Seems ameriKKKa is preparing to house future offspring of the Rachets, Pookies and criminal immigrant class.
Inner city education is very poor, kids barely learn much that will actually give them a strong future.
White devil doesn't want to fix a corrupt judicial system, white devils rather build bigger prisons.
I also believe these mega prison will house criminal immigrant class presently pouring into ameriKKKA.
These rural areas of ameriKKKa don't have a strong economy, locking folks up will bring jobs, and Govt funding to these poor areas and give poor white trash an economist base for income and healthcare.
What say you?
news.yahoo.com
The Alabama prison is expected to be completed in May 2026, according to the contract terms. In Nebraska, construction is expected to begin in the fall of 2024. The expected opening date for the Georgia prison, once plans are approved, is 2029.
At the same time, plans for additional prison construction projects, including a new jail to replace New York City’s notorious Rikers Island, are also beginning to take shape.
New prisons will be better for those living — and working — inside them
“This is about not just creating a safer environment for the inmates. This is about a safer environment for our corrections officers to work in.” — State Rep. Rex Reynolds, chairman of the Alabama House General Fund Budget Committee, to the Associated Press
The Alabama project has been “cloaked in secrecy”
“From the beginning, this project has been cloaked in secrecy. The state and the firms it has hired have denied public information requests that could reveal what exactly tax money is buying or who is getting paid. They have refused to show so much as what this prison would look like, citing security issues. ... What seems clear now is that no one ever really knew how much this was going to cost.” — Kyle Whitmire, AL.com
Inner city education is very poor, kids barely learn much that will actually give them a strong future.
White devil doesn't want to fix a corrupt judicial system, white devils rather build bigger prisons.
I also believe these mega prison will house criminal immigrant class presently pouring into ameriKKKA.
These rural areas of ameriKKKa don't have a strong economy, locking folks up will bring jobs, and Govt funding to these poor areas and give poor white trash an economist base for income and healthcare.
What say you?
Billion-dollar supersize prisons are slated to be built across the U.S. But do they help or hurt public safety?
At least three states are moving forward with plans for larger, pricier prisons, with proponents of such facilities citing the need to address issues of overcrowding, poor sanitation conditions and a lack of mental health resources in the current facilities.
Billion-dollar supersize prisons are slated to be built across the U.S. But do they help or hurt public safety?
The Alabama prison is expected to be completed in May 2026, according to the contract terms. In Nebraska, construction is expected to begin in the fall of 2024. The expected opening date for the Georgia prison, once plans are approved, is 2029.
At the same time, plans for additional prison construction projects, including a new jail to replace New York City’s notorious Rikers Island, are also beginning to take shape.
New prisons will be better for those living — and working — inside them
“This is about not just creating a safer environment for the inmates. This is about a safer environment for our corrections officers to work in.” — State Rep. Rex Reynolds, chairman of the Alabama House General Fund Budget Committee, to the Associated Press
The Alabama project has been “cloaked in secrecy”
“From the beginning, this project has been cloaked in secrecy. The state and the firms it has hired have denied public information requests that could reveal what exactly tax money is buying or who is getting paid. They have refused to show so much as what this prison would look like, citing security issues. ... What seems clear now is that no one ever really knew how much this was going to cost.” — Kyle Whitmire, AL.com