THE “WALL STREET” SLAVE PRISON INDUSTRY

THIS SITE HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH AUTOMOBILES!  SLAVERY YES….

PLEASE VIEW:      WWW.TOYOTARUNAWAY.ORG

BUT YOU MUST LOG IN FROM A BROWSER.  THE ONE ABOVE WORKS JUST FINE.  WHERE YOU SEE THE HTTP: AT THE TOP OF YOUR SCREEN-TYPE IN TOYOTARUNAWAY.ORG THAT’S ALL.

About these ads

2 Responses to THE “WALL STREET” SLAVE PRISON INDUSTRY

  1. Change is coming in the way we incarcerate Americans, because what we are doing now does not make sense, economically or in human terms. The Thirteenth Amendment abolishing chattel slavery had an exception for those duly convicted of crime. We ought to pay prisoners to work, but not as much as free people earn for the same work. They can make consumer goods now made overseas exclusively to avoid competing with American free labor and business. Prisoners want to work, but there are not enough prison jobs for them due to overcrowding and because the state monopolizes their labor. The entire legal framework keeps prison industries from thriving and is handicapped because prison-made goods cannot be sold in some states and cannot cross state lines easily.

    For practical, market-oriented, faith-friendly, pro-American, racially neutral and proven methods of boosting prison labor, please read my new book, “Prison & Slavery – A Surprising Comparison.” It’s for sale on Amazon.com (with a free “Look Inside” feature and also in Kindle), BarnesandNoble.com (with their free “See Inside” feature), and the $5.00 e-book is on my website at Outskirts Press. This book will shock some people, but I studied things for three years and it makes sense.

    John Dewar Gleissner, Esq., author of “Prison & Slavery – A Surprising Comparison”

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s