My young friend Nathan just got out of juvie after having just turned
18. "So. Nathan. What are you going to do next? Go to community
college? Get a job? What have you got in mind for the rest of your life?"
Well, it appears that Nathan had already been making long-term plans
and already had his eye on a full time job -- and not just any mere
stop-gap employment gig either. What Nathan had in mind was a whole
big CAREER. It seems that during all of those childhood years he had
spent in brat camps, so-called behavior modification programs, group
homes and juvenile halls, Nathan had been developing a finely-tuned
set of skills and now he was ready to begin a life-long career that
would not only allow him to put those skills to use but to be provided
with life-time job security too!
"Last week," Nathan boasted, "I was gang-banging with
my homies and the Albany cops busted us and sent us to jail." Oh,
Nathan. Oh no.
"You shoulda seen me out at Rita." Santa Rita is the local
county jail. "I was so cooool. Some dude come up to me and asked
me was I gonna be in his gang." Apparently the name of his gang
was the Woods. "I told him no, no way! Then he gets all up in my
face and I get all up in his face and...." Oh great.
Apparently, a Wood is prison slang for a peckerwood. Did I really need
to know that?
"At Rita, the black guys hang out with the black guys and the white
guys hang out with the white guys. And this guy wasn't sure what I was
because I looked white but talked black." Nathan, the new Eminem.
"I ain't like that, but at Rita you don't get no choice. So once
I understood the situation, I was all good."
Yes indeed. After spending the last five or six years of his childhood
learning how to fit into the "institutional lifestyle" without
getting jumped too often, Nathan definitely had skills. Our Nathan had
found his calling all right. He was ready. He was trained. He was a
specialist. And he had discovered the exact place where he could put
all his well-honed job skills to work -- the California Department of
Correctional Facilities. In a flash, I saw the hand-writing on the wall.
Nathan was going to be spending the rest of his life in jail.
HOW'S THAT FOR JOB SECURITY!
"Then," Nathan continued, "they dropped all the charges
and I got out." But not for long. Three days later, Nathan was
back in jail. And will probably be there for the rest of his life. I
guess he just can't resist the PERKS!
America has the highest jail population in the world. Something like
one in every 32 American adults is now in jail, on probation or on parole.
That's seven million people on the prison employment fast track!
So. The next time you watch COPS on television, don't just see all those
police patrol officers as cops out arresting bad guys. Think of them
as employment agency headhunters -- using the latest recruitment techniques!
PS: It is a sad commentary on the economic viability of America today
that, for all too many of us, the top job you can get - with the best
health plan, the best housing perks, the best working conditions and
the best job security - is as an inmate in jail. It's not as dangerous
as meat-packing, not as tedious as stoop labor in the fields and definitely
more secure than being homeless and unemployed.
America also has gotten sidetracked.
BC Columnist Jane Stillwater is a freelance writer,
civil rights and peace activist living in Berkeley, California. Click
here to contact Ms. Stillwater.