What you don't hear in the political ads
No question
about it: Most people are getting sick of the political ads. Your television set
isn’t on for five minutes before you are bombarded with messages as to why you
should vote for one person, and why his or her opponent is a danger to society.
On the
national level, we hear about immigration and about the economy. Healthcare is
a major topic of discussion, and so is our nation’s leadership. But you don’t
hear any discussion about
-mass
incarceration---2.2 million people behind bars, the highest percentage per
capita in the world;
-wrongful
convictions---staggering numbers that have Innocence Projects in every state struggling
with serious backlogs; and
-the death
penalty---only 20 states have abolished this shameful practice!
Here in
Michigan, there’s a lot of political discussion on who’s toughest on crime, bad
water, right to life, and fixing the roads. But you don’t hear any discussion
about
-39,000
people occupying 30 prisons in Pure Michigan, a far higher percentage than that
of any other Great Lakes state;
-serious
overcrowding issues at Michigan’s only prison for women;
-how to make
it easier for the wrongly convicted to collect money owed them by the state;
-why Prosecutors
still oppose raising the age of juvenile court jurisdiction from 17 to 18
(Michigan is one of only four states left clinging to this archaic plan); or
-the slow
progress in resentencing juveniles who were condemned to life without parole.
Do you know
how your favorite candidate for Congress or for the US Senate feels about mass
incarceration, wrongful convictions and the death penalty?
What about
your choices for state public office. Where do they stand on these important
issues? One would think they might have some opinions on a budget item that
involves 14,000 state employees and costs taxpayers 5-million dollars a day!
Yet we hear nothing.
Election Day
is approaching, and it’s time to get out the measuring stick, time to look past
the “hot-button” issues and dig into the less popular but very humanitarian matters. Know where
your candidates stand on all issues.
Then, on
November 6, follow this advice in Proverbs 31: Speak up for those who cannot
speak for themselves; ensure justice for those being crushed.
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