Incarceration, “Jewish Values,” and the URJ – Part One

prison

A recent post on a website sponsored by the Union for Reform Judaism urges Reform Jews to support the proposed Sentencing Reform and Corrections Act (S. 2123). Introduced in the United States Senate with impressive bipartisan support, the bill limits the imposition of mandatory minimum sentences especially for nonviolent drug offenders. The goal is to deal with the problems of over-criminalization and mass incarceration (the US leads the world in incarceration, both in absolute numbers and in percentage of the population). The post notes that the draconian penalties now imposed upon even nonviolent drug offenders fall disproportionately upon persons of color, though they as a group are no more likely than white people to use or sell illegal drugs. This clear racial disparity, the post says, is an offense against “Jewish values,” which is a reason why Jews in particular ought to support the reform effort.

That’s clearly a worthy goal. But troubles me is the way in which the URJ post justifies its claim that sentencing reform is in accord with “Jewish values”: Continue reading Incarceration, “Jewish Values,” and the URJ – Part One