Which means that California, like so many other states, including Georgia, spends more on prisons than on education.Going to a RAND Corporation study, in 1994 higher education received 12 percent of the state budget, corrections 9 percent, other services 9 percent (which included controlling environmental pollution, management of parks, fighting of brush fires, regulating insurance and other industries). By 2002 higher education took the biggest hit, along with “ other services,” both of which were virtually eliminated from the state budget. Corrections on the other hand went from 9 percent to 18 percent of the budget.
And not just public prisons anymore: Continue reading





So I happened to wake up and wanted to check something online.
No DSL service. (Yes, I rebooted the DSL modem.)
Determined the modem was working and the problem was beyond it in
AT&T’s network.
Thought maybe there’s a tree down on the line.









