It's utterly wild how there are people in the comments saying "maybe slave labor is actually good for the slaves."
I don't even necessarily disagree with that possibility - sure, work provides meaning in life, it's better than sitting in a cage.
The issue here is the perverse incentives of corporations profiting off of prison labor. Same issue as private prisons - no one should be making money off of keeping people in cages. If we as a society have to do that, fine, but it's unconscionable that it be a profitable venture.
I don't know enough about the US system to comment on that.
However in Germany a large part of prison work is around qualification. The inmates can learn a job and once released have a useable qualification for finding a job. Most prisons in that way are self supporting. Meaning food is made by inmates who are cooks or are learning to be a chef. Repairs for heating or doors or furniture are made by inmates etc. Only a small part of the work is for external customers and even a smaller part is for the prison's online Shop like https://www.haftsache.de/
And yes salaries are low, but they get free food and accomodation and aren't there for fun but punishment ...
One common US prison job is seasonal firefighter, for forest fire season in California. The irony is that as soon as prisoners are released, being convicted felons, they can never work as firefighters. US prison labor is about money while incarcerated, never about life after release.
>Gavin Newsom on Friday signed a bill allowing inmate firefighters to have their records expunged, clearing the path for them to be eligible for firefighting jobs upon release.
There are a couple reasons not to treat the problem as solved:
First,
> Law enforcement groups and prosecutors opposed the bill saying the former inmates pose a danger to the public.
The culture that creates these restrictions is still there, it's still the predominant view from law enforcement and prosecutors that prison labor should be punitive, not rehabilitative. None of the people who created and supported that system are gone, and they still have an outsized degree of control over how that system works.
Second,
> The bill, sponsored by Democratic Assemblywoman Eloise Reyes, lets prisoners who received "valuable training and [placed] themselves in danger assisting firefighters to defend the life and property of Californians" to petition the courts to dismiss their convictions after completing their sentences.
A right to petition is not a guarantee that your petition will succeed.
Third,
When you dig into the details, the bill only allows removing the specific convictions that the prisoner was serving time for while they were a firefighter. If they had previous convictions or served time in the past, they'll still be restricted from getting EMT certification.
Fourth,
When you dig into the details, this bill actually doesn't get rid of restrictions on felons. It provides prisoners with a very narrow path to remove their felon status. That's not really the same thing as getting rid of the restrictions, and it's only available to prisoners who have "[placed] themselves in danger assisting firefighters".
Think of it this way: if it's illegal for women to vote, and instead of letting women vote I instead say, "here's a pathway to get the courts to declare you a man", then I haven't really gotten rid of the restriction on voting, and it would be inaccurate to say that my system provided women with the right to vote.
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It's good that prisoners have at least some recourse that they can use to try and benefit from the life threatening work they did in prison, but it's a far cry from solving the overall problem, and it arguably doesn't even fully solve this specific problem.
The vast majority of these programs are complete garbage. Yeah, it helps a few people, but they tend to come with tons of catches. Almost all crimes should be expungable, or it should be illegal to use the information for jobs/housing (may be trickier, which is why states are going with expungement). There's obvious exceptions, but there's no reason for someone to get denied a desk job, service job, trade/manual labor, due to getting caught with coke or DUIs... I don't care if they have five of them. Sometime within 1-10 years this information should not be used.
I'm currently going through the process of trying to get my own record expunged, the entire thing is a complete joke.
The amount of forms that need to be filled out is obscene. Determining which forms need to be filled out is a nightmarish exercise all to its own. Many of them need to be submitted in person. Email and online submission forms apparently don't exist. Each step has an absurdly short deadline for the the petitioner, and multiple month turnaround times for the state.
Then comes the fees. I had to pay out several thousand between attorney fees, application fees, filing fees.... Then come additional charges for each certified copy that you need, as you need to send one copy to any facility that would have any record for you. In my case, that came out to be 13 different facilities. Thankfully I've managed to get a decently paying job, but for most of those trying to get their life back in order, this is a complete non-starter.
I'm still in the process of trying to do this, and have been working on it for months now. It was made apparent to me that the process is designed extremely asymmetrically, and is just another form of exerting control.
Edit: This process will likely vary from state to state, but that's just what I've experienced.
Yeah, I don't want to say what state I'm in, but recent attempts to reform have been stymied by the fucking democrats. Politicians are utterly gutless to do anything remotely progressive (and the thing that was shut down was NOT very progressive)
It's just an acknowledgment of the fact that the system has zero trust in itself. The prison is supposed to produce a functioning member of society. Instead, it can swallow a minor offender and spit out a dangerous criminal.
The US prison system is not designed to reform anyone. Its goal is purely punitive.
The financial incentives are set up to produce as many dangerous criminals as possible. Without repeat offenders, many private prisons would have to close.
The solution is simple: The US should actually ban slavery and should also ban private prisons.
It should replace private prisons with ones that are rewarded when their former prisoners become productive members of society.
There should also be a cap on the ratio of prison spending to education, mental health, and community service programs.
For what it's worth, In my understanding the prisons themselves aren't necessarily private. At the federal level, most are not, but everything is run by for-profit contracting firms.
Private prisons incarcerate 8% of the total US prison population. I strongly suspect if they were banned, little would change for the average inmate.
The rest of the inmates are in prisons that are state-owned and thus inherently nonprofit, and the guards & other staff are either state or federal workers. Contractors do things like provide commissary goods or run the inmate telephone system, but the guard in the tower at your local prison is a state employee.
Hey, so IMO private prisons are a distraction and tiny part of the problem. The prison industrial complex is more substantial (but still just a piece). It's not just the prisons, but the contractors and LEO/justice personnel involved in putting bodies into the system and making sure as many lives are ruined as possible.
This is ignoring the not-so-historical use of prisons as a way to disenfranchise ones political rivals be they black, communist, socialist, antiwar, or whatever.
Not sure what you’re getting at here. An uncharitable reading would be that you’re implying that Normway keeps political dissidents prisoner, but I’m sure you wouldn’t mean to claim something so absurd.
Ys. The use of the courts and prisons as tools to quell dissent and maintain power for a minority prohibits efforts to reform prisons. To effect meaningful prison reform we must address the use of courts as weapons to silence political rivals. We should also be taking a hard look at selective enforcement, and lack of law enforcement action against criminal acts perpetrated by wealthy people. Steps like drug decriminalization, free career training/college programs for everyone, and quality rehabilitation are necessary to these ends but do nothing to right the generational injustices afflicted on the families caught up in the prison system.
Because its a risky job with a high esprit-de-corp. Similar to allowing criminals to be soldiers, think of the damage it does to the esteem of folks already in that position to be told "you are in the same class as these dregs".
Why would your morale drop if you would work with someone who spent some time in prison 5 or 10 years ago? I don't see why it should.
And why are they "dregs"? The entire attitude towards crime and punishment in the US is seriously FUBAR IMHO; people seem to think everyone who spent any time in prison as some psychopath ready to loot, plunder, rape, and murder at the drop of a hat. In reality, it's not like that at all. People are regularly shackled during trails like they're some Hannibal Lector with superpowers. Police will chase people even for fairly minor offences putting everyone's life at risk, as if they're chasing Ted Bundy. AFAIK it's the only country that routinely does drug tests on employees as if every drug user is a rabid maniac and a danger to the company.
The US puts more people in prison than China. Before the internment camps in Xinjang really took off it was more even in absolute numbers, and now even with the internment it's still significantly higher per capita. If you're locking up more people than a country which literally locks up people based purely on their ethnicity then you're doing something wrong. Very wrong.
People have been talking about the police a lot in the last year. But that's not really the core problem, it's just a consequence of the toxic and dehumanizing attitude much of the country seems to have.
The best salesperson I've ever worked with was a convicted felon. That "dreg" could outsell every single person at the company. The damage he did to my self-esteem was that I sucked at sales and needed to do better. Thankfully, he outclassed me as a salesperson and gave me insight of what it takes to close a deal.
In my area (Tampa, Florida) firefighter jobs are very desirable and there's a lot of competition for them. They're difficult to land. They're very stable, they give you enough free time that many firefighters have second professions/businesses, some days you don't have to work.
The role of firefighters has also expanded well beyond fighting fires - they also act as medical first responders, and it's required here that firefighters get EMT certified in their first two years on the job, or else they get fired.
So it's... kind of a position with a lot of public trust. I'm not saying I agree with this, but I imagine it would be very bad for a city's leadership if their firefighters went to someone's home for a medical issue and then robbed them.
I don't think GP's point was that firefighting should be a career open to felons, but rather that the fact that it's not, combines with the fact that prisoners are often doing firefighter work, means that clearly it's not about giving them an avenue for getting qualifications and get a job when they're released.
Structure fires in modern buildings are actually kind of rare such that even in cities it wouldn’t be financially viable to keep a full staff of firefighters paid and equipped. This is (one) reason that fire crews are sent on medical calls. Yes - they might get there first which saves lives, but it also creates an additional justification to keep them paid. The majority of calls for city firefighters are medical, not fire related.
Modern firefighting has little to do with fire. Trucks are far more likely to respond to traffic accidents or general medical emergencies than to structure fires.
The numbers shift from one area to another. I have family who are volunteers in a very small highway town. For them it is 80% road accidents and 10% old people falling. Better/closer ambulance support would mean fewer firefighters responding to slip-and-break-hip emergencies, but that is the reality of their local. In farm country it is more machinery-related accidents, things that probably don't happen much in a city.
Barns tend to comprise a large percentage of structure fires. Also, it seems many newer apartment buildings have caught fire in recent times. The older buildings were pretty much concrete or block. They build the newer stuff kinda flimsy in my opinion.
Because they have enough volunteers not to need to pay people.
Really we simply doing pay based on risks. It’s far more dangerous to be a long distance trucker than a police officer, but truckers don’t get respect, pensions, or high pay.
Well, a lot of rural departments are having trouble getting enough new volunteers to replace older ones.
I mean, just look at our type of jobs in IT. I can't just tell my employer that I'm leaving for a call. It seems it was the small community businesses that were the most understanding when you had to leave for that type of service.
Okay, it's not true... now.... but it's super fucked up that it was still true literally less than a year ago. So as an indicator that our systems incentives are completely messed up. It's still valid. The system hasn't changed in a year... just our need for firefighters.
It's still true. "Allowing ex-inmates to petition courts to expunge their records so they can get jobs as firefighters" is not the same as "allowing ex-inmates to get jobs as firefighters".
>Are they there for punishment or for rehabilitation?
A third possibility is 'removal'. The idea is that a potential criminal is under the control of the state.
Correlation vs. causation and all that, but given the likely lack of results from either punishment or rehabilitation, perhaps that is what happened here.
"A third possibility is 'removal'. The idea is that a potential criminal is under the control of the state."
The problem with this approach is that its counterproductive, as many prisons act as graduate schools in crime.
Combine this with society mandating severely curtailed opportunities to participate in non-criminal work and you get a perfect storm where prisons churn out more hardened criminals, which leads to more crime, which leads to more prisoners.
>The problem with this approach is that its counterproductive, as many prisons act as graduate schools in crime.
As are the streets.
In this model of 'removal', I'd say that the main point of a prison is to take a more crime prone demographic (by that I mean age, gender, ethnicity, location, wealth...the whole ball of wax) off the street until they are older and less likely to do things that the straights don't like.
In the long run, I would expect for universal surveillance (and the increased ability to parse data we are seeing) to be the main driving force in social control rather than mere warehousing.
Why can't we have a system that provides both removal and rehabilitation?
If I were designing a prison system, it would be a mini-society. Only a minimal set of rules would be specified and enforced by those outside the prison. The rest would be voted on and enforced by the prisoners themselves.
They do that in Honduras, Bolivia, and other developing nations. I've seen footage of one such prison where the inmates voted to exile the prisoners with AIDS to the dump, where they were forced to scavenge for food to survive.
Well, punitive generally means make them suffer, which likely counteracts progress towards rehabilitation.
If you can accept "comprehending and accepting your crimes and their consequences, and having a genuine desire to return to society as a member of it looking to make a positive contribution" as punishement then they are compatible.
But you want to transition somebody psychologically from being in the out-group "criminals" to re-joining the in-group of law-abiding citizens, and most purely punitive measures actively make a person feel further pushed into the out-group.
You want strong incentives and support towards positive re-integration. I always thought that repeat offences ought to be the most damning statistic for prisons, and their performance and budget should mostly be influenced by success on that metric.
Profit from holding prisoners and their labour are basically negative incentives to improve the repeat offending rates.
I mean, that’s one hypothesis among many. An alternate hypothesis is that prison should be uncomfortable and unpleasant as a deterrent. I think it’s overly simplistic to say that punishment is about suffering—parents might punish a child for bad behavior, but the goal isn’t to make them suffer (and indeed being grounded is hardly “suffering”) but rather to teach them good behavior. So we can at least say that in some cases punishment is compatible with rehabilitation. Notably, there can be a kind of dignity in discipline, and I think there’s a subtle distinction between that kind of dignified correction and cruelty.
I can imagine a prison system with a redemptive quality where prisoners feel they’ve labored to redeem themselves to society (this requires society to esteem them accordingly to some degree) and learned a valuable trade in the process.
I think liberals (myself included) would do better to cast that vision for prison reform, rather than the current messaging which IMO comes across as hyperbolic (e.g., “literal slavery”) and naive (prison should be a comfortable place and the rest will work itself out).
I'm not sure they've shown that prison is ineffective as a deterrent, but I've heard of studies which indicate that returns on increasingly punitive measures diminish. "Prison is a not an effective deterrent" means that no one factors it into their calculus about whether or not to commit a crime, and that seems very hard to believe.
To be quite clear, I don't believe that prison's sole value is a deterrent. I think there's an element of justice (criminals should have to pay for their crimes), an element of deterrence (prison should make criminals think twice--this feels intertwined with 'justice' and yet distinct), an element of rehabilitation (to the extent that we can rehabilitate prisoners, we should), but mostly I think there is significant social value in protecting innocent people by keeping harmful people away from innocent people.
Even if the deterrent effect is nil and even if you don't believe in justice (or for many of my fellow liberals, you reserve 'justice' for crimes that offend you, such as white collar crimes), I would still keep prisons around for the protection of the innocent. That said, I have an optimistic view on the potential for prisons.
Rehabilitation implies getting help from people who can rehabilitate. While there is charity and volunteering to some extent, the needs of rehabilitation throughout society (not just in prison) is so great that the amount of work people are willing to give for free is not enough.
For the freely given work, it becomes a question of who deserves it. Giving it to a prisoner who is supposed to be punished instead of a law abiding individual stuck at a dead end job appears to be rewarding the individual with bad behavior. The same reasoning also applies when there isn't enough free labor for rehabilitation and money is spent buying more labor.
If at any point the rehabilitation offered within prisons is better than that offered for free outside of prisons then it becomes a reward. Rewards are generally viewed as incompatible with punishment and seen as cancelling out, when they are of similar scales.
Being rehabilitated in a place where you have no freedom is generally not a reward. Working on yourself is hard and often painful. By this logic, getting clean is a reward to substance abuse disorder so we shouldn’t offer programs to substance abuse disorder sufferers to get them clean. But we know that not offering these programs practically guarantees continued suffering.
Additionally, the notion that there isn’t enough social programs to go around is a lie. There most certainly is enough social programs to go around, but our elected officials in America want to bolster the ultra wealthy and the mega corps instead. This is an artificial scarcity mindset that tries to make us pull each other down.
>By this logic, getting clean is a reward to substance abuse disorder so we shouldn’t offer programs to substance abuse disorder sufferers to get them clean.
Is your help getting clean only offered to substance abusers that assaulted another person? If so, you might see why someone who is addicted, wants but can't afford help, and who hasn't assaulted someone might not appreciate the help only going to those who have assaulted another.
If the help is offered to everyone who needs it, then the logic wouldn't apply.
>Additionally, the notion that there isn’t enough social programs to go around is a lie.
Where did I suggest such? I pointed out that there isn't enough purely from volunteering, meaning you'll have to spend money. I specifically pointed out that money could be spend buying more.
>and money is spent buying more labor.
Right there. My argument is that the money spent on buying more help follows the same issue. Spending money to help someone who committed a crime that you wouldn't spend to help them if they hadn't is not a widely agreeable position.
>Spending money to help someone who committed a crime that you wouldn't spend to help them if they hadn't is not a widely agreeable position.
It seems to me that doing so is a great idea. Firstly, given that these folks have (presumably so, but many folks plead guilty to crimes they have not committed, which is a travesty, but beyond the scope of this comment) committed a crime is pretty clear proof that they are having issues integrating into society.
Secondly, except for those who commit violent crimes (a minority of inmates), most folks will be released at some point.
Once those folks are released, they are now responsible for taking care of themselves economically and living in society. If we continue doing what we do now, by not giving them tools and skills to reintegrate into society and stigmatizing them for life, we severely limit their ability to live as productive members of society.
This has a negative effect on society (in that these folks are being actively discriminated against and shut out from many decent jobs) and limits the productivity and economic output of these people in performing jobs compatible with society.
Those are huge negatives for all of us. We're reducing economic output, creating pariahs and increasing the possibility of recidivism, which costs society more when those folks re-offend and are then re-incarcerated.
As such, I posit that rehabilitation along with reducing/removing the stigma of a felony conviction would increase both economic output and societal well-being.
And IMHO those benefits far outweigh how much you (or anyone else) wants to stick it to those dirty criminals.
>And IMHO those benefits far outweigh how much you (or anyone else) wants to stick it to those dirty criminals.
To clarify, I'm explaining why it would be unpopular. I'm not saying I personally agree with it. Please try to not conflate the argument with the person.
Many people aren't great at seeing long term or higher order effects. I'm explaining the immediate visibility problem, where someone is told that more help is provided for criminals than non-criminals. That the long term effects are worth it doesn't work well to convince people whose views are short term. We can see many government problems resulting from prioritizing short term reasoning.
Take the war on drugs. People see drugs, think "I should ban it so my kids won't be hooked on drugs." They don't think of the long term effects of a war on drug, and as a result we have our modern day war on drugs with all the harm it has brought us.
I'm sure this is true in the US, but this is a problem with the US prison system and the extremely strange system of using volunteers. In many places (Scandinavia, Germany, etc.) the people who help rehabilitate are hired by the state and the main reason for prison is rehabilitation first, punishment second.
To clarify, I was giving an example of both volunteering and hiring. Hiring someone doesn't change the economics of it, maybe even making it worse because you now have the state spending someone on a law breaker. Does it spend as much money to hire help for those who don't break the law who could benefit from the services offered?
The real main difference is when people stop viewing prison as being for punishment, but that goes back to the original question of why is rehabilitation incompatible with punishment. If prison is seen as being for rehabilitation and containment for safety while rehabilitating then the comparison is different (though ideally the services offered shouldn't be better than those offered to people who follow the law).
I believe the biggest differentiators are inherited from the fact that many countries who aim for rehabilitation first are also countries with free access to the kind of help many people incarcerated might need: free access to a psychiatrist or doctor, anger management therapy, educational help, etc. So not only are most of the money already earmarked for this but the extra it does costs to offer the help to inmates that aren't allowed to leave the prison to access these services are likely less than the cost of a punishment-first system. The lower recidivism rate added with the fact that these systems also rarely label people as former inmates, which often would block access to well-paid jobs that pay more taxes, must be a lot cheaper but... I can't be arsed to look it up.
As an example from around here (Denmark) if someone want to hire a person they do not by default know that this is a former inmate and they will only have access to this information if the job somehow is related to the crime committed in the past. You could ask the job applicant to bring a form from the police but if the sentence is unrelated to the job (or a set amount of years have gone past if it is a lesser crime) the form will be completely blank. Only related crimes will be shown.
All in all I believe that such a system is also punishment (few like to be locked up) but this rehalibation-first-system will punish everyone else less in the long run.
No, they are saying that fruit picking is not a job that requires training or qualifications. So prison work picking fruit does not help prepare the inmate for life after release.
Are you saying that people in prison lack training or qualifications?
Picking fruit is a valid occupation and one that is not limited by post-incarceration rules like not being a stockbroker after committing securities fraud or not being a childcare worker after pedophilia. While many agriculture jobs provide on the job rather than classroom training, there are skills to be acquired that can enhance productivity and value.
I’m not saying that people in prison lack training or qualifications. That assumption would actually probably hold true, on average, but I have not studied that and that was not my point.
My point was that fruit picking, in contrast to many other potential professional activities, is not something that is likely to help an inmate build a post-release career.
When you apply for a job as a fruit picker, the employer is not going to reject those candidates who lack former experience.
Not really, it's a seasonal job (at least in Germany, but are there climates where plants bear fruit year round?) that doesn't pay enough through the season to sustain you through the entire year.
Germany is about 35% reincarceration rate after 3 years, and US is about 29%,
Although there are strong caveats, and like for like data doesn't exist. After 5 years US rate goes up a lot, my link doesn't have that for Germany.
> Recidivism rates vary significantly around the world, and many countries have insufficient data. Rates of criminal recidivism around the world are reported to be as high as 50% and have not declined in recent years. It is challenging to compare recidivism between countries because definitions of recidivism outcomes vary from re-arrest to reoffending to reimprisonment. Within these definitions, countries differ in their inclusion of misdemeanors, fines, traffic offenses, and other crimes. Additionally, follow-up times (period after release from incarceration) are inconsistent between and within jurisdictions and vary between six months and five years.
Seems like a pointless statistic, as solely arresting dangerous criminals instead of scores of harmless people would likely lead to a higher recidivism rate afterwards.
100% agreed, and I shared the above only partly to provide an answer, but mostly to flag some major caveats.
Another great example: "The U.S. incarceration rate is 693 per 100,000 residents —compared to 76 per 100,000 in Germany, and 69 per 100,000 in the Netherlands."
There is some real academic research on the topic, but as far as international comparison goes, it's not a solved issue. For example, this paper basically concludes that countries should update their reporting:
Let's compare "lifelong sentence" in Germany you have a high chance to get out after 15 years. (There is a mechanism for true lifelong, but that's then more of a psychiatric treatment than jail)
Point is: Comparing some statistic without context is not easy
I think this is the key: We need to skill/educate these folks. I know that sounds counter-intuitive because they are supposed to be punished. But if we don’t, they will come right back. And every prisoner is a burden on the tax payer. Also, if you’ve paid your debt to society, it should be paid in full - wiped from your record. That only seems fair.
I sympathize with a lot of this, and we'd probably agree at the practical level.
As a matter of principle though... the principle is violated inevitably. A prison guard "profits" (or rather, makes a living by) imprisonment. Any company supplying a prison profits. Community service is forced labour, etc.
That said, I totally agree on incentives. It's dangerous, especially private prisons.
The pay rate does bother me... I can see why real pay isn't done, but just paying pennies per hour does not sit well. Maybe a 3rd party should get the money, and this could take on a restorative rather than punitive aspect. There might even be a case for demonetize prison labour, supply the food directly to food banks instead of for market.
The phrase, "debt to society" is used often. Debts are not redeemed by suffering, generally.
My thought is that prison guards are paid because their work is a "debt to society", to force people to slave labour on a daily basis can not be good for you. In the same vein, I think society looses by systematically making prison guards slavers. I believe this is the case for ordinary prison guards as well, but in that case at least the correctional part could be believable.
Fair points, if I were being more careful I'd probably phrase it in terms of "we should minimize incentives for regulatory capture that leads to mass incarceration." As I get older I'm increasingly less idealistic a lot more comfortable with the fact that the world is a generally irrational and unfair place, but this is a topic that still rather gets my goat.
I think ideals are important, they just also get us into trouble when we overapply them. We forget that they're ideals, and think of them as reality.
A capitalist or communist ideal(s), for example, can be good. People dealing with each other by beneficial mutual agreement. People cooperating out of social solidarity. Both exist (imperfectly) in the world.
The problems come when we overapply these ideas. Justifying abusive labour practices or banking excesses because Adam Smith's village baker parable must apply to all things always. Building whole worldviews from a core ideal, as if it were F=ma.
Modern prisons evolved entirely out of their ideals. Imprisonment wasn't a common punishment until modern times, and the early logic (eg bentham) was about rehabilitation. Lots of (retrospectively ugly) ideals about morality and character were at play. Lots of horrible things done in their name. The project essentially failed, and rehabilitation aspect of prison devolved into vestigial formalities.
I imagine the rehabilitation ideal seemed enlightened, relative to the punitive ideals of previous eras. The US' 18th century "cruel and unusual punishment" concept related, I imagine, to these new enlightenment era ideals. A few hundred years later, and we can't even imagine a society without prisons. We're not even quite sure what they're for. At least, we don't agree on what they're for.
Pay them minimum wage, put the money into a savings account for them, use that money to pay off their restitution, with some money set aside for them to be able to live on release.
I find that bit crazy. It is local society's wish to imprison them, and thus deprive them from opportunity to earn money to pay those things on open market. Thus it should be up to them to provide them with that, that is if they want them to be imprisoned. They could just let them go free, or excommunicate them...
That's a weird thing to say. Do people in the US go around wishing prison for others? Here it's more like society is cornered into imprisoning some people in self-defense, because it hasn't figured out how to get those individuals to collaborate and live cordially with others.
>Do people in the US go around wishing prison for others?
Yes.
Lock her "Hillary Clinton" up, and lock him "Donald trump" up are very real wishes of many Americans. The war on drugs, poverty, and in general garbage tvlike live pd, Jerry Springer, dr Phil, has helped to breed this retributional bent into American culture.
Society don't "wish to imprison them" they go to prison to pay for a debt with society. Society wishes that nobody committed crimes so there where no prisons. At least I believe so.
>"Many adults who have experienced disrupted or deficient attachments when young will, from whatever source, find sufficient resilience to grow into well-balanced adults."
We, all off us as society, have a role to play in ensuring that all people are sufficiently resilient. Furthermore, to breed this resiliency we must all occasionally make sacrifices so that those with great need do not suffer neglect.
I agree that it makes sense for these costs to be factored into a prisoner's pay, since everyone else needs to pay these expenses. That might make a case for someone being paid $3 a hour, not 30 cents an hour. Also, in this case, the savings are passed to private businesses rather than the taxpayers.
> It's utterly wild how there are people in the comments saying "maybe slave labor is actually good for the slaves."
There are many countries that treat their prisoners as prisoners, not as slaves. Maybe prison work can be good in those countries? Just not in yours.
There are many articles on how Norway is one of the best countries in rehabilitating prisoners, and in Norwegian prisons prisoners do work. I'd guess that prisoners work in all the countries that are among the world top in rehabilitation.
Agreed. As usual, the debate in the US conflates several distinct issues, using a strangely deformed "fruit of the poisoned tree" logic.
Here, the logic goes something like, "US prisons mistreat prisoners, therefore prison labor constitutes mistreatment". Mistreatment of prisoners through labor is an accidental property, not an essential one (as evidenced by countries like Norway).
> It's utterly wild how there are people in the comments saying "maybe slave labor is actually good for the slaves."
> I don't even necessarily disagree with that possibility - sure, work provides meaning in life, it's better than sitting in a cage.
If it's better, then why don't they let the people decide for themselves whether they want to work for free? My guess is that they wouldn't get many takers. Also, exploiting people by giving them a choice between slave labor an worse options doesn't count.
Fundamentally, who are some HN commenters to decide for others what's 'good' for them? The 'maybe slavery is a good idea' stance is one I've seen around Internet forums, a trendy pseudo-intellectual provocation that is transparently absurd. Those who are serious are encouraged to volunteer first for slavery and show us how good it is, or for something much less onerous - free hard labor. It strikes me that people value their freedom and self-determination, not to mention their energy and time, and nobody is a slave voluntarily.
Are prisoners forced to work against their will for no compensation? I think not, and therefore "slavery" is hyperbole.
I used to work with mentally retarded people. They had a jobs program where they contracted with companies for small jobs that these folks could do. TI teamed up with the school, and together they set up a "workshop" where they would fold up power cords and tie with twists. The people were paid like a dollar per day... they worked a couple of hours per day. It was beneficial for all (TI indeed sold those cords with its products), and hardly slavery. It was hailed at time for all its good. That was not a prison, but it served a similar purpose. Not a single complaint of slavery or exploitation was ever raised... but this was in the 1980s.
Were those people barred from multiple forms of unemployment after they graduated from your program? The "prison work preps people for normal life" argument is just absurd to me, I don't see any long-term training or rehabilitation benefits to making license plates.
If you want to talk about reintegrating prisoners into society, then clear prisoner's records after they leave prison and bar employers from asking about prior convictions. Otherwise, I don't buy that we're doing this out of concern for the prisoner.
Also, to be clear:
> Prisoners at Angola can be legally forced to work once cleared by a medical doctor, and most are required to perform field work, like harvesting soybeans and corn for at least 90 days upon arrival. For long hours in the hot sun, they earn as little as 4 cents per hour.
So yeah, that sounds a lot like slavery to me. What's hyperbolic about that?
4 cents an hour is not compensation. By your logic, the South wasn't practicing slavery either since plantation owners gave their slaves "free" room and board.
> Once cleared by a prison doctor, prisoners at Angola can be legally forced to work under threat of severe punishment, including solitary confinement. Even prisoners with physical impediments may still have to work. “Angola frequently fails to accommodate men with disabilities—often forcing them to work in dangerous factories or in the fields,” said Mercedes Montagnes, executive director of the Promise of Justice Initiative.
Yes. This forced labor happens. Actually, this is the only form of slavery still allowed in the U.S. per the constitution.
Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
> Are prisoners forced to work against their will for no compensation?
The threat is that if you don't work, you receive more punishment, whether formal or informal: solitary confinement, abuse by guards, ineligibility for parole, etc. So yes, they are forced to work under duress. It's basically extortion.
I haven't looked into any reasons past the only one that actually matters, which is that people who actually have an intellectual disability prefer it.
> which is that people who actually have an intellectual disability prefer it
I think it's reasonable to be skeptical of consensus on a group of people on the matter of what they like to be called. Consider, for example, the backlash on the term "Latinx" and, more recently, even among some of our Black neighbors over being included in BIPOC.
I'm not trying to get into a whole thing here, it just seems to me that "intellectually disabled", taken at literal value, is more disparaging (and more open to slur-ish interpretation) than "mentally retarded".
Your links don't appear to support your position. None of them say that the people in question prefer this appellation. The WaPo piece expressly prefers "people with intellectual disabilities" (with Eades emphasizing that the inclusion of the word 'people' first is that makes the phrase better), so presumably he'd have a similar objection to the term "intellectually disabled."
The NIH doc doesn't even include the phrase "intellectual disabled" but does suggest the phrase "mental retardation" (see term number 13), so I can't imagine why you've included it if your point is to suggest that the former is more humane than the latter per this source.
In any case, if indeed there is the kind of consensus you assert, I'm happy to oblige it. But I think it's reasonable to wonder whether that's so.
To be transparent, I looked up what the preferred term seemed to be because I didn't know offhand and I wanted to offer actionable advice. Most resources seem to recommend "person with intellectual disabilities" ("intellectually disabled" being the adjective form of that, although I could be mistaken). The NIH doc recommends “learning disability” specifically to be used in place of the r-word.
So yeah, I'm also happy to use a better term if you know of one. I’m not really trying to prove a point here, per se — I just know there is widespread consensus that the r-word is a slur and I’m trying to gently help us move past it :)
I don't know if you're making a serious suggestion or not, but prisoners are already forced to pay for a lot of the resources they get in prisons, including basic services like video calls and extra medical supplies. And they pay exorbitantly higher prices than people outside of prison.
Outside of prison, a video call with your family is free because you use Skype or Zoom. Inside of prison, a 30 minute call can have a double digit price tag. Even basic necessities like menstrual products and tampons for women often have to be purchased at prices far above what normal consumers pay.
There's no competition or prisoner autonomy over which businesses they give their money to, and there's no commercial incentive for businesses that are authorized to sell to prisoners to lower prices; they literally have a captive market. State-approved monopolies are allowed to restrict access to those supplies and "privileges" unless prisoners pay up.
This has also led to really perverse policy incentives. Video call companies have lobbied states to restrict and/or remove in-person visiting, meaning that if you want to have any contact with your family or the outside world, you need to pay for the privilege. Often, books and entertainment will have a single company you can purchase through. Prisoners don't get access to the free market and even completely noncontroversial, obviously positive rehabilitative measures like family visits are being restricted for the sake of monetary exploitation.
So short answer, we're not giving prisoners a minimum wage and we're already charging them and their families an artificially inflated amount of money for basic necessities.
All that other stuff is fucked up in its own right, as is the privatization of prisons, but I'm only talking about room and board. I don't think taxpayers should foot that bill, if the prisoner is able-bodied.
Quick sidenote, but some prisons do already charge room and board[0].
Florida comes up a lot in these conversations about prisoner rights:
> Each state prisoner shall pay from such income and assets, except where such income is exempt by state or federal law, all or a fair portion of the prisoner's daily subsistence costs, based upon the inmate's ability to pay. An order directing payment of all or a fair portion of a prisoner's daily subsistence costs may survive against the estate of the prisoner.
And Florida does not pay prisoners a minimum wage. So while I disagree with the overall premise (more on that below), giving prisoners a real wage for their work would still be an improvement over the current system, which is the worst of both worlds.
----
But ignoring that and just talking about the policy on its own merits, I would ask the same question about whether those room and board costs are fair. I can choose where I live, a prisoner can't. Prison accommodations are not a free market.
So should prisoners be allowed to "shop around" for which prison they want to be incarcerated in based on the prices of room and board? Should prisoners be allowed to decide when they turn lights on and off in their cells to save power? Prisoners have no say in how much their accommodations cost. In multiple states they don't even have voting rights, so they lack the bare minimum of input into the policy behind how those costs are determined.
To me, it's a little problematic to charge someone for something that they are legally forced to purchase from a single source. We should generally try to avoid that. But it's extra problematic to force someone to work to pay for that charge. That's when we start getting into direct comparisons with slavery. Slaves were also provided living accomodations on plantations. But like prisoners, they couldn't leave or execute any choices about their arrangement.
In practice, what really is the difference between charging a prisoner for tampons and charging them for the electricity in their cell block? Both are required purchases by a captive market.
You and I, the tax payers, are who ultimately pay for lodging for prisoners. It makes much more sense to me for the person who committed the crime to bear this cost (if possible).
The abuses of private prisons, etc is a tangential issue. As a high level, it's all still funded by taxpayer money.
Why shouldn't you pay for food and lodging? You would outside of prison. Why should taxpayers foot the bill? Privatized prisons aside, because that is perverse and should be flat out illegal.
I've thought about this more and this is such an odd take. If you want to live in a society that locks people up for crimes then you should expect for society to collectively pay for the place to lock them up in and the cost to meet their basic needs. I don't even understand what other take there is other than making them pay for their own detention which just doesnt work out unless you allow them to keep their jobs.
Slaves in China peel that garlic, and the garlic is grown in california and shipped to china for slaves to peel it all, and they lose their fingernails due to how much garlic they need to peel.
I love garlic, but on par with the fucking Sackler family of Oxycontin, The garlic ranches of Gilroy are fucking despicable.
Hahahaha, that’s funny in a terrible way. Yes, I recently discovered peeled garlic, and thought to myself, “man; I love not peeling garlic. I wonder what industrial process they use to make this work at scale.”
Apparently the answer is slavery? Gonna Google that and confirm, but I guess this means I’m back to peeling my own garlic.
The Gilroy thing was largely invented to draw tourists — Fresno is where the bulk is grown, ex. Fresno County grew 25,060 acres of garlic in 2017. Santa Clara County grew 761 acres. About 90% of California's garlic crop is from Fresno.
Gilroy has the festival and a couple of processing plants.
Would you rather sit around, in a cage, in a caged courtyard, in a caged rec room, in a caged gym, or pick up trash on the side of the highway or dig a ditch.
I know what I'd rather do.
Forcing inmates to work under harsh and/or exploitative conditions is wrong but forcing them to do some sort of work for some portion of their time is not inherently wrong. The devil is in the details.
Unfairly compensated labor is bad -- in this we agree -- but distinctions exist for a reason, and the surest way to appear unreasonable/extreme is to conflate them.
Fair criticism. I'll rescind my argument and present a new one, that does not rely on my subjective opinions.
Slave: "a person who is the legal property of another and is forced to obey them." -Google
>"As of 2017, Arkansas, Georgia, and Texas did not pay inmates for any work whether inside the prison (such as custodial work and food services) or in state-owned businesses. Additionally, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi, Oklahoma, and South Carolina allowed unpaid labor for at least some jobs."
>"...in all or nearly all US states prisoners must work. If they refuse, they can be punished with solitary confinement, revoking visitation, or other measures."
Solitary confinement is torture. Thus, prisoners refusing to work are tortured into compliance. This is cruel and unusual punishment and stain on the conscience of every American.
>Fair criticism. I'll rescind my argument and present a new one, that does not rely on my subjective opinions.
I really appreciate your attention to fair debate. Thank you for this.
I agree with you that the example of uncompensated prison labor under threat of solitary confinement is morally wrong. I also agree that it at the very least skirts the line of slavery.
Where I think we (maybe?) disagree is that prison labor is not in and of itself slavery, nor morally wrong. I'm not even sure that compelled labor is inappropriate as a sentence. Under the right conditions, I tend to see compelled labor as an exemplary sentence because it's less about punishment and more about the repayment of the proverbial debt to society. My criteria for such compelled prison labor amount to:
1. The work should be acceptably safe, at least to common standards of occupational safety.
2. The work should be useful. The goal is not to punish through toil, but to contribute to the collective.
3. The work should benefit the public. It should not be in the service of a private entity.
I may be missing something obvious, but I think this more or less communicates what I have in mind. As an example, I sometimes see inmates picking up litter on the side of the highway. This strikes me as appropriate.
Overall, I find that people conflate the essence of prison labor with the modalities of prison labor. Just because it's implemented in a horrific an inhumane way doesn't invalidate the general principle. Similarly, the fact that prisons can be inhumane doesn't invalidate the principle of depriving an individual of liberty after a fair trial.
It seems like there might be some common ground between us, here. I hope there is :)
I see it as business enabling this part of the rehabilitation.
I lived for years a few miles from a federal penitentiary, I had friends who worked inside. The picture I have is that prison jobs are good and sought after by the inmates. (Versus eternal boredom.)
It's better for the jobs to be meaningful than meaningless, as make-work projects would inevitably be. This is not a broken system, there are no credible politicians or officials calling for change.
If people think it's a good idea for prison inmates to work then they should at least pay them minimum wage and prisoners should be given an opportunity to not work if they so choose.
I have no respect for someone who thinks forcing people to work as slaves is ok, and I will take the hardest stance possible on this. There is no wiggle room, there can be no compromise. Slavery is morally repugnant.
I don't know, prison is about something. It's not about treating prisoners as law-abiding rights-bearing citizens with the highest level of social leverage.
At what point should prisoners do something, anything, to mitigate what damage they've done to the rest of us? Is planting potatoes in the hot sun in Texas too much to ask? Regular law-abiding folks do it after all.
And note: when folks have to plant potatoes in the hot sun as part of prison, recidivism is very low. For whatever reason, though I'd guess that petty criminals are essentially lazy and having to work a real job is more than they want to do. It changes their outlook, when prison work outweighs the benefit of petty theft etc.
There's a moral dimension (who are we to judge etc) and a political one (out-of-control profiteering). But fundamentally, making prisoners work is not a bad thing.
Hey, I meant potato farming. Regular people do it voluntarily. Its not even all that onerous, just hard work. Don't know where that 'prostitution' bit was supposed to be going.
The fact some people will do something voluntarily doesn't mean it's ethical to force other people to do it against their will.
Therefore, it's irrelevant whether "regular people do it voluntarily" - because it's the being forced against their will that's the ethical issue here.
One illustrative example of this maxim is prostitution.
But isn't that deliberately ignoring the fact we're talking about prisoners? Not citizens with full rights? So 'making them do something' is the entire point of the exercise.
Its not advancing the topic to exclaim breathlessly about loss of rights, when that's the point of prison. We could be talking about misaligned incentives or effectiveness etc.
There are different goals a society can hope to achieve by imprisoning its citizens for crimes depending on its philosophy. These include retribution, rehabilitation, protecting society from the individual, and deterring citizens from committing crime. You are focusing on retribution and deterrence. Planting potatoes in the hot sun does little to mitigate any damage done by a prisoner and seems more like revenge than mitigation.
Training and incentivizing a prisoner to change their behavior (rehabilitation) has a better chance to provide a much larger gain for society in the long run.
> But fundamentally, making prisoners work is not a bad thing.
Forced labor is a violation of human rights. Either these rights are inalienable or they aren't.
>no one should be making money off of keeping people in cages.
Prison guards should work for free? How about maintenance workers? How about contractors who build the prisons? Are they all incentivized to keep people in prisons? What if a government-run prison outsourced management of prison to an outside company - is that OK?
I understand your sentiment, but I think private prisons is one of those non-issues that are blown way out of proportion (like the idea that somehow prisons are full of non-violent drug offenders). Nothing changes if you get rid of private prisons. I suspect you know that because your primary objection is philosophical rather than practical. You just don't like the 'idea' of them.
>If we as a society have to do that, fine, but it's unconscionable that it be a profitable venture.
Again ... WHY?! Vilifying profit as this great evil is a common trope among the internet intelligentsia. In each case though, the individual exempts their wage and savings (i.e. profit) from this rule.
These are all irrelevant gotchas but also not particularly insightful.
>Prison guards should work for free?
No, but their employment shouldn't be tied to how many prisoners there are.
>How about maintenance workers?
Ditto
>How about contractors who build the prisons?
Hopefully there aren't building companies that would lose out significantly if prisons stopped existing to the point that they'd be incentivized to get more people in prison.
>Are they all incentivized to keep people in prisons?
I'd hope not, but maybe they are, and if so that's awful.
>What if a government-run prison outsourced management of prison to an outside company - is that OK?
It would depend on how it's set up, but I think such things do exist and they're usually not much better than private prisons.
What's the point of all of these irrelevant questions? Their answers don't affect what we should do about companies profiting off of prison labor, at all. They're irrelevant.
>I understand your sentiment, but I think private prisons is one of those non-issues that are blown way out of proportion (like the idea that somehow prisons are full of non-violent drug offenders). Nothing changes if you get rid of private prisons. I suspect you know that because your primary objection is philosophical rather than practical. You just don't like the 'idea' of them.
This point would be better made if you had any sources to back this up, at all. Like, I could theoretically try to rebut these points with sources, but then I'd have effectively gotten gish galloped.
>Vilifying profit as this great evil is a common trope among the internet intelligentsia.
Why are you so quick to defend profit? It's pretty clear to me that allowing companies to profit off of prisoners is a perverse incentive, and the only refutation of that fact you can give is a bunch of irrelevant points, unsourced waxing lyrical about private prisons, and then blandly pointing to "oh you always hate profit". Do you own a prison? Why are you so invested in defending them?
>These are all irrelevant gotchas but also not particularly insightful.
Not irrelevant.
Don't get me wrong, I understand OPs point, but contracting out services is a very normal government function. And the line OP draws is arbitrary and he only does it for the feels.
>Their answers don't affect what we should do about companies profiting off of prison labor, at all.
That's not what's happening here. You're distorting for the purpose of an emotional appeal. A government contracts out a service, that's it. And it isn't a cart blanche. The process of how this services is executed, is still regulated by government agencies. The government sets all the rules.
>This point would be better made if you had any sources to back this up, at all.
I'm not the one making the claim that private prisons are immoral.
>Why are you so quick to defend profit?
This kind of talk comes from disaffected lefties who want to tare down the capitalist system. There is nothing wrong with profit. If you have an issue with some way that some private enterprise runs the business, then talk specifics, instead of impugning a market economy (what's the alternative? the humanitarian disaster that is socialism every time it's been tried?)
>It's pretty clear to me that allowing companies to profit off of prisoners is a perverse incentive
That's not clear AT ALL. That's just you engaging in hyperbole based on a hypothetical situation you dreamed up. You don't even know how the system works. It's just all about feels. It's like being against universal healthcare because it means that society is incentivized to euthanize old people lest they be a drag on tax-payers and society. That certainly is an incentive, but not very likely or reasonable in practice. So claiming a hypothetical incentive, is not evidence anything other than your creativity.
Just noticed how no one has mentioned how the criminalization of drug users creates thousands of free prison workers.
I can't understand how prisons can be private... it creates an incentive for them to lobby keeping drugs illegal. There are so many horror stories, like prisons saying that they'll close if they don't get some more prisoners.
> the criminalization of drug users creates thousands of free prison workers.
The antislavery amendment* explicitly permits prison labor and this was put in as a sop to the former slave states. The later used this to reproduce their prior system de facto (look up Parchman and Angola prisons for much discussion of the sordid details).
Not surprising Jim Crow was an important part of this, and the use and deployment of drug laws (other than alcohol) began as part of this racial mechanism.
* 13th: "Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist..."
>and this was put in as a sop to the former slave states.
Citation please.
While the prison population was much lower at the time they were being used as municipal labor. The "except prisoners" loophole was intended to grandfather in that system so as not to turn upside down the prison systems of all the states in the union at the time.
Furthermore "a sop to the former slave states" was the last thing congress was doing at the time. They were far more interested in maximizing the legislate utility of time spent without having southern reps present to vote against northern interests. The threat of more states (MD, TN in particular) seceding was the line they were trying to walk up to but not cross.
Edit: Is my analysis wrong or just inconvenient? I would be very interested in any source that can show that the northern states included the prison exemption in the 13A as a means to give the south a way to cling to some part of their slavery economy as opposed to a pragmatic "we'd rather not upset our prison systems, we already have a war and lots of unrest on our hands" exemption.
From a fairly basic set of morals, both privatized prisons and health care are obviously wrong. Heavy rules and regulation could reduce the problem somewhat, but fundamentally, you have a business that wishes to profit. In terms of health care, it is providing less and charging more. In terms of prison, it's incarcerating more and spending less / treating worse. The US is IMO far into coo-coo land on the approach to both, and with so many of the things that make no sense there, it's deeply rooted in systemic racism.
> From a fairly basic set of morals... obviously wrong...
"Privatized" prisons are a typical distraction from the deeper problems. California's prison system sterilized women as late as 2010, and those were public prisons. The state of Texas saved a little money by pulling inmates' teeth and putting them on liquid diets instead of supplying dentures, and only just started to reverse course in 2018.
Even private actors actively conspiring to exploit people have a hard time matching the sadistic cruelty that the public and the law enforcement apparatus train on those who it has deemed un-peopled — even many of those merely accused of crimes, and not yet tried.
There are certainly more than one set of problems indeed. I suppose that was your point, and not just a whataboutism?
Edit: To clarify, since I assume the immediate downvote was from the parent. A "typical distraction from deeper problems" is not relevant here, as, I am in fact, explicitly, and quite deliberately pointing out the moral issues of privatized prisons and health care. The definition of the logical fallacy I am asking whether or not you intended is the "attempt to discredit an opponent's position by charging them with hypocrisy without directly refuting or disproving their argument". Now, as I mentioned, I do not think the issues you've pointed out are non-existent, or non-problematic, they are just irrelevant to the issue and point I made. So, if what you wanted was to give particular examples of issues in non-private institutions, then, by all means. I don't see how that relates, and it would be a pretty spot on example of a whataboutism.
Pretty sure the person you're responding was to suggesting that your argument is missing the forest for the trees. That privatized prisons is a lesser evil when considering all the evils wrought upon those imprisoned be they in a public or private prison.
Ah, I see. Well, thank for clarifying. My argument was however that, by not explaining what this "larger evil" is, and just giving examples that exist and are equally problematic, if not more, in private prisons, while at the same time not addressing my point, which was the moral aspect of profiting from incarceration... That the response I got seemed disingenuous or unrelated? I don't know. People seem to downvoted anything that isn't pro USA. Just see my other comment. I took the time to answer how this doesn't apply to food production, and also got downvoted without explanation. So, maybe this isn't the website for thoughtful discussions that it once was. Arguing the immorality of private prisons is not the same as arguing the morality of public prisons. The response I got seemed based on an assumption that I argued the latter, and is a logical fallacy.
A: profit on prison population has significant moral problems
B: public prisons exploit workers in the US!
A: well... That's, bad too.
And, it's a bit tiresome. I'm pointing out something that is pretty obvious, yet, instead of some argument that can be refuted, my argument is made to be something different. And that's the crux of it. People don't like that their constitution explicitly allows forced labour of incarcerated people, aka slavery. I wouldn't like it either. It's immoral and wrong. Put it under a for profit business? Even worse... I mean. What counter argument can you possibly have. So, of course people will attempt to refute it with logical fallacies instead.
I see. Well, I'm actually very aware what the guidelines say.
> Please don't comment about the voting on comments. It never does any good, and it makes boring reading.
However, I did not in particular complain about the downvotes. I minded silent dismissal and intellectually dishonest discourse. I took the immediate downvotes as a need to clarify, and stated that as the reason. But, I might as well not do that. Point taken.
>From a fairly basic set of morals, both privatized prisons and health care are obviously wrong. [...] In terms of health care, it is providing less and charging more. In terms of prison, it's incarcerating more and spending less / treating worse.
Can't you extended this argument to most things? ie. "privatized food production is obviously wrong because you're providing less and charging more"
For food production, the intention is that at least the mechanics of capitalism can mitigate bad products. Incarceration has multiple purposes in a society, to which one can argue over the effect or desire, but the main ones are:
- Person who did bad thing should be punished
- People should not want to do bad things because that would lead to punishment
- People who do bad things should be stopped from doing more bad things
- People who have done bad things should learn and/or be given the means to do things differently
The last one is pretty big in a lot of places outside the US, and vice versa for the first one. Regardless, the difference between incarcerating people to fulfill these functions, and creating a product for people to buy, are fundamentally different in a capitalistic setting. Private businesses wish to maximize profit. Then, one should consider the effect of this in each case. So let's do that.
Food? Well, you make the process cheaper or more effective, and otherwise there are regulations in place in order to not cause harm or deceive. You try to get as many as possible to buy your product. However, if you do not make a product that people want, then, you don't get to sell it. Whether or not one thinks capitalism is a good thing, one could argue that this in its intention, can function OK.
Prisons? How do you maximize profit? The selling point is to also make it more effective. This is indeed OK. The moral problem is the other parts of maximizing profit: increasing the prison population, spending less on treating the prison population, less on education and rehabilitation, why not also make them do stuff? All of this would increase the profit margin. As I mentioned, rules and regulation can mitigate this, similar to how they can exist for food in terms of not using harmful ingredients, etc.
But fundamentally, there is a moral component to how one treats other people, that doesn't exist for how one produces a product.
To answer your question succinctly: no. Not unless it's inmates making carrot soup through forced labour.
Let's keep this in perspective. 8.1% of prisoners in the US are in private prisons. Maybe that number is too high, but clearly it isn't the primary driver in US justice policy.
This entire conversation seems especially resistant to facts, due to their inconvenience. No matter, HN doesn't exist to solve the world's problems, only bitch about them.
>it creates an incentive for them to lobby keeping drugs illegal.
Does it? As far as I can tell it expands it but does not create it. This is an important distinction because that incentive exists even with 100% public prisons. Even with public prisons, workers are prisons, any organizations that represent those workers, and any private organizations which supply the needs of prisons all have an incentive to expand prisons.
>There are so many horror stories, like prisons saying that they'll close if they don't get some more prisoners.
And if a public prison has to close, it will still be an issue for those who work there and those who supply it with goods. Even if they were guaranteed another job, which isn't likely common to begin with, would it be comparable in pay, duties, and commute time?
In every country with prisons this incentive exists, so I think it would be worthwhile to looking at how other countries handle it.
Its not the private prisons who decide to send people to prisons. Its actual judges following local, state or federal laws. Lets not pretend there is no judicial system...
That's not the norm though. The norm is self-righteous bureaucrats, who are worried they will be seen as weak on crime, or actually want to be even harsher than their constituents. There's scores of judges and legislators that feel this way. Most of the rest of them don't have the guts to stand up to them.
Its actually better if prisons are private. If they dont meet standards you can shut them down or hurt them financially. State prisons are the worst because there is no accountability whatsoever. Look at countries that ONLY have state prisons you will be shocked.
Here in germany we don't turn prisoners into slaves. We give them opportunities to learn a job to resocialize after their time. Yes, there is work for prisoners, and yes it pays way less than it should, but again, it's part of the reso program.
Good for Germany. I'm glad their prisons are well run.
You know how when a politician gets asked a tough question they avoid answering and immediately pivot to a trope where they have a couple talking points they can hit?
Well that's what you just did.
Prisons should be rehabilitating prisoners but the punishment vs rehabilitation debate is an almost completely tangential issue from public vs private.
I don't think private prisons are necessarily good, they seem to suffer from the same "the government doesn't cut and run from bad vendors" issues that many other things government contracts out do, but there is a legitimate pro/con debate to be had over whether the entity sending people to prison should be under the same umbrella as the entity administrating and in some cases profiting off of (massive conflict of interests!!) prisons.
>Here in germany we don't turn prisoners into slaves.
Do you tell them where they must live and how they must behave? If they disobey and go about their daily lives ignoring what you tell them (meaning they don't even show up for prison) do you use force to make them comply? Even if you don't profit off of them, that is still a form of slavery. And to be pedantic, the people who are forcing them to obey are making a profit because they receive a paycheck for their actions, one they would lose if they didn't force the prisoners to behave. The state may lose money, but the actual people running the prison are profiting off enslaving prisoners.
The US prison system is indeed practically slavery. However, that's not even the tip of the iceberg in terms of all the products and services being supported by slavery/servitude e.g. Apple, Nike, most clothes, electronics, and consumer goods, etc.
We had a brief period without slavery in the 1950s after WWII, and due to labor shortages wages went up and the middle class soared. Problem is, such a situation isn't good for capital, and capital makes the rules -- access to free labor makes workers compete for lower wages and bigger profit margins. Consumers love the lower prices, even though the wages stagnate and it will probably lead to a revolution or UBI at some point.
I feel like this article is pointing a gun at the wrong faces. These companies are most likely doing this as a form of social giving. The amounts involved are minuscule for the industry.
It touches on the question of rehabilitation but very superficially, when that should be the main point. Plenty of prison systems have voluntary work placement, not mandatory, and it benefits everyone.
Buried at the very end:
> In a series of interviews and surveys by the nonprofit Impact Justice for a six-part report on food in prisons, formerly incarcerated people reported widely varied experiences working in food production. In some cases, people said they received helpful training, enjoyed the fresh air, and snacked on food they grew. In other places, they found the jobs extremely difficult and were not allowed to eat the food they produced.
The choice for the prisoners is making $4.50 a day or sitting in their cell doing nothing to improve their life. Don’t act like this isn’t still exploitive to the point of it obviously being a false sense of choice —- especially with the BS that America will lock people up for. If a 14 year old kid in Alabama gets caught with a joint isn’t it convenient that the corporations in the state suddenly have access to a fresh new indentured servant — quite a nice replacement for slavery you guys have worked out for yourselves. If you want to see how civilized countries rehabilitate people see how prisons in Norway are run.
> I feel like this article is pointing a gun at the wrong faces. These companies are most likely doing this as a form of social giving.
No, they're doing it because they know they can severely underpay these workers and treat them badly, knowing that they have no recourse to push back.
People who run such businesses rarely have any pure motive. It's all about the profit and they don't care who suffers in the pursuit of it.
Now if they'd provided the prisoners with a decent wage for their work, that would be a different matter, and indicative of some good intent. But none of these companies are going to do that, when they know they have a source of people they can continually exploit.
The companies are purchasing from a distributor. They don’t decide the pay or conditions just as they don’t for other suppliers. They probably only choose to purchase because of that label and price.
Not when you read the whole sentence. They're comparing working for the purpose of rehabilitation (in which case eating the food you grow is possible), to working in order to generate the prison a profit.
Is it normal for an aerospace engineer to be able to launch himself into space? I think your stance is quite irrational / ignores the complexity of modern society.
The UK has comparably large problems as well. I don't think NZ has many prisons at all, but I don't know about the situation there, don't know about their incarceration rate. It is still not a contest between countries, but if it pleases I will state that the US is awesome.
I'm not even from the states, just giving you some perspective because it often seems the American snob past time is shitting on their own country and making comparisons they know very little about.
> The answer to the first question, it turned out, may have been the Colorado prison system, where incarcerated people working for the state’s correctional industries earn an average of $4.50 per day
I served a 1-year sentence in Federal prison and my _monthly_ salary was $0.59 - that's for the entire 30 day period. My job was to take cakes that were made daily and wrap them in plastic. In the area of the prison I was designated this meant my group of 4 people wrapped about 500 cakes per day. Some of the other people assigned to the group were elderly or disabled, so that meant that 2 of us usually wrapped all of the cakes.
Before you attempt to give me any sympathy it's worth noting that I eventually did not have to do this job. I became friends with inmate clerk that coordinated all the ins-and-outs of the kitchen and he eventually said he had a way to avoid the cakes needing to be wrapped to begin with and that my job wasn't even really worth existing. Strangely enough, through paperwork, this actually caused me to begin making $5.20/mo for a job that I no longer had to do.
For my last month there my wage was increased to $30/mo for my fake labor and the reason given was "because it would piss of person X".
TL;DR - Prison job systems are arbitrary and stupid ways that most inmates use to entertain themselves. None of it matters.
This sounds exactly what I heard from a guy who did a 6 year stint at San Quentin on a clerical error in the 90's. He said the job training was subpar. You basically do your time, and were dropped off at the San Rafael bus station with $200. (It's now $400.). Many guys went right back because of Probation infractions, like being in the presence of another felon. There are a lot of felons, especially when homeless. All it takes is pissing off the wrong cop.
He told me he was falsely incarcerated. I didn't know what to believe, or say. I was young, and still kinda believed in the system. I do remember telling him there are nonprofit attorneys whom might take your case. He said, "I just don't care anymore.". I didn't quite understand, probably because of my young age. It turns out he was kept in jail over a clerical error. It didn't matter because he died homeless over a pnumonia.
Here's possible link between prison work and government opposition to marijuana legalization:
In 1995, Governor Bill Janklow established a temporary minimum-security unit of fifty male inmates in Pierre. These inmates were deployed on a variety of deferred maintenance projects throughout the Capital complex. That initial effort was a total success and the program was expanded to include all minimum-security inmates. [1]
[In 2020] South Dakota became the first state to simultaneously approve legalization of medical and recreational marijuana.[...] Thanks to a legal challenge backed by Noem, the initiative has been blocked, and it may never take effect.[2]
If you want to be even more disappointed in the US look at UNICOR.
Government agencies hire prisoners to do arbitrary work at costs the private sector cannot compete with. License plates are a commonly cited example of a product they produce.
It’s slave labor as the prisoners are paid something absurdly low like a dollar a day.
In my opinion, actual community service of some kind is far preferable to prison, both to society, and to the prisoners. Why lock up perfectly fit human beings for life, when we as a society could say, you know what? This person murdered somebody, and as a way of paying back society, they're going to work as a trash collector for 20 years on minimum wage. Far cheaper than paying for their prison upkeep, and no perverse incentive from private prisons.
Yes, there are issues around them running or reoffending. But I think tech might be able to solve these problems. We just choose the easy way out and pay tons of money to lock them up. I think there's a missed opportunity here.
My only opposition to this is that labor should be done by fully paid employees, and not having companies getting this legal avenue to cheap labor, and that most convicts should have been executed a long time ago instead of actually giving them an occupation to entertain their time.
Global capitalism has been terrible since its inception. It’s a political and we’ve only liked it because we were on the benefitting end. Now that the west is moving into the economic shadow of China, we’re seeing more and more of the exploitation first hand.
It would be lovely to say this was a new chance, but since Chiquita and the other banana companies had local farmers killed by local militia for their land in the 70-80ies the whole thing has been rotten to its core, and probably even before that.
The prison labour of America is just crazy, and it’s only a thing because a very small elite makes a profit of it.
> Now that the west is moving into the economic shadow of China
Is it actually? The results of the recent census paint a picture of a country which, in the long run, might become the largest economy in the world, but will struggle to maintain growth - more so than the west.
> Global capitalism has been terrible since its inception. It’s a political and we’ve only liked it because we were on the benefitting end. Now that the west is moving into the economic shadow of China, we’re seeing more and more of the exploitation first hand.
It's ironic that you raise China in your comparison, because the chinese people have been massive beneficiaries of global capitalism.
> China is a dirty old dinosaur of an economy, it has double the carbon emissions of the US while only generating 2/3 of the GDP!
Does this account for the goods exported from China to the US? These should be added to the emissions caused by the US. The west exported much of their environmental problems to poorer nations, including China.
It doesn't, it also doesn't account for the fact that China has a larger population.
The US only has about ~23% of China's population to sustain. GDP/CO2 is a silly metric to compare (No Patrick, selling financial products to increase GDP/CO2 isn't green).
In reality China is just "greener" (in CO2 emission) than the USA if you measure more reasonable metrics like CO2 emission per capita.
> Does this account for the goods exported from China to the US? These should be added to the emissions caused by the US.
No they shouldn't, China sells products in the global market. The emissions belong to them, along with the price they charge for the product.
> The west exported much of their environmental problems to poorer nations, including China.
Well, globalist corporations and politicians exported their environmental problems, I agree. The solution is not to give dirty polluting countries a free pass, it is to account for the externalities in tariffs.
> No they shouldn't, China sells products in the global market. The emissions belong to them, along with the price they charge for the product.
Well, emissions caused by burning oil would belong to Saudi Arabia, then. I believe the ultimate consumer of a product bears responsibility for its emissions. Without a consumer, the product would not have been made.
Of course it does. Not much US oil usage, of course, because US uses oil extracted domestically. And most of China's carbon emissions come from burning coal not oil, and almost all of that coal is mined domestically.
But Saudi should not get a free pass either, and should be made to pay for its profiteering from carbon pollution along with all other people, corporations, and countries accordingly.
Not sure if you're editing your comment or I didn't read it entirely before.
And your last sentence is not some kind of proof of your belief. Without a dirty cheap producer then a cleaner producer who has paid for the environmental externalities they created might have made the product.
I'm not a fan of China's actions but your post is both mis-informative and ironic given that every one of your points apply to the U.S. at various points in time.
> China is a dirty old dinosaur of an economy, it has double the carbon emissions of the US while only generating 2/3 of the GDP! Horrific carbon intensity. Not to mention all the other environmental destruction it causes. The worker exploitation, the corruption, the human rights abuses, the bullying of its neighbors.
The U.S. produces roughly double the emissions of China per capita. Ignoring population is a gross misrepresentation of the facts. As for bullying neighbours, the U.S. lost both those legs after a long string of funding terrorists, assassinations, and aggressive wars.
> It's modernization strategy consists of copying from the west, and little else innovative, certainly not for its size and wealth. A single American company started less than 20 years ago has already surpassed its entire space program, which sees it losing control of its rockets in orbit and crashing them all over the globe.
Wikipedia has a quote from Alexander Hamilton:
> American founding father and first U.S. Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton advocated rewarding those bringing "improvements and secrets of extraordinary value" into the United States. This was instrumental in making the United States a haven for industrial spies.
Industrial espionage was how the U.S. caught up to the UK and Europe. All developing countries will try to copy what's already been discovered because it gets you to the point where you can actually start competing on new technology much more quickly than trying to reinvent the wheel.
> I'm not a fan of China's actions but your post is both mis-informative and ironic given that every one of your points apply to the U.S. at various points in time.
It is neither misinformative or ironic, and it's clearly talking about today and in future.
> The U.S. produces roughly double the emissions of China per capita.
I'm not talking about per capita. Per capita is about the worst metric to use for this, because 1. the environment doesn't care about per capita, it cares about total emissions, and 2. acting like lower per-capita is better creates perverse incentives to increase population and suppress quality of life. Carbon intensity is the relevant metric.
> Ignoring population is a gross misrepresentation of the facts.
Rubbish. I'm talking about facts that have no relationship to population.
> As for bullying neighbours, the U.S. lost both those legs after a long string of funding terrorists, assassinations, and aggressive wars.
That doesn't address what I wrote I'm afraid. I never said "China does this and USA does not".
> Wikipedia has a quote from Alexander Hamilton:
Also irrelevant. America (and almost all the world) had slaves. That doesn't stop me from saying any nation that uses slave labor will never be a leading country and will always be looked down upon, at least until [the use of slave labor] is dismantled.
If there's one thing capitalism is very good at, it's externalising costs - and in my opinion that's precisely how it's kept its reputation (in the West, at least) as so much superior to any other economic system.
It's very nifty. As long as all the vices are conveniently offshore in the places that people already don't really think or care about (or buried deep enough in the underbelly of your society, where it has the same effect), you can extol only the virtues and continue to reject any useful change.
I'm starting to think that from a global lens the economic system doesn't even matter - none could really have mitigated the unbridled greed combined with the population explosion of humanity in the 20th century. Now most of us are stuck relying on the poverty and deprivation of others to support the vaunted quality of life of the 21st; food, clothes, etc can only be so cheap when somebody is willing (or even forced) to take pennies to produce them.
By letting prisoners become familiar with expectations of a job, and get used to being paid, managing finances, and spending within their means, they're less likely to be forced to return to crime after they're released.
Despite being 'inhumane', I suspect these programmes lead to better outcomes for people involved in them than prisoners who spend every day in a cell.
It was fine when the prisoners themselves were the only ones using the things they produced. The problem comes when the fruits of this labor are sold on the market. Then all of the perverse incentives rear their ugly heads.
Whenever you have a captive consumer or producer of marketable materials, you have a perverse incentive to exploit, because the other party has no choice in the matter and must take whatever you offer (if anything). Every dystopian movie makes heavy use of these kinds of story elements.
In the case of prison labor, you essentially have slaves, and can therefore leverage that slave labor to undercut your competitors in the open market. The slaves, meanwhile, suffer the indignity of their forced labor and exploitation for someone else's benefit, which is why we outlawed slavery in the civilised parts of the world.
In the case of captive markets (food, commissary, communications systems, etc), price gouging is commonplace. Food quality is so low that malnutrition is common. Quality is shit but it doesn't matter because the consumers of these products are not empowered to decide, while everyone else involved benefits from their exploitation and therefore has no incentive to fix it.
This is then further exacerbated by trade groups that influence laws to increase incarceration durations and incidence in order to preserve and even expand their supply of captives for further exploitation and profit.
I suggest you look into how Western European countries handle their prison populations for comparison.
> In the case of prison labor, you essentially have slaves
s/essentially/literally/
The US laws still allow for slaves by name as long as they're in prison
> Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.
I don’t see how selling to the outside world is a problem in itself. It connects with the community and gives the workers a much more fulfilling sense of accomplishment than doing it as a hobby.
What you described only holds true if:
1. There is nobody overseeing policies regarding prices, compensation and workloads.
2. The “business” or workforce can be grown to increase profit
3. Work is mandatory
Both 1 and 2 point to a private prison system being a problem. They have little oversight, and are incentivized to increase the # if prisoners instead of it being an expense.
Selling to the outside world is not a problem PROVIDED the producer of said products can set the asking price for their labor and the (free) market itself dictates what they can get. This is never the case with prison systems, public or private.
Which is great in theory, but the only people interested in influencing such prison laws are the trade groups that represent those who benefit from the status quo.
The problem is the incentives they create to imprison people.
Imprisoning someone should be a purely negative action on the state, by having some potential benefit you reduce the costs imposed to the state and therefore incentivize imprisonment.
>By letting prisoners become familiar with expectations of a job, and get used to being paid, managing finances, and spending within their means, they're less likely to be forced to return to crime after they're released.
I would expect there are large percentages of the prison population that might be familiar with these things, also I mean the expectation a job in prison might be getting you ready for is a low paid job in which you are exploited, which once having been in prison in the U.S is probably what you can expect - but I don't know if having that expectation will actually reduce recidivism.
I actually know people that had some business inside prison in EU country and the experience was that there were more prisoners asking to be working than it was possible to use. Main driving force was that time passes faster when you are busy, with another advantage that earned money could be used to buy some extra goods. Also, some of the former prisoners continued to work in that company once their prison time was over, so it was really good help in transition to freedom.
Since prison work is voluntary, there is not much space for exploitation.
>I actually know people that had some business inside prison in EU country
ok but there does seem to be some perception in the world that the prisons in the U.S might be slightly lacking in some of the human rights protections found in EU prisons - you are aware of this concern right?
>Since prison work is voluntary, there is not much space for exploitation.
Again, speaking about the U.S, and I know that in Utah prison work is not exactly voluntary in that the parole board has power to release or make stay to your maximum sentence - so in Utah you go in with a possible 1-15 years, if the parole board wants to let you go in 1 year you can go (but of course be on parole and get pulled back in again later if considered necessary), so how do you get the parole board to consider letting you out in 1 year instead of 15 - well you get a job and work every day and show them that you are good. Other tools are of course used for compliance and to make people work.
This is of course one state and things vary by state the American system, but there are plenty of states considered much worse than Utah for prisoner exploitation so in conclusion, I know things are great in the EU is not going to calm any worries in a discussion about the US.
I agree, that's why I chose to include info about EU, and of course my comment is meant to be just one extra data point.
Definitely there will be huge differences around the world, but prison work may not always equal to exploitation.
Not in all cases, but when coupled with the private prison system of the US which is less concerned with rehabilitation and more with the extraction of value from its "residents", you do get a problem.
In that sense it is not bad. The problem is that it creates perverse financial incentives for large sections of the population to be incarcerated as a cheap supply of labour. Prison labour also undercuts minimum wages in some cases. Consider that for-profit prison companies spend millions of dollars on lobbying efforts.
Even if you were absolutely correct about improved outcomes (I don't know what/if the data shows), there is still a major problem that would still make prison labor as it exists today problematic or even immoral: it creates a huge incentive to imprison more people through various means (stricter laws, opposition to drug reform, mandatory minimums etc.). The prison industrial complex is a major lobby for these issues, so this is not just a theoretical concern.
A system that would improve the life of people after prison without falling for this pitfall would have to entirely remove the profit motive from prison labor (for example by prohibiting the prison to keep any proceeds from prison labor, or by paying inmates competitive rates for the work they are doing, so that overall prison labor is guaranteed to be more expensive than just hiring/outsourcing etc).
I would be fine with it if there was no profit made, or the profits would go to rehabilitation of these individuals. Being able to make a profit off prison labor is a bad incentive.
Kind of how America went from the slave labor system to the prison labor system seamlessly. There was just too much money to be made.
Well, I guess if you compare prison labour vs nothing, like that, then it sounds all good. If you compare slave/underpaid labour vs proper-wage labour, then it's probably putting people out of a job. Also, it sounds like the last thing the US needs is more commercial incentive to put people in prison.
Why? It's very simple, you're creating a market that incentivizes incarceration. Prison should be about recovery of a human being and trying to create negative incentives so people think about making a crime (this is a bit debatable).
When you create a market for incarceration, what you're saying is "we don't want to lower crime". So yes, it's bad in all cases because we should be creating incentives to lower crime instead of how to make it profitable.
Prisons don’t incarcerate people. If the money from sales go to prisons and inmates then there is no incentives for judges or prosecutors to incarcerate anyone. If money somehow are connected - this should probably be changed. The fact of selling products to the market is not a problem here.
> By letting prisoners become familiar with expectations of a job, and get used to being paid, managing finances, and spending within their means, they're less likely to be forced to return to crime after they're released.
Afaik, prisons jobs in general do nothing of the sort.
The labor should be billed out at minimum wage. The convicts should be required to pay taxes on it, pay some token amount as rehab to the system, etc.
Threads like this always bring out the "OMG private prisons are immoral and explain everything about the US justice system" crowd. Turns out 8.1% of prisoners in the US are in private prisons. Maybe we want that to be 0%, but let's not pretend that it's a serious contribution to the way we run the justice system here. We've gotten exactly the system we voted for, repeatedly.
It's my understanding that private prisons are used as a wedge to open the door on the conversation about prison reform. Some, less fluent, people only bother to learn this much about it. Prisons have a lot of problems, let's not demean those fighting for the rights of people who've had their voices taken away from them just because they're not writing dissertations about the problems. If you've Only got one tweet worth of time and one issue to speak about choose the simplest one.
But if you stake your entire argument on something inaccurate because you think it makes the best soundbite, then you risk setting progress back in reality as people decide that you're full of crap about everything else you say.
Frankly, it is the average citizen that voted to get us this system, and trying to convince them that they were manipulated into that position by evil corporations is probably a non-starter. IMO it would be more effective to convince them that a puritanical attitude towards criminals has a net negative effect on the rest of society. Get people to focus on the forest instead of the trees.
No ones staking an entire argument on private prisons. The entire industry is an affront to humanity.
The average citizen has been staring through the wool for as long as America has been a country.
Sure, convincing bible thumpers that retributionary policies against crime make America worse is a hard sell. Doesn't mean we shouldn't make that pitch, or any other pitch that might work. I'm sick of seeing people come out of prison worse than they went in knowing that my taxes paid to worsen their lives and create more suffering.
As I said, they can pay some token amount back to the system. We shouldn't incentivize people to stay in prison for the housing and pay, but we should provide some way for them to build up a financial cushion they can use when released to try and avoid landing right back in prison.
> Someone imprisoned in Arizona might work at a canning plant that produces taco sauce sold at Safeway and on Amazon, but the jar doesn’t come with a “packaged in prison” label or other disclosure.
Well, thankfully we’re not doing that. If we’re advocating for prison work to become more healthy, that’s the wrong way to go - it’s transparency for the customer, but a form of discrimination for the workers. The product is not tainted because it was made by prisoners, but because your justice system sucks.
I don't even necessarily disagree with that possibility - sure, work provides meaning in life, it's better than sitting in a cage.
The issue here is the perverse incentives of corporations profiting off of prison labor. Same issue as private prisons - no one should be making money off of keeping people in cages. If we as a society have to do that, fine, but it's unconscionable that it be a profitable venture.