[ ]   [ ]   [ ]                        [ ]      [ ]   [ ]

Israel - R_P - May 26, 2024 - 2:32pm
 
First World Problems - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 26, 2024 - 2:25pm
 
Photos you have taken of your walks or hikes. - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 26, 2024 - 2:23pm
 
Climate Change - R_P - May 26, 2024 - 2:13pm
 
Bug Reports & Feature Requests - jarro - May 26, 2024 - 1:58pm
 
NYTimes Connections - Bill_J - May 26, 2024 - 1:47pm
 
NY Times Strands - Bill_J - May 26, 2024 - 1:41pm
 
Sonos - konz - May 26, 2024 - 1:24pm
 
Wordle - daily game - geoff_morphini - May 26, 2024 - 1:08pm
 
USA! USA! USA! - R_P - May 26, 2024 - 12:58pm
 
RP Daily Trivia Challenge - maryte - May 26, 2024 - 11:19am
 
Today in History - DaveInSaoMiguel - May 26, 2024 - 8:02am
 
Name My Band - DaveInSaoMiguel - May 26, 2024 - 4:37am
 
Radio Paradise Comments - Mellifluous99 - May 26, 2024 - 4:07am
 
Artificial Intelligence - R_P - May 25, 2024 - 11:05pm
 
What Makes You Laugh? - thisbody - May 25, 2024 - 10:42pm
 
Fascism In America - R_P - May 25, 2024 - 6:16pm
 
New Music - miamizsun - May 25, 2024 - 2:45pm
 
The Obituary Page - DaveInSaoMiguel - May 25, 2024 - 2:40pm
 
Song of the Day - oldviolin - May 25, 2024 - 12:57pm
 
The Dragons' Roost - miamizsun - May 25, 2024 - 12:02pm
 
Media Matters - Beaker - May 25, 2024 - 10:59am
 
2024 Elections! - kurtster - May 24, 2024 - 9:43pm
 
Dialing 1-800-Manbird - oldviolin - May 24, 2024 - 3:42pm
 
What's that smell? - oldviolin - May 24, 2024 - 3:41pm
 
• • • The Once-a-Day • • •  - oldviolin - May 24, 2024 - 3:40pm
 
Trump - Steely_D - May 24, 2024 - 2:01pm
 
Business as Usual - R_P - May 24, 2024 - 12:49pm
 
It's the economy stupid. - R_P - May 24, 2024 - 12:38pm
 
Bob Dylan - Steely_D - May 24, 2024 - 10:50am
 
Rock mix sound quality below Main and Mellow? - R567 - May 24, 2024 - 9:11am
 
RightWingNutZ - Steely_D - May 24, 2024 - 8:54am
 
Odd sayings - GeneP59 - May 24, 2024 - 8:08am
 
Things You Thought Today - GeneP59 - May 24, 2024 - 8:06am
 
May 2024 Photo Theme - Peaceful - fractalv - May 24, 2024 - 8:03am
 
Solar / Wind / Geothermal / Efficiency Energy - Red_Dragon - May 24, 2024 - 6:55am
 
Nederland / The Netherlands - R_P - May 23, 2024 - 10:03am
 
Music News - Beaker - May 23, 2024 - 8:30am
 
Interviews with the artists - Beaker - May 23, 2024 - 8:12am
 
Photography Forum - Your Own Photos - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 22, 2024 - 8:51pm
 
Science is bullsh*t - GeneP59 - May 22, 2024 - 4:16pm
 
Maarjamaa - oldviolin - May 22, 2024 - 3:32pm
 
Gotta Get Your Drink On - ScottFromWyoming - May 22, 2024 - 3:25pm
 
Coffee - haresfur - May 22, 2024 - 12:12am
 
Most played: what's the range? Last 30 days? 90? - theirongiant - May 21, 2024 - 2:20pm
 
What Did You See Today? - Steely_D - May 20, 2024 - 1:24pm
 
Baseball, anyone? - ScottFromWyoming - May 20, 2024 - 12:00pm
 
Mixtape Culture Club - ColdMiser - May 20, 2024 - 7:50am
 
Shawn Phillips - Isabeau - May 20, 2024 - 6:20am
 
The Corporation - Red_Dragon - May 20, 2024 - 5:08am
 
Positive Thoughts and Prayer Requests - GeneP59 - May 19, 2024 - 4:08pm
 
What can you hear right now? - GeneP59 - May 19, 2024 - 4:07pm
 
China - Isabeau - May 19, 2024 - 2:22pm
 
TV shows you watch - Steely_D - May 19, 2024 - 1:13am
 
Music library - nightdrive - May 18, 2024 - 1:28pm
 
Paul McCartney - miamizsun - May 18, 2024 - 4:06am
 
Virginia News - Steely_D - May 18, 2024 - 2:51am
 
Gnomad here. Who farking deleted my thread? - Red_Dragon - May 17, 2024 - 5:59pm
 
Upcoming concerts or shows you can't wait to see - ScottFromWyoming - May 17, 2024 - 1:43pm
 
DIY - black321 - May 17, 2024 - 9:16am
 
Other Medical Stuff - kurtster - May 16, 2024 - 10:00pm
 
Your Local News - Proclivities - May 16, 2024 - 12:51pm
 
Alexa Show - thisbody - May 16, 2024 - 12:15pm
 
Joe Biden - Steely_D - May 16, 2024 - 1:02am
 
Strange signs, marquees, billboards, etc. - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 15, 2024 - 4:13pm
 
how do you feel right now? - KurtfromLaQuinta - May 15, 2024 - 4:10pm
 
What the hell OV? - oldviolin - May 15, 2024 - 12:38pm
 
NASA & other news from space - Beaker - May 15, 2024 - 9:29am
 
Human Rights (Can Science Point The Way) - miamizsun - May 15, 2024 - 5:50am
 
Play the Blues - Steely_D - May 15, 2024 - 1:50am
 
Animal Resistance - R_P - May 14, 2024 - 6:37pm
 
punk? hip-hop? metal? noise? garage? - thisbody - May 14, 2024 - 1:27pm
 
Social Media Are Changing Everything - Red_Dragon - May 14, 2024 - 8:08am
 
Internet connection - ai63 - May 14, 2024 - 7:53am
 
Congress - Red_Dragon - May 13, 2024 - 8:22pm
 
Index » Regional/Local » USA/Canada » Jails, Prisons, Incarceration Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 18, 19, 20  Next
Post to this Topic
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 11, 2022 - 7:54pm

US Prison Labor Boosts Hundreds of Private Companies and Helps Expand the Carceral State
Tennessee, Alabama, Oregon, and Vermont voted in the November elections to ​​prohibit slavery and involuntary servitude as punishment for crime, while Louisiana did not.

The votes had to do with the hundreds of thousands of incarcerated Americans forced to work for pennies an hour – and sometimes no wage at all. The four approved initiatives won’t bring about any immediate changes in the states’ prisons, but they could remove some barriers to legal challenges over the brutal treatment of prisoners.

There are reasons to doubt much change will come from the votes. Colorado voters made slavery and involuntary servitude unconstitutional in 2018, but the state’s court of appeals just recently decided that the people did not mean to abolish the state Department of Corrections’ prison labor program. (...)

The ACLU research found that the average minimum hourly wage for non-industry work is 13 cents with an average maximum of 52 cents. And being forced to work for basically nothing doesn’t just take a toll on the prisoner. From the report:
Because incarcerated workers’ wages are so low, families already struggling from the loss of income when a family member is incarcerated and removed from household wage earning must step in to financially support an incarcerated loved one. Families with an incarcerated loved one, many of whom are impoverished themselves, spend an estimated $2.9 billion a year on commissary accounts and phone calls. Over half of these families are forced to go into debt to afford the costs of a relative’s conviction and subsequent incarceration.

Sanctions!
black321

black321 Avatar

Location: An earth without maps
Gender: Male


Posted: Sep 1, 2022 - 1:23pm

Stumbled on this somehow, interesting discussion on prison life:

kcar

kcar Avatar



Posted: Apr 4, 2019 - 4:45pm

"Hellish" would be an understatement: 

 Alabama’s Gruesome Prisons: Report Finds Rape and Murder at All Hours


An Alabama Prison’s Unrelenting Descent Into Violence


miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Apr 4, 2019 - 4:09pm

States of Incarceration: The Global Context 2018

Oklahoma now has the highest incarceration rate in the U.S., unseating Louisiana from its long-held position as “the world’s prison capital.” By comparison, states like New York and Massachusetts appear progressive, but even these states lock people up at higher rates than nearly every other country on earth. Compared to the rest of the world, every U.S. state relies too heavily on prisons and jails to respond to crime.

R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 9, 2018 - 7:15am

Forty-Five Things I Learned in the Gulag
R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Jul 3, 2018 - 11:15am

The border-to-prison pipeline
President Trump’s plan to establish more detention centers for undocumented immigrants will give a boost to private prison companies that backed Trump’s presidential campaign, The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

CoreCivic and Geo Group both saw their shares spike last month after Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced that it will likely add 15,000 new beds for families after Trump’s executive order to detain undocumented immigrant families together, according to the newspaper.

The Trump administration is also pushing to increase the number of beds for immigrants to 52,000 from 40,000, requesting $2.8 billion for the 2019 budget year to fund the effort.

Geo Group declined to comment to the Journal. The company’s CEO, George Zoley, said during an earnings call in April that he anticipated the possibility of new contracts “as the president will be asking for a significant increase in the detention bed capacity for ICE," the outlet reported.

A CoreCivic spokesman told the Journal that the company is ready to address the administration’s changing needs.

The corporation’s CEO, Damon Hininger, said last month that “this is probably the most robust kind of sales environment we’ve seen in probably 10 years,” according to the Journal.

Both companies have relied on ICE for a significant chuck of their revenue in recent years, according to the Journal, which reported that the agency made up a quarter of CoreCivic’s revenue last year, up from 13 percent a decade earlier.

Geo Group experienced a similar rise, with ICE making up 24 percent of its recent from 10 percent in 2007.

Each of the companies donated $250,000 to Trump’s inauguration, and Geo Group last year held a leadership conference at one of Trump’s golf resorts in Florida.

Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Dec 15, 2017 - 8:26am

 cc_rider wrote:

Cheaper still to educate them before they become prisoners.

 
We don't need no steenking education.

cc_rider

cc_rider Avatar

Location: Bastrop
Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 15, 2017 - 8:09am

 Coaxial wrote:

It's big business, keeping the brother down. Cheaper to keep prisoners in hotels than in the pen...Somethings is just a little askew with the system.

 
Cheaper still to educate them before they become prisoners.
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 15, 2017 - 5:36am

 Coaxial wrote:

It's big business, keeping the brother down. Cheaper to keep prisoners in hotels than in the pen...Somethings is just a little askew with the system.

 
yes

yes it is
Coaxial

Coaxial Avatar

Location: Comfortably numb in So Texas
Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 15, 2017 - 5:27am

 miamizsun wrote:


 
It's big business, keeping the brother down. Cheaper to keep prisoners in hotels than in the pen...Somethings is just a little askew with the system.
miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Dec 15, 2017 - 5:17am


R_P

R_P Avatar

Gender: Male


Posted: Nov 23, 2017 - 12:42pm

They too
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Sep 1, 2017 - 6:23am

Yay for-profit prison system!
Red_Dragon

Red_Dragon Avatar

Location: Dumbf*ckistan


Posted: Aug 23, 2017 - 10:01am

Because prison is a for-profit enterprise in this country, that's why.
helenofjoy

helenofjoy Avatar

Location: Lincoln, Nebraska
Gender: Female


Posted: Aug 24, 2016 - 2:03pm

 westslope wrote:

Well, that is precisely where you are wrong.  

This kind of fuzzy thinking has consequences.  Example, 50,000 dead Americans during the Vietnam War or Obama's hugely expensive socialized health care albatross.  Or the billions upon billions that socialist (sic) Americans gladly throw at the agricultural sector so it can destroy watersheds, create air pollution and contribute to a galloping obesity epidemic and reduced life expectancies.    

Even the nuclear weapons backed affirmative action ethnic cleansing project in the Holy Lands receives support because of this kind of fuzzy thinking.  I mention the Israeli nation building project because it brought you the Sept. 11th attacks and paints a target on the backs of Americans.  Though I do realize that many Americans saw the Sept. 11th attacks as a huge positive and welcome more of the same. 

Killing innocent civilians — something both Israel and the USA excel at — and ethnic cleansing enjoy long noble histories that predate modern capitalism by hundreds of thousands of years. 

The Scandinavian social democracies all have better socio-economic outcomes than the USA but it strikes me that  the vast majority of Americans have no clue as to how that happened.  Both those that identify as 'left' and the 'right' — now outdated concepts from the early 20th century.

 
Here Here! (hand clapping emoticon!)


Manbird

Manbird Avatar

Location: La Villa Toscana
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 24, 2016 - 1:15pm

 miamizsun wrote:

think of capitalism as a tool

it can be great when used properly

when in corrupt hands not so much

 
that might work in oklahoma
westslope

westslope Avatar

Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: Aug 19, 2016 - 7:56am

 Steely_D wrote:

I'm thinking of capitalism in the sense of: "Capitalism is an economic system based on private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit."
......
 
Well, that is precisely where you are wrong.  

This kind of fuzzy thinking has consequences.  Example, 50,000 dead Americans during the Vietnam War or Obama's hugely expensive socialized health care albatross.  Or the billions upon billions that socialist (sic) Americans gladly throw at the agricultural sector so it can destroy watersheds, create air pollution and contribute to a galloping obesity epidemic and reduced life expectancies.    

Even the nuclear weapons backed affirmative action ethnic cleansing project in the Holy Lands receives support because of this kind of fuzzy thinking.  I mention the Israeli nation building project because it brought you the Sept. 11th attacks and paints a target on the backs of Americans.  Though I do realize that many Americans saw the Sept. 11th attacks as a huge positive and welcome more of the same. 

Killing innocent civilians — something both Israel and the USA excel at — and ethnic cleansing enjoy long noble histories that predate modern capitalism by hundreds of thousands of years. 

The Scandinavian social democracies all have better socio-economic outcomes than the USA but it strikes me that  the vast majority of Americans have no clue as to how that happened.  Both those that identify as 'left' and the 'right' — now outdated concepts from the early 20th century.


miamizsun

miamizsun Avatar

Location: (3283.1 Miles SE of RP)
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 18, 2016 - 6:08pm

 aflanigan wrote:
You've built up what you may think is a rather robust logical argument, but I think there are some holes in it.

Regarding the bolded text above, Ordinary peoples' ability to judge the professional competence of experts (doctors, bridge designers, etc. etc.)  is dubious at best. How many centuries before scientific reasoning came along did we put up with things like bloodletting, burning witches for disease and crop failure, etc?

Scientific method and knowledge gives us (in theory) the ability to judge if someone is competent at their job, but few consumers possess it in the requisite degree to make an informed judgement.

Look at how many people willingly give their money to quacks like Andrew Wakefield, or "Alternative" medicine practicioners of homeopathy, etc.

Even when it comes to traditional practitioners, how is one to judge reliably whether the failure of a therapy, or some other unwanted outcome is attributable to the competence of the practitioner? If a doctor sets your broken nose improperly, and you go to complain, they could tell you you did not follow their post treatment instructions carefully, or insist that the radiologist screwed up, or some other clever excuse. Most people assume that a certain aura surrounds people with "MD" appended to their name, and would not be likely to pursue this. Online review sites can potentially help somewhat in making it easier to detect patterns of complaints, but these comments and reviews are unvetted, so we don't know how reliable they may be.

There are ways that incompetent practitioners can continue to practice. If the state medical board (a regulating agency which presumably you as a libertarian/nonaggression principle supporter are not in favor of) suspends a practitioners' license to practice in one state, they can simply move to another. Even if they get decertified in every state, they can do what Wakefield has done, i.e. become an "unfrocked" doctor, i.e. a "service provider" or "consultant". Your options 1, 2, and 3 may be the only ones in your idyllic utopia based on non-aggression, but in the real world there is at least one other.
 
if you read the thread i was referring to price/overcharging

legitimate competition usually helps keep that in check

=======

your post assumes i'm against licensing or standards in medical care

obviously i'm not but it depends on who is controlling licensing and what standards one uses for certification or practice

there's some history of the medical profession in this country that i've posted over in the health thread i think

it deals with the pre-flexnor through post-flexnor stuff

you can get an idea about it here

america went from having the highest number of doctors/health care workers per capita to the lowest

flexnor worked closely with the ama and under the auspices of raising standards they closed a massive number of medical schools

many of these schools were already transitioning to the latest science/methodology (when possible)

and predictably the majority of these were for negroes and women and deemed unfit (and i'm sure a few were, but all of them?)

the "unintended consequences" of political action?

they controlled the licensing and it was virtually impossible for minorities to get in/accepted in the remaining schools

when political overreach and bad rules/regs are used against good people how do we reel them in? (or how do we say no?)

accad touches on a lot of the history

read it and maybe chase down some of his ref material

regards

Steely_D

Steely_D Avatar

Location: Biscayne Bay
Gender: Male


Posted: Aug 18, 2016 - 4:27pm

 westslope wrote:

Agree with most of what you write Steely_D but you are wrong on one point.  It ain't necessarily 'capitalism'.  It is self interest.  

Canadian doctors get paid a fee for service and there is plenty of incentive to over-order.   Would you call Canadian socialized medicine 'capitalism'?

How about we agree to call it professional self-interest?   

 
I'm thinking of capitalism in the sense of: "Capitalism is an economic system based on private ownership of the means of production and their operation for profit."
That gets cloudy when insurance companies are involved, of course.
But, my point is that FFS medicine is diametrically opposed to the nature of making people healthier, and doesn't do anything to limit health care costs. (The limit comes when the the insurance company refuses to reimburse the doctor, and then they would reconsider what they want to order.)


And going back to the main topic, it's the same: the incentive for privately owned prisons is to make them financially profitable - and the only ways to do that are by cutting costs or increasing population.
westslope

westslope Avatar

Location: BC sage brush steppe


Posted: Aug 18, 2016 - 3:29pm

 Steely_D wrote:

Well, that very much depends on the setup.

In antiquated, obsolete Fee For Service medicine, where a doctor gets paid for everything they do to the patient, it's in the doctor's financial interest to over-order and - in truth - not cure the patient. They make more money that way. That's capitalism.
....

 
Agree with most of what you write Steely_D but you are wrong on one point.  It ain't necessarily 'capitalism'.  It is self interest.  

Canadian doctors get paid a fee for service and there is plenty of incentive to over-order.   Would you call Canadian socialized medicine 'capitalism'?

How about we agree to call it professional self-interest?   
Page: 1, 2, 3 ... 18, 19, 20  Next