This is very concise and would be great for first-timers to Ron Paul. I'd be very happy to direct folk to this video for starters. Thanks for putting it up for us to see today. This also reflects directly to the wider british joint american arms for oil (& legs and other body parts too) programmes.
'I always think of all you canvassors and precinct leaders and delegates at the front line and caucuses.
Good luck out there &Thank you. You're a gift.
Here's an interesting video -- it is speaking to black people but it let's you know the awareness and differences between "leading blacks" vs "black leaders." It's slightly groupist, but as a multiracial man the message resonates with me -- also, there some deep truth here -- it's also very funny, in parts!
Dr. Julia Hare is speaking against Affirmative Action and Welfarism and how this was used as a tool to invade the school system and thus the homes of African Americans!! Malcolm X was very much against Welfarism/Affirmative Action, he called it "a trick of the white man," and by "white" he was referring to those in power -- as powerless whites are just as disenfranchised; however during that time it was the "poor KKK" who were lynching folks so using "white" as generalized term was probably fairly accurate coming from a black perspective.
Ron Paul Speaks the truth and it is sure nice to hear it.
I'm proud to be a part of this awakening revolution.
It is an idea whose time has come!
I just hope it get's done as peacefully as possible.
Good to see this, I hope it reaches all the billions of people around the world! Awesome.
Good interview. I enjoy it when Ron Paul gets interviewed and I also watched parts 2 & 3 it is well worth watching. Thank you
This is off subject but one of the fastest growing businesses is private prisons. The more laws government make the more prisons and jails they need. It is so sad.
Adult Population : 229,786,080
Prison Population: 1,596,127
Jail Population: 723,131
Total Behind Bars: 2,319,258
You can download the PEW Report here.
Who’s Making a Profit?
Crime pays for US prison companies
Financiers, real-estate agents and car salesmen might be suffering from America’s economic malaise, but bulging jails have triggered a profit boom for corrections companies.The United States leads the world in the number of people it incarcerates and government figures show the country’s prison population grew by three percent to a record 2.3 million inmates in 2006.
Harsher sentencing policies have put more criminals behind bars and prison management firms such as the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and The GEO Group are racing to build new jails or expand existing facilities to house more convicted felons.CCA, the largest US private prison operator, is spending 205 million dollars to build a new prison in Eloy, Arizona, to house 3,060 prisoners. It is also constructing a 105-million-dollar jail near Natchez, Mississippi, to hold 1,668 inmates.”
As states struggle with overcrowded facilities, growing populations and no meaningful supply of beds coming online, they are finding that private correction companies, such as CCA, can deliver beds more quickly and less expensively than they can develop themselves,” CCA’s chief executive John Ferguson said in an email to AFP.CCA’s profits swelled to 35 million dollars in the fourth quarter of last year, rising from 32 million in the same period of 2006, as revenues jumped to 382 million dollars.
George Zoley, The GEO Group’s chief executive, told analysts on a conference call in February that 2007 had been a bonanza year and predicted that “2008 will be an even better year” as more detention facilities are filled.A company spokesman declined to comment further on GEO’s operations.Its profits rose 10 percent to 11.5 million dollars during the fourth quarter of 2007.
The GEO Group is expanding a leased detention center it manages in Clayton County, Georgia, so it will be able to house almost 200 extra inmates, and executives have said they are pursuing contracts in Britain and South Africa.CCA and GEO Group shares have declined as US stock markets have been ravaged by a credit squeeze in recent months tied to an ongoing housing slump, but they have not been singed nearly as badly as some other industries.
Most jails in the United States are run by the federal government or states, but corrections firms are winning more and more concessions.Tennessee-based CCA; The GEO Group, which is headquartered in Florida; and Cornell Companies, based in Texas, have recruited veteran money managers and former federal officials and lawmakers to bolster their executive and lobbying clout.
William Andrews, the chairman of CCA’s board of directors, is also a top executive at Kohlberg & Company, a large private-equity firm, and has held a host of other high-ranking executive posts.Norman Carlson, a former director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP), sits on GEO’s board, and the resume of James Hyman, the chief executive of Cornell Companies, highlights stints at General Electric and McKinsey & Company.Private groups guard over 100,000 federal and state prisoners, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, but that number is expected to climb higher.
Advocacy groups say the “war on drugs” and changes in sentencing laws, not rising crime rates, explain America’s ballooning prison population. A majority of those locked up are racial and ethnic minorities.Ryan King, a policy analyst with The Sentencing Project, said tougher sentences and a reduction in the use of parole have fueled around a sixfold rise in the US prison population since 1970.”Generally, we don’t believe that incarceration should be part of a business model for profit. This is a public good, it’s an effort to rehabilitate, it’s an effort to provide public safety and it should be governed by those principles rather than principles of profit,” King said.
Whether companies or the government can run prisons more cost-effectively is a difficult question to answer and has stymied some government investigators.”BOP does not have the data necessary to do a methodically sound cost comparison of its various alternatives for confining inmates in low- and minimum-security facilities,” the Government Accountability Office said in a detailed October report.
The GAO judged that without such data it was impossible to say whether private jails are more cost effective than government-run facilities.Comparisons are tricky because prisons vary in size, have different rehabilitation programs and varying staffing needs. (Source) http://ronpaul2008nyc.wor...
I have watched that news program before. They seem to be left leaning. But look like they are on the brink of failing. Some support and money from us and maybe we could have that first media step. I know the idea of having a liberty news show was floating around a couple weeks ago. This could be the start.
INN report
This is very concise and would be great for first-timers to Ron Paul. I'd be very happy to direct folk to this video for starters. Thanks for putting it up for us to see today. This also reflects directly to the wider british joint american arms for oil (& legs and other body parts too) programmes.
'I always think of all you canvassors and precinct leaders and delegates at the front line and caucuses.
Good luck out there &Thank you. You're a gift.
It may be old but....
It may be old but if you go to INN's website here
http://www.innworldreport...
they have that on their front page as a "classic interview"
Good stuff!
"Whether you think you can or think you cannot, you're absolutely right!"
Interesting video
Here's an interesting video -- it is speaking to black people but it let's you know the awareness and differences between "leading blacks" vs "black leaders." It's slightly groupist, but as a multiracial man the message resonates with me -- also, there some deep truth here -- it's also very funny, in parts!
Dr. Julia Hare is speaking against Affirmative Action and Welfarism and how this was used as a tool to invade the school system and thus the homes of African Americans!! Malcolm X was very much against Welfarism/Affirmative Action, he called it "a trick of the white man," and by "white" he was referring to those in power -- as powerless whites are just as disenfranchised; however during that time it was the "poor KKK" who were lynching folks so using "white" as generalized term was probably fairly accurate coming from a black perspective.
http://youtube.com/watch?...
Octobox
Wisdom is the anticipation of consequences!
Revolutionary Truth
Ron Paul Speaks the truth and it is sure nice to hear it.
I'm proud to be a part of this awakening revolution.
It is an idea whose time has come!
I just hope it get's done as peacefully as possible.
Good to see this, I hope it reaches all the billions of people around the world! Awesome.
thank you
Good interview. I enjoy it when Ron Paul gets interviewed and I also watched parts 2 & 3 it is well worth watching. Thank you
This is off subject but one of the fastest growing businesses is private prisons. The more laws government make the more prisons and jails they need. It is so sad.
Adult Population : 229,786,080
Prison Population: 1,596,127
Jail Population: 723,131
Total Behind Bars: 2,319,258
You can download the PEW Report here.
Who’s Making a Profit?
Crime pays for US prison companies
Financiers, real-estate agents and car salesmen might be suffering from America’s economic malaise, but bulging jails have triggered a profit boom for corrections companies.The United States leads the world in the number of people it incarcerates and government figures show the country’s prison population grew by three percent to a record 2.3 million inmates in 2006.
Harsher sentencing policies have put more criminals behind bars and prison management firms such as the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) and The GEO Group are racing to build new jails or expand existing facilities to house more convicted felons.CCA, the largest US private prison operator, is spending 205 million dollars to build a new prison in Eloy, Arizona, to house 3,060 prisoners. It is also constructing a 105-million-dollar jail near Natchez, Mississippi, to hold 1,668 inmates.”
As states struggle with overcrowded facilities, growing populations and no meaningful supply of beds coming online, they are finding that private correction companies, such as CCA, can deliver beds more quickly and less expensively than they can develop themselves,” CCA’s chief executive John Ferguson said in an email to AFP.CCA’s profits swelled to 35 million dollars in the fourth quarter of last year, rising from 32 million in the same period of 2006, as revenues jumped to 382 million dollars.
George Zoley, The GEO Group’s chief executive, told analysts on a conference call in February that 2007 had been a bonanza year and predicted that “2008 will be an even better year” as more detention facilities are filled.A company spokesman declined to comment further on GEO’s operations.Its profits rose 10 percent to 11.5 million dollars during the fourth quarter of 2007.
The GEO Group is expanding a leased detention center it manages in Clayton County, Georgia, so it will be able to house almost 200 extra inmates, and executives have said they are pursuing contracts in Britain and South Africa.CCA and GEO Group shares have declined as US stock markets have been ravaged by a credit squeeze in recent months tied to an ongoing housing slump, but they have not been singed nearly as badly as some other industries.
Most jails in the United States are run by the federal government or states, but corrections firms are winning more and more concessions.Tennessee-based CCA; The GEO Group, which is headquartered in Florida; and Cornell Companies, based in Texas, have recruited veteran money managers and former federal officials and lawmakers to bolster their executive and lobbying clout.
William Andrews, the chairman of CCA’s board of directors, is also a top executive at Kohlberg & Company, a large private-equity firm, and has held a host of other high-ranking executive posts.Norman Carlson, a former director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP), sits on GEO’s board, and the resume of James Hyman, the chief executive of Cornell Companies, highlights stints at General Electric and McKinsey & Company.Private groups guard over 100,000 federal and state prisoners, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, but that number is expected to climb higher.
Advocacy groups say the “war on drugs” and changes in sentencing laws, not rising crime rates, explain America’s ballooning prison population. A majority of those locked up are racial and ethnic minorities.Ryan King, a policy analyst with The Sentencing Project, said tougher sentences and a reduction in the use of parole have fueled around a sixfold rise in the US prison population since 1970.”Generally, we don’t believe that incarceration should be part of a business model for profit. This is a public good, it’s an effort to rehabilitate, it’s an effort to provide public safety and it should be governed by those principles rather than principles of profit,” King said.
Whether companies or the government can run prisons more cost-effectively is a difficult question to answer and has stymied some government investigators.”BOP does not have the data necessary to do a methodically sound cost comparison of its various alternatives for confining inmates in low- and minimum-security facilities,” the Government Accountability Office said in a detailed October report.
The GAO judged that without such data it was impossible to say whether private jails are more cost effective than government-run facilities.Comparisons are tricky because prisons vary in size, have different rehabilitation programs and varying staffing needs. (Source) http://ronpaul2008nyc.wor...
Michael, why did you post this?
It's super old. I think it aired originally last fall.
Something we Should Support
I have watched that news program before. They seem to be left leaning. But look like they are on the brink of failing. Some support and money from us and maybe we could have that first media step. I know the idea of having a liberty news show was floating around a couple weeks ago. This could be the start.