A broken poverty stricken society of forgotten children bangs
its way up the ladder of demoralizing childhood while very few
people are aware of the devastating lives they are forced to live.
The unfortunate circumstances imposed on them are due to no fault
of their own. Surprising as this may seem to some, this particular
segment of population, abandoned and neglected, starved and
abused(children)has grown beyond imaginable leaps and bounds in the
last few years.
People, who are not, nor have not been incarcerated or associated
with those who are currently or in the past, have little, if any
reason, to give a thought to the overwhelming monstrous effects
caused by having a parent(s) incarcerated. But, today I propose a
moment of conscious thought on their behalf. The spiraling,
rippling, negative effects are more than upsetting. Not only do the
children suffer due to their loss of parental love, supervision,
respect, guidance and comradeship; they must endure the awful
demoralizing labeling stigma referred and projected on them as
'prison spawn'.
These children regrettably, without any negligible say so, pay a
heavy life-long penalty for their parents' poor decision making
faculties non-violent (mistakes). It's a heart rendering sobering
reality for the children to endure, but sadder still is the
stunning statistical data that states that more than 78% of the
children whose parents are incarcerated will end up in behind bars
themselves. Who cares? You and I should and every one else who is
living in this land of the free civilized society of the world,
today.
Mandatory sentencing guidelines and a growing number of
drug-related convictions are factors in a continued growth of
inmates held in federal, state and local prisons and jails in the
United States. In other words, the bulk of the prison population is
not found among those who have committed violent crimes. The United
States imprisons significantly more people than any other nation in
the world.
In fact, the Pew Center on the States reported in 2008 that an
astounding one in every 100 adults in the U.S. now lives behind
bars! And over the next two years, researchers predict the
situation will get much worse.
At a particularly mind-blowing rate, more people are being locked
up then ever before. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics,
in June 2008, a staggering 2,310,984 prisoners were held in federal
or state prisons or in local jails - an increase of 0.8% from year
end 2007. More importantly and certainly surprising, - The number
of women under the jurisdiction of state or federal prison
authorities increased 1.2% from year end 2007, reaching 115,779,
and the number of men rose 0.7%, totaling 1,494,805. The vast
majority of these incarcerated women are mothers.
What do these figures have to with you and your family? Everything!
[Because, esoterically, humanely, consciously and spiritually
everything has something to do with "it"]. Why are these numbers
important and how do we, as law abiding citizens, fix a stake in
the activities of non-violent criminals? First on the agenda is
awareness. We can not bury our heads in the sand and pretend like
it doesn't matter.
If you're alive, reading these words, breathing, enjoying the
benefits of your 'somewhat' preferred existence, then we can
idealistically acknowledge that nothing that occurs is exempt from
our own life. We can not simply dismiss these people as not
belonging to the entire body of our civilization any more than we
can cut away the heart from the lungs. They are not some sort of
unclassifiable parasitical insects to be placed under an
undignified microscope for investigation, as if they are not part
of the viable human race
Their perplexing, distressing dilemma is the underlying 'real and
raw' reflection of just one of mankind's indiscernible resolutions
of continuing unrelieved injustice. Along with the inability to
recognize, rectify and respond appropriately, we are hereby
stationed, as regents, to act on their behalf, in some way.
IF, you simply can not relate to the unjust human
despair,{intellectually,physically,mentally and spiritually}, then,
just think about the astronomical 'economical' deterring negative
impact. Those extenuating escalating, circular problems, which are
indirectly tied to and embedded in the inmates' childrens' lives,
whose parents' convictions of non-violent criminal behavior will
present.
The majority of these inescapably scarred children will probably
remain uneducated, criminally inclined, habitually disinterested
and repeatedly deviant, pregnant, unwed and destined to be
dependent on governmental assistance. The uncaring, unfeeling,
unconcerned, "I simply must survive" attitudes will be passed down
from generation to generation producing more and more 'make an
easy' buck criminals.
FYI: We have countless prisons that are inestimably overcrowded
which continue to bulge with no relief in sight. This unpleasant,
all-consuming dilemma, alone, at the very least, requires the
expertise, energy and skill of the best strategic minds to reduce
the surmounting cost to house, feed, clothe and educate the
confined inmate population
Although local jails are generally operating under their stated
capacities, all state and federal prisons are extremely overcrowded
-- some as much as 33 percent higher than their official
capacities. Can you even begin to imagine the stifling atmosphere
"of stick it to 'em" projected onto and received by their
children?
Based on recent projections of 2011, the U.S. prison population has
increased by 13% - which is triple the growth of the entire
population as a whole - to more than 1.7 million. Supporting the
increase of incarcerated people will cost American taxpayers and
local/state budgets an estimated $27.5 billion. At that time,
another, in excess, of 4 million people will also be on probation
or parole.
Back to my original concern, however, what happens to the children
of this huge cancerous growth? The net effect is that states,
counties, courts, sheriffs, and administrators are actively looking
for ways to address the almost unmanageable issue. According to the
latest findings, it is now estimated that 7 million children, or 10
percent of the population under the age of 18, have a parent under
some form of correctional supervision. While research is limited in
this area, early indications from preliminary studies suggest, that
children of incarcerated parents are three to six times more likely
to exhibit violent or serious delinquent behavior.
Further Statistics:
* The (2008) Bureau of Justice Statistics estimates that 2.3
children are affected by the 1.1 million parents incarcerated in
prisons or jails, up from 500,000 children in 1991. {Recent
findings in statistical data reflect more increase}
* Approximately 75 percent of incarcerated women are mothers and
two-thirds have children under age 18.
* Seventy-two percent of female inmates with children under age 18
lived with those children before entering prison.
* Six percent of women entering prison are pregnant.
* From 1990 to 2000, the number of mothers in prison grew 87
percent, while fathers increased by 61 percent.
* Fifty-four percent of mothers in state prison said they never had
visits from their children.
* Approximately 55 percent of incarcerated men are fathers of
children under the age of 18.
* Thirty-two percent of men in prison have two or more children
under the age of 18.
* On any given day, there are approximately 1 million fathers
behind bars.
* Fifty-seven percent of fathers in state prison report never
having visits from their children.
The humanistic resolution concerning this life debasing problem
resulting from the forgotten society of the children of inmates
will not dissolve itself without consciously motivated
intervention. I have merely presented to you statistics without
presenting or dissecting the emotional, mental, financial,
spiritual, physical and educational needs of these deprived young
ones.
Every child is precious; their talents/gifts irreplaceable, and
their unique contribution significantly important to the entire
weaving of the intricate fabric of mankind. Their non-participation
in social change of verifiability affects us all. What can we do?
It begins with recognition of the sacred profound desire to move
into this technologically advanced meteorite propelled American
civilization with an upsurge in our consciousness.
We must embrace the 'poverty of incarcerated minds' which we don't
understand fully, comprehend completely and typically turn a deaf
ear to simply because our fertile minds are bombarded with other
time-consuming pleasurable so called productive activities. If we
can realize the catastrophic consequences of consuming uninvolved
plates of negligent concern, which are much too full of legal
atrocities, we may just get a cosmic glimpse of the unbearable
penalties these children are bearing.
"...Suffer not the children to come unto me: if anyone offends one
of least of these; he has done it unto me..." (Ancient esoteric
text) It's worth pondering when you get the time.
*Latest findings show further crippling increase
Prison Spawn: Sad Legacy Vested
April 26th, 2011 in Causes and Organizations, by Paula Andrea Pyle, MA
Send article feedback to this author.
PROCESSING REQUEST









































