Communicated
In just a few days, a historical prison reform bill will, with Hashem’s help, be brought to the Senate floor for a vote.
After 10 years of fighting, rallying and lobbying, a passionate Rabbi Moshe Margeretten will hopefully succeed in changing the laws of the American correctional system.
If the Senate votes to approve the First Step Act, it will reduce sentencing time drastically and offer better rehabilitation programs for thousands of inmates.
It all started when Rabbi Margeretten saw a family of kids asking their father the Mah nishtanah at a prison visiting hall. The sight was too much to bare and with no prior experience or knowledge in the political or legal world, he jumped right in.
After years of ups and downs, and over $4,000,000 in lobby and legal team costs, the final and most critical moment is here.
Yet in order to proceed, Rabbi Margeretten needs the help of every individual! In the next 60 hours, they must raise $1,000,000 to fund the exorbitant costs it takes to hire thebest teams to represent the bill.
“This bill will reunite families, it will give inmates a chance to start over, it will give children their fathers back,” explains Rabbi Margaretten. “And you have the chance to be a part of this history defining moment.”
As families light the 8th candle, as R’ Sholom Mordechai Rubashkin celebrates the first anniversary of his release, and laughter and love fills every corner, let’s not forget those who are left behind.
Act Now. Spread Light. Make a change.
With the abuse that goes in behind bars, lack of safety, lack of true rehabilitation and time wasted, most prison sentences do not do much other than make some prisoners worse and more mentally ill from being caged.
So lets say a white collar crook steals your half of the business and you are left with almost nothing. What will be left to deter folks from stealing if the slap on the wrist is even milder than it is now in many cases. Corruption is as bad a ever and for a goy to have no fear of penalty we have chaos.
Will the conservatives vote it through now, knowing that if they wait until next year, the new progressive Democrats who were recently voted in, will demand much more in terms of criminal justice reform. Will the new progressive Democrats tie the bill to Marijuana reform ?
As what Jared Kushner was referring to in his recent interview?