The Kinzel podcast was basically how Kinzel got into a life of crime, his experiences in a high security penitentiary, and how his life after prison was. Aaron describes how hard it was for him to find work, and that he didn’t find a real job until after getting his Master’s Degree. Kinzel states how education was the ultimate factor that turned his life around for the better, and how other incarcerated individuals should seek opportunities and be more open, rather than the “overly-masculine” mentality that plagues many new prisoners. Kinzel closes off the podcast by encouraging anyone doing time to seek help and opportunities from the get-go, rather than make the mistake of waiting 9 years like he did. Overall, I felt like the podcast wasn’t just directed towards prisoners, but anyone who was seeking good advice. I say this because when he mentioned how it’s important to get involved within the community, and not just fill out a job application and hope for the best, it really hit home with me. This is because I applied to several jobs on the University of Michigan Dearborn’s campus, and I’ve never heard a single word back from any of them. Kinzel gave me the advice to actually go meet with the employers, see their faces, and show them that you need this job. I also felt like me and Kinzel had a similar situation. That being that we both disregarded the advice from wiser peers, until we got older and wiser ourselves. I think that anyone should take everything Kinzel said to heart, and that everybody deserves the gift of education and involvement.
One of the biggest changes to the criminal justice policy has to be regarding felonies. I just think that felonies are way too detrimental to any formerly incarcerated individual because they strip them of so many things that people in modern society need to have a healthy lifestyle. Kinzel’s story just proved my point even further, because he states that it was so hard for him to find a job, and that he sent hundreds of applications, but as soon as he checked the “felony” box, he never heard back from them again. I think felonies should not take any rights away from formerly incarcerated citizens, because I feel like the punishment they deserved was already served in prison. The way felonies are currently structured kind of reminds me of the “War on Drugs.” It reminds me of it because it was supposed to be a way to scare people into not doing drugs by showing what severe punishments would result if anyone did do drugs. However, we’ve seen time and time again that the war on drugs did little to nothing to help, and might have made the situation even worse. It just boils down to the fact that harsh punishments don’t equate to better citizens, which is why the recidivism rate is so high in our country. If we did away with the current meaning of a felony, then I predict that our recidivism rates would go down, and that we would have even more hard-working citizens putting money into our trillion-dollar debt country. I also think it would lead to happier prisoners, because they know that life outside bars will still yield them great hope, and will motivate them to do good things and probably even pursue education and all the things Kinzel advised in this podcast.