
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Often overlooked, ignored and damned, the cycle that throws people in the prison system and spits them out is a calamitous yet integral part of the American experience. People who find themselves at the short end of the stick—usually poor, uneducated and of a minority race—find themselves worse off, excommunicated from society and filled with more trauma and neglect. Keri Blakinger was not poor, was highly educated and white, yet found herself in the same spot and was treated in the same cold and dehumanized fashion. In prison, as Blakinger points out, “You become a number.”
By Scheerpost4.4
385385 ratings
Often overlooked, ignored and damned, the cycle that throws people in the prison system and spits them out is a calamitous yet integral part of the American experience. People who find themselves at the short end of the stick—usually poor, uneducated and of a minority race—find themselves worse off, excommunicated from society and filled with more trauma and neglect. Keri Blakinger was not poor, was highly educated and white, yet found herself in the same spot and was treated in the same cold and dehumanized fashion. In prison, as Blakinger points out, “You become a number.”

580 Listeners

5,133 Listeners

1,985 Listeners

1,284 Listeners

619 Listeners

670 Listeners

1,109 Listeners

537 Listeners

518 Listeners

1,460 Listeners

435 Listeners

1,210 Listeners

155 Listeners

1,511 Listeners

1,588 Listeners

6,125 Listeners

737 Listeners

1,905 Listeners

4,452 Listeners

2,707 Listeners

557 Listeners

571 Listeners

324 Listeners

378 Listeners

487 Listeners