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JakeH's avatar

I badmouthed Oliver in my last comment, but that segment on bail reform was compelling and fair. If there's a flaw, it's that he didn't address the non-bogus critique from the right, which is not entirely baseless fear-mongering. Murders are up, after all. But that would be a different sort of show. I thought the recent debate between conservative think-tanker Rafael Manguel and progressive lawyer Lara Bazelon on Bari Weiss's podcast, hosted by Kmele Foster, was pretty good.

I fear that the big crime reduction in the '90s relied in large measure on a Casablanca strategy -- rounding up the usual suspects in large numbers and locking them away. Progressives don't want to admit that this strategy, in a sense, "worked." Conservatives don't want to admit that the strategy only worked at the expense of fairness, justice, and the Constitution. Manguel's pooh-poohing of wrongful convictions, for example, as just a few eggs necessary to make the omelette was outrageous.

We remain in search of the right middle ground. I'm beginning to think that our criminal justice system is by turns both too harsh and too lenient. For every report of the unacceptably draconian, there's a report of a violent crime committed by someone whose ridiculous rap sheet suggests he should have been in prison.

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Jo A.'s avatar

I find it hard to believe that when there isn’t support for the Illinois constitutional amendment from people like you and me, that it could prevail. It is likely doomed by the fact that needed pension reform in Illinois is made difficult if not impossible by the current constitutional situation. Tying the hands of the legislature seems foolhardy.

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