Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2000 Date: 03/02/2000 Source: Guardian Weekly, The (UK) Author: (Dr) Mark Morris The horrific news that the United States now has more than 2m prisoners means that 1 in every 137 Americans is now in jail or, assuming a family unit of 4, that 1 in every 34 Americans belongs to a family with an immediate member in jail - and this is not counting those who have been in jail or are on parole (US jails two millionth inmate, February 17). There are strong vested economic profits in such incarceration. The privatisation of the prison system bears this out - and surely future generations will condemn those making money out of jailing people with as much disgust as we now condemn slave owners. Can we honestly approve a society where the second largest employer in that country is engaged in locking people up? More sinister, though, is the fact that it has developed into a method of large-scale social control. It may be difficult to see a justice system, involved in individual decision-making, as a form of general social control, though Western history has a number of examples, from the deportations of 18th and 19th century Britain to the gulags. But consider just two aspects of the situation in the US, leaving aside the potent question of the disproportion of people of colour in the jails. More than 2m adults are disenfranchised, conveniently, as they are a group likely to vote against the status quo. Then imagine releasing, say, 1m of them, almost all adults of working age with few specialised skills. The unemployment rate would leap; the dollar would fall; interest rates would jump to compensate; inflation would follow; and the whole basis of the current economic prosperity would collapse into recession. Or consider this: if we translated these figures globally, more than 46m people would be in jail, and 11.5m would be employed in the prison industry, at a cost of $771bn a year. (Dr) Mark Morris, Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada