December is make-or-break for Mother Jones’ fundraising. We have a $350,000 goal that we simply cannot afford to miss. And in "No Cute Headlines or Manipulative BS," we explain, as matter-of-fact as we can, how being a nonprofit means everything to us. Bottom line: Donations big and small make up 74 percent of our budget this year and are urgently needed this month, and all online gifts will be matched and go twice as far until we hit our goal. Please pitch in if you can right now.
December is make-or-break for Mother Jones’ fundraising, and in "No Cute Headlines or Manipulative BS," we hope that giving it to you as matter-of-fact as we can will work to raise the $350,000 we need to raise this month. Donations make up 74 percent of our budget this year, and all online gifts will be matched and go twice as far until we hit our goal.
Ahead of the debate, Booker signaled he planned to attack the former vice president over his role in the 1994 crime bill, which Biden helped write and, as Vox’s German Lopez has reported, experts now see as one of the major contributors to mass incarceration in the 1990s.
Huh. Did Lopez really say that? Let’s click and find out:
The 1994 law didn’t really cause mass incarceration
….That’s reflected in the statistics, which show that incarceration rates were climbing rapidly before the 1994 crime law and actually started leveling off a few years after.
Incarceration rates approximately quadrupled between 1970 and 1994, and flattened almost immediately thereafter. The 1994 crime bill simply didn’t have anything to do with it.
I realize this is politically impossible, but sometimes I wish Joe Biden would just flat out defend the 1994 bill. “You know what happened after that bill passed?” he should ask. “Crime went down, that’s what.” This would be pretty misleading since we all know what really caused the crime decline,¹ and it’s unlikely the 1994 bill had much impact on its own. Still, it’s at least a true statement.
¹The phaseout of leaded gasoline. But you already knew that, right?
Can you pitch in a few bucks to help fund Mother Jones' investigative journalism? We're a nonprofit (so it's tax-deductible), and reader support makes up about two-thirds of our budget.
We noticed you have an ad blocker on. Can you pitch in a few bucks to help fund Mother Jones' investigative journalism?
This is where you come in.
We’re a nonprofit newsroom, because the truth-telling investigations
we’re known for don’t happen under corporate ownership. We shine a
bright light into the dark corners of power and report the facts that
other media are afraid to touch.
The essential ingredient that makes this possible? Readers like you.
Please stand with Mother Jones and make a donation today.
These are dangerous times, and we’ve got a lot of hard, consequential
work to do. But we can’t do it without reader support.
This is where you come in.
We’re a nonprofit newsroom, because the truth-telling investigations
we’re known for don’t happen under corporate ownership. We shine a
bright light into the dark corners of power and report the facts that
other media are afraid to touch.
The essential ingredient that makes this possible? Readers like you.
Please stand with Mother Jones and make a donation today.
These are dangerous times, and we’ve got a lot of hard, consequential
work to do. But we can’t do it without reader support.