| There obviously isn't a conscious decision to spend more locking people up than expanding their minds, but I think the results speak for how badly the state's priorities have been the last several, several years (this isn't something that springs forth from bare rock overnight). Here's the link to the study's page. The report concludes, unsurprisingly, that simply locking people up siphons money from state budgets without providing much return on the investment. This, in turn, would support the notion that the greatest state savings that could be had would be in reforming sentencing rather than privatizing everything. We'll see if that kind of thing comes to pass. |