The simple answer to this
question is yes. I say simple because
the penal system in our context is the administration arm of the judicial
system. If a person commits a crime, and
is caught, he appears before a court and is judged. From there the imposed punishment is
administered by our prison system.
Done; end of story. The penal system administers justice. Next question?
Wait.
Wait.
The more nuanced
answer is no. The reason why this is
more nuanced is that one needs to look at what is justice to understand if the
penal system is administering this justice.
On the most basic level justice is fairness (in both the context of
punishment or reward). It is the desire
or ability to reward good behavior or to correct bad behavior, and like in the
case of money, it is to be a method to expunge the debt. In the case of the penal system the
operational sphere is with regard to justice is punishment for a crime.
For the sake of this
argument I think it is important to look at what is considered a crime. I, in my infinite wisdom, would define a
crime as simply any act that interferes with the Rights of another person. And that the government, which is a social
contract that imbues authority, is the entity responsible for enforcing
personal rights. Our particular brand of
government goes further to state that individuals are equal in standing and
that there is no privileged class of people (regardless of race, gender or creed).
The protection of rights is the foundational principle for government
and really it’s only authority. Going
further, a crime has two parties (while each party may consist of many people);
the perpetrator (interferor) and the victim (interferee). These are two separate parties and in no case
can a crime be committed within one party.
I am unable to interfere in my own rights.
Over 50% of the prison population (i.e. those tried in a court and had a
sentence imposed and is currently being administered by the penal system) are
classified as non-violent drug offenders.
What this means is that these persons were caught using or had drugs on
their person and that they have no record of any violent act on a person or
property. A disproportionate number of
these inmates are classified as minorities.
Why is this important to note?
First, there is no
evidence that drug use is greater or more frequent in minority populations as opposed to any
other demographic. So, if justice were
blind to race and creed the demographic make up of the prison population for
drug related offenses should be proportional.
Second, non-violent drug
convections are victimless. Remember, to
be a crime there must be a victim and a perpetrator. Who is the victim if I were to use drugs? No doubt I may impact loved ones around me,
but that does not constitute a violation of their rights.
These two reasons (among many more I did not address) illustrate
that the penal system does not administer justice (the key word being justice). It does administer punishment for the court
system, but this is not justice.
You open with a comment about how justice is served because justice is served. There is something true about this. If I were convicted of a crime I didn't commit we could say that this was an injustice against me. But, by being convicted, I am legally guilty, I'd bear the guilt of the crime, and justice could be said to have been served by the verdict being delivered and executed. For two of the parties involved (the victim and society) the act of administering a verdict does the work of restoring order to society (whether the guilty party is actually guilty or not). Rene Girard talks about some of this in his book The Scapegoat.
ReplyDeleteMy post was more about the penal system acting as the 'brute squad' for our society and not the administration of justice. Just because you are tried, convicted and punished for a 'crime', that is not always justice. You hinted at this in your post.
ReplyDeleteYeah. My comment here was about justice in general, not about our justice system (like our posts were). I didn't have too much to argue with in your post so I took an idea from it and went a different direction with it.
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