Virginia Prisons Accountability Committee: HAVE VIRGINIA GOVERNOR GLENN YOUNGKIN AND ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE COMMONWEALTH JASON MIYARES EVER HAD TO DEFEND THEIR VIEWS ON THE STATES PRISON SYSTEM? By William Thorpe

Thursday, May 16, 2024

HAVE VIRGINIA GOVERNOR GLENN YOUNGKIN AND ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE COMMONWEALTH JASON MIYARES EVER HAD TO DEFEND THEIR VIEWS ON THE STATES PRISON SYSTEM? By William Thorpe

Virginia spends more money on its Department Of Corrections and The Prison system than any other State Agency, meaning The Virginia Department of Corrections, is the crown jewel of The State, its highest achievement, the crème de la crème of its intellectual effort or labors and I'm not being facetious, because one doesn't spend the most money on meaningless and clownish things. So we have to conclude that if the administration of a prison system is gobbling up a major portion of The People of Virginia's economic labors at the expense of educating its kids, providing health care that wouldn't bankrupt the people, retraining its workers and providing a just and practical support system for those out of jobs and The Commonwealth's society writ large, then The Virginia Department of Corrections has to be realizing the aspirations pursued by The Constitution of Virginia, due to the above asserted supremacy of State investiture. As such with this established, which by the way is irrefutable, because once again Virginia wouldn't be spending most of its quintessential value on a lie right? Currently the Virginia Executive is embodied by Governor Glenn Youngkin and Attorney General Jason Miyares who not only represent but also oppose The Virginian and are immediately responsible for what we know has forever been the true nature and priority of Virginia's government which is Virginia's dehumanization of its youth by valuing imprisoning them at the expense of their education. Its been a ritualistic genuflection at the altar of scapegoat politics, that the first thing that comes out of the "right" side of any Virginia politician's mouth is, "tough on crime, lock em up and throw away the key", without any interrogation from media that's constitutionally tasked to do just that, because who among The People will dare challenge whatever, "tough on crime "is supposed to mean right? So what we currently have are, Jason Miyares being the most aggressive between him and Glenn Youngkin, in asserting that a imprisoned person hasn't served "enough" prison time. Again media that's constitutionally tasked to give us, The People, clarity and insight into what the "tough on crime "mouth is saying, abrogates the task and by doing so seeds and fertilizes the environment for the exploitation of scape gloating politics which is that axiomatic one-eyed king in the land of the blind. If Jason Miyares in his unbridled ambition to succeed Governor Glenn Youngkin as Virginia governor is fundamentally basing his quest on the assertion of imprisoned persons not serving "enough" prison time, then the obvious question is how much "time" is enough and satisfactory for dictator in waiting Jason Miyares, because if Jason Miyares isn't insinuating himself as dictator between The People and The Law, then the adjudicative process of Virginia law has already determined sentence for the convicted and if anyone, including Herr Dictator Miyares has issues with prison sentences, then in this 21st century we need scientific basis showing that x amount of imprisonment equals y behavior, colloquial antebellum based suppositions won't do.

By William Thorpe

I'm William Thorpe Virginia exiled me to the Texas prison system. I'm solitary confined at the Wainwright Unit

3 comments :

Anonymous said...

Thank you for such insight. I too have wondered how and what analysis and/or studies have been proven as evidence on how much prison time is sufficient for x crime and for specifically, what is the outcome or what has been the outcome? As you stated “determining spending x years in prison produces y results. I have a family member that was sentenced to well over 2 years, eventually was transferred to prison on VA. It was so deficient in many areas and I was scared for my loved one. It’s so easy to get drugs in our prisons so if someone, and it seems most do, has a substance use disorder, this environment is so not conducive to sobriety or recovery. Try as they may, the SUD treatment program in VADOC prisons is not set up to accomplish what it is supposed to be doing and that is helping people with SUD.

Anonymous said...

I believe strongly that they should have parole in Virginia In any other state many that are serving would be out on parole. And we would not be taxed . And it’s in human the way they treat inmates . Some are there and should not be . My sons not in Virginia prison but has to live by their law where he’s at . And we keep having trouble visiting him where he’s at we moved him so we could see him and can’t still he’s served over 17 years and won’t be out until he’s 53 they gave him a life sentence on a plea bargain it’s so sad . If he was here in Missouri he would be out . Working and seeing us . They keep it so they make money .

Anonymous said...

We the People are going back to Constitutional Law this year 2024 and all things will get better but , it starts with everyone getting educated to become free from this Tyrants in charge of our government. It's called Government by Concent, education starts here www.nationallibertyalliance.org