no reason to do anything but make a better life for themselves within prison. There was no hope for relief, no hope for protection by the authorities, so they became what we all imagine of hardened members of a penitentiary. They beat people to death for the slightest offense, throw feces when locked in single cells, would rather stab someone than appear weak in front of their fellow inmates.
To Michael Santos, this lack of an outlet, and lack of control, is what leads to recidivism and continued violence. You put men and women in prison, and they don't learn to become better people, they learn to become better criminals. They gain skills in smuggling, crafting drugs, how to fight, how to kill. When they are released, the prison system didn't let them prepare for anything better than being a janitor, and their public mark as a felon means they can't expect much better.
So if you were given the choice of earning minimum wage as a janitor at whatever business chooses to hire you, or using your prison skills to make substantially more, which would you take? What if you had kids to feed, or family to take care of?
There was a time that I wanted to help, prisoners, the addicted, the mentally ill. But in reality, I think I'm simply not strong enough. I didn't live close enough to that life, and while I'm thankful for that, that would be problematic. Still, Michael Santos helped draw a clearer diagram of prison life, and helping me distinguish between the myths and reality of prison. Interesting book.
Now I just need to figure out what to read next.