Preview

Bismarck Mass Incarceration

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
703 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Bismarck Mass Incarceration
white and 3.4% native american. The potential threat to Bismarck's water supply was one of the many reasons why the proposal was rejected. The route was changed without a struggle. Our government went back on its word and still take land from the Native Americans. Different Native American tribes began protesting and people from all over the United States began to help and join in. There protesting because the construction of the pipeline because a leak could contaminate the source of their water, and kill the fish in the water.
The protesters are also worried about wildlife habitat and spiritual sacred sites. Three Hundred Eighty archaeological sites along the the entire pipeline route face desecration. It is basicly a historic trading ground.
…show more content…
Mass incarceration started in the 1980s, when the war on drugs arose. The U.S. prison system is a failure on every level. There are a total of 2,418,352 federal and state prisons in the United States and 2.3 million people occupy them. According to California prison focus “no other society in human history has imprisoned so many of its own citizens”. The U.S. has more prisons than colleges. America also has private prisons owned by greedy corporate millionaires and billionaires.The more people in prison, the more money private prisons make. Tom Beasley, co-founder of the Corrections Corporation of America(CCA) stated that “you just sell prisons like you were selling cars or real estate or hamburgers”. According to CCA they have nearly 5,500 acres of land, and 2,500 acres are undeveloped for future growth projects. That means they want to keep putting people in jail. There are 4,575 private prisons in the United States. According to NYU School of Law “ since 2000, the effect on the crime rate of increasing incarceration has been zero. Even though the crime rate has not gone down, the government continues to put people in jail. Private prisons have continued because they make millions of dollars off of owning private prisons, and putting people in jail. War on drugs was the beginning of mass incarceration. In the 1990’s state and federal prisons started exploding at the seams because of the increase in drug use and possession of it. The drug that made the huge impact on society was Cocaine, known as “crack”. Cocaine was a powder, which was known to be more sophisticated than crack. Crack was used in poor black communities. The biggest surge in the use of crack was between 1980s and 1990s. Black and latino communities were hit the hardest in the drug epidemic. There was a high

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    This week for PLN I read Dakota Access Pipeline: What's at stake? by Holly Yang. Why this topic is blowing up is because where Native American tribes live the government approved a pipeline to be built and where the pipeline is going to be constructed invades the native American's land. Some background of the Dakota Pipeline is it is a 1,172-mile pipeline would stretch from the oil-rich Bakken Formation to the southeast into South Dakota, Iowa, and Illinois. The Army Corps of Engineers approved the project then Standing Rock Sioux tribe sued the Corps because it would threaten the tribe environmentally and economically. Some people are arguing that they need the pipeline because it will be an economic boom but on the other hand, people are…

    • 471 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One recent autumn evening while I stood in line to comment at a public hearing about a proposed natural gas pipeline through Virginia, I befriended an inspirational environmental advocate by the name of Bear Redstar. Bear grew up in a Lakota family as a part of the Dakotas’ seven Sioux tribes. Bear’s initial exposure to the destructive potential of a pipeline occurred while he worked as a welder for ExxonMobil on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, where he witnessed the steel pipe rupture and release crude oil into the environment. Upon his return home, he advocated alongside Native American community members against the Dakota Access Pipeline. A few months ago Mr. Redstar, moved to Roanoke, Virginia, again facing the trouble of a pipeline. He and I were at the public hearing to warn the Appalachian community of the risks associated with a pipeline.…

    • 199 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The United States government possesses a long history of double-crossing Native Americans. The most recent event is the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline currently being protested by the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and their supporters. Though the pipeline is more than halfway completed, protestor's have held their ground since April of 2016, and show no sign of losing momentum. The tribe argues construction of the pipeline has already bulldozed into the sacred burial grounds of their ancestors, and further digging will result in irreparable damage to historical, religious and cultural sites. Along with the possible contamination of the Missouri River in case of a leak or oil spill. Followed by The Army Corp of Engineers, responsible of approving the final permits for the pipeline, failing to properly consult with the tribe beforehand. The pipeline has been momentarily halted, while…

    • 756 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There should never have been a problem with the Dakota Access Pipeline, and it should be built. The pipeline has many benefits, and few, if any, actual problems. Nodaplsolidarity.org, a site dedicated to opposing and protesting the pipeline, avoids the issue of what the problems with it actually are, saying that the pipeline is a violation of the United Nation’s Declaration of Universal Human Rights, and a violation of the United Nation’s Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, without actually naming what it is about the pipeline that violates these declarations. Since there appear to be no actual issues violated (and they are declarations of the United Nations, not the United States) these problems can be dismissed, leaving us with…

    • 359 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The North Dakota Access Pipeline has been a major topic for national controversy for almost year now. It has sparked a major disagreement between Native Americans and the Government. Is this perhaps another treaty that has been broken? The North Dakota Access Pipeline is a $3.7 billion project constructed by the Texas-Based Energy Transfer Partners. Ir. Although it is said to be the safest and most efficient way to transport crude oil many Native Americans still have many concerns regarding the project and the environment. Granting that the North Dakota Access Pipeline may hold potential benefits such as jobs, resources and revenue; the apparent possibility of land invasion, oil spills/leaks, and environmental impact still outweigh the bad.…

    • 981 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Archambault said in a statement, “President Trump claims he has not received ‘a single phone call’ opposing this widely criticized project. Maybe he should turn the White House phones back on, because millions of people have raised their voices against this dangerous project” (Helsel and Medina). Trump says he hasn’t heard anything about this huge controversial topic. Trump has abandoned his commitment perpetuating the nation’s pattern of broken promises to the Sioux tribes (Helsel and Medina).The tribes on this land have always be discriminated against, and the government has been wanting their land for quite some time. Many people have protested against the pipeline, but the government has shut them out.…

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In my opinion, the fact that it’s even up for debate whether we build the pipe is pretty ridiculous. For one, the pipe crosses over sacred burial ground. To me, this is proof that a part of the American government has little or no regard for the Native American’s ways of life. The idea of building a pipeline through the gravesite of our founding fathers or important leaders would apall us, so why is it any more “okay” to do so through the gravesite of important Native people? What’s more, a leak or rupture in the pipe could cause oil to seep into the ground, tainting the soil with oil, as well as damaging the reservation’s water supply. The former would be a significant issue, as the main economic activites on the Standing Rock reservation…

    • 205 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The United States is based on the ideal image of increasing job opportunities, and becoming more energy independent regardless of the consequences that come along with it. The Dakota Pipeline was first announced to the people on January 25, 2014. During the making, the pipeline was denied final permits to finish the project by former president, Barack Obama. Recently it has been brought to surface by president-elect, Donald Trump. This pipeline will allow about 800 million gallons of crude oil to pass underground across four states in America every day. It will disrupt Native lands in the process, will run across river streams and worsen climate change. This pipeline explores Thoreau’s concept of limited government, non-violent protest and…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    This project has been under review of President Obama’s administration for more than six years. The Senate had a close vote of 62-37, but did not achieve the required 67 votes to override President Obama’s decision to veto of the bill. Had the Senate been successful at overriding President Obama’s vote, TransCanada would have been able to begin construction of the pipeline. In a message to congress the week prior, President Obama quoted the U.S. State Department as his reasoning to veto the bill and stated that the legislation “conflicts with established executive branch procedures and cuts short thorough consideration of issues that could bear on our national interest—including our security, safety and environment.” In response, before the Senate vote, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.) stated, “Construction of the Keystone pipeline would pump billions into our economy. It would support thousands of jobs. And a bipartisan majority in both the House and Senate voted to support it.” Also before the vote, a democratic leader, Sen. Maria Cantwell (D., Wash.), who opposed overriding President Obama’s decision, stated that, “As we vote, the pipeline’s route through Nebraska is still in doubt. Even if the bill becomes law, the Keystone XL pipeline will not get built anytime soon (“Override of…

    • 1516 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tar Creek Conflict Theory

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Picher and Tar Creek are products of the long history of maltreatment of Native Americans in this country. The Quapaw Indians were forced from their home in Arkansas onto a reservation encompassing the Tar Creek region and attempted to make a life but were continuously bullied by the federal government and big mining businesses with no regard for their well being or future. The government went as far as naming many Indian land owners unfit to make decisions so that they did not have to be consulted for the mining companies to dig up their land. When the damage was done and the area became a superfund site, the businesses that had made so much money at the expense of the Quapaw tribe were not held responsible and the government attempted several half hearted clean up attempts to sweep the issue under the rug. When eventually they had to buyout the town they did it as cheaply and quickly as possible with clear prejudice against the Native Americans still in Picher. The government did a good job of keeping the issue quiet and the people of Picher became discouraged and accepted their defeat eventually relocating with the little they had left. The Quapaw tribe was left with this worthless and toxic land with no reparations paid and the evidence that the danger is spreading constantly. Unfortunately I think that the issue will not truly be resolved until it begins to hurt those in power personally or as a nation we push for a resolution and our…

    • 676 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In, “Beyond the Prison Bubble,” published in the Wilson Quarterly in the winter 2011, Joan Petersilia shows different choices about the imprisonment systems. The United States has the highest incarceration rate of any free nation (para.1). The crime rate over a thirty year span had grown by five times since 1960 to 1990. There are more people of color or Hispanics in federal and state institutions then there are of any other nationality. The prison system is growing more than ever; the growth in twenty years has been about 21 new prisons. Mass imprisonment has reduced crime but, has not helped the inmate to gradually return back to society with skills or education. But the offenders leaving prison now are more likely to have fairly long criminal records, lengthy histories of alcohol and drug abuse, significant periods of unemployment and homelessness, and physical or mental disability (par.12).…

    • 259 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Domestication of Energy

    • 1470 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Parfomak, Paul W., Neelesh Nerurkar, Linda Luther, and Adam Vann. “Keystone XL Pipeline.” Cornell University ILR School (2012): 1-37. Web. 7 Oct. 2012. <http://digitalcommons.ilr.cornell.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1927&context=key_workplace>.…

    • 1470 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    A big movement that has came across America’s headlines in The Dakota Access Pipeline. It has created a war between the US Government and the Indian Reservation. The pipeline would run through the Indian Reservation. The biggest argument that the Standing Rock Sioux People were bringing up were that the pipeline would be destroying the water supply to the reservation. The Indians believed it would be scorching the earth. The people of the reservation believe t “water is life”, and that they are looking out for the future of their children, with protesting against the pipeline. (Archambealt) If the pipeline was put in, it would be ruining Mother Nature by taking down 100-year-old trees, and polluting the water of the Missouri River, which is the primary drinking source for Standing Rock.(Archambealt) If there were to be an oil spill it would pollute the main source of water for the Indians. This would leave them no water to survive. The historical precedents the US would break once again would be the Laramie Treaty of 1868.(Estes) This Treaty brought peace between whites and the Sioux. The Sioux agreed to settle in the Black Hills reservation, which had wood, water and a source food which are the three things the Sioux need to survive.…

    • 805 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Of course there is the Native American tribes who protest the pipeline because the plan is for the pipeline is to go straight through their territory. To being there was just a small protest mainly with the native Americans of the local tribes peacefully protesting the building of the pipeline but after one A-list Hollywood celebrity was arrested on October 10th, which so happened to be National Native American day, Shailene Woodley the star of The Divergent Series, was arrested while protesting with the tribe members and her arrest was streamed live all over the internet for the world to see. After her arrest more people tuned in to find out exactly what was happening at Standing Rock. Since Woodley’s arrest thousands more people have gone up to Standing Rock to stand alongside those protesting this pipeline. Among those who joined in the protest are thousands of military veterans, chairman Dave Archambault II, Chief Morgan Littlesun, and many of other people from around the country. These protests even brought Sioux and Pawnee tribes together after centuries of hating each…

    • 751 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Synopsis submitted to College of Management and Economic Studies for the partial fulfillment of the degree of…

    • 3482 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Powerful Essays