Year: 2025
Education Behind Bars: Success Stories and Opportunities for Georgia Prisoners
Education Behind Bars shares powerful success stories of formerly incarcerated individuals who transformed their lives through prison education, highlighting real-world examples from GED achievements to advanced college degrees earned behind bars. The article explores educational opportunities currently available in Georgia prisons—including Ashland University’s degree program, Georgia State University courses, vocational training, and correspondence programs—and offers practical guidance on how incarcerated learners can enroll. Discover how education creates lasting change, reduces recidivism, and provides prisoners and their families with hope for a brighter, more stable future.
Georgia Prisons’ ACA Compliance vs. Inhumane Reality
Georgia prisons claim to meet ACA standards for humane treatment, yet investigations reveal a shocking reality: overcrowded cells, dangerously inadequate meals, and filthy conditions that defy basic human rights. Behind the official accreditation lies a disturbing pattern of neglect and abuse, exposing a system that’s ACA-compliant in name only.
The First Thing We Do, Let’s Kill All The Lawyers
The Corrupt Business of Justice in Georgia
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For centuries, people have distrusted lawyers—but in Georgia, that distrust is well-earned. Criminal defense attorneys demand massive upfront payments with no refunds. Judges and district attorneys—often former defense lawyers themselves—profit from the same system they claim to regulate. State lawmakers, many of them attorneys, write laws that fuel mass incarceration while quietly benefiting from the industry it creates.
Is Georgia’s legal system a system of justice, or a business designed to keep itself in power? With sky-high incarceration rates, private probation companies raking in millions, and public defenders drowning in impossible caseloads, one thing is clear: the system isn’t broken—it’s working exactly as those in power intended.
How did we get here? Can Georgia’s criminal justice system even be fixed? Or are we doomed to a future where mass incarceration is just another profit stream for the legal elite? Read the full investigation to find out.
Nutrition Neglect: How Georgia’s Prison Food Is Fueling Violence
Could something as basic as food be the hidden trigger behind prison riots and unrest?
In Georgia prisons, hunger isn’t just about discomfort—it’s fueling a crisis. Malnutrition and barely-edible meals at $1.80 a day are not just depriving incarcerated people of nutrition; they’re driving desperation, mental health breakdowns, and escalating violence behind bars.
In this investigative piece, we reveal the shocking truth about the state of food in Georgia’s correctional facilities and how it directly impacts safety, mental health, and rehabilitation—AND Violence!!
Georgia’s Corrections Spending vs Public Safety: A Costly Imbalance
Georgia’s Costly Corrections System: Billions Spent, Average Safety Returns
Georgia incarcerates more of its citizens than any democratic nation on Earth, with an incarceration rate of 881 per 100,000 people. Since 1970, the state has seen a staggering 671% increase in its prison population.
Despite pouring over $35 billion into its corrections system since 2000—with annual spending set to reach nearly $1.9 billion in 2025—Georgia’s public safety outcomes remain average. The state ranks just 20th nationally in crime statistics, with violent crime rates only slightly below national averages.
One in every eighteen Georgia adults is under some form of correctional supervision—73% higher than Pennsylvania, the state with the second-highest rate. 1 in 7 adults in Georgia currently have a felony conviction. This massive investment in incarceration has failed to deliver exceptional safety results, while many states with dramatically lower imprisonment rates achieved better crime statistics.
Is Georgia wasting billions on a corrections approach that doesn’t work?
Ignoring the Trap: How Indifference Fuels Georgia’s Prison Crisis
When a mouse fears a mousetrap, its plea for help goes ignored by those who think the danger isn’t theirs. Yet, tragedy reveals a profound truth: injustice and neglect, even behind prison walls, ripple outward, affecting us all. This powerful parable reveals why empathy for those incarcerated isn’t just humane—it’s essential.