Wilbur wrote:
These gang members and other chronic repeat offenders each cost our society millions before they are either murdered, overdose, get sent to prison for long sentences, or finally grow-up and quit their criminal lifestyles. We could save ourselves a fortune by going back to a habitual criminal law. On your third or fourth indictable offence conviction you get a mandatory life sentence without parole. Could some be rehabilitated if we did not impose a life sentence, sure, buy so what. They choose their life of crime, and they choose to quit doing crimes. Make the obviously wrong choice and you suffer the consequences.
The cost of keep for those doing life without parole can be significantly decreased. They won't need counselors or rehabilitation programs because they will never be released, they don't need gymnasiums, tennis courts and golf courses in their prisons, nor colour TVs, and hobby shops. No, a 6X10 plain concrete box and three bowels of gruel with boiled meatloaf will suit their needs just fine. You could lower the cost of keeping them in prison to a couple thousand a year, and they would never again be victimizing anyone.
A couple of problems there. The vast majority of the costs incurred in the prison system are through the legislation to run it, the building, the guards, the case managers, etc. Giving prisoners a T.V., basketball court, library, costs nothing. I've yet to see a prison that has a golf course. In return, it keeps the prisoners mobile enough to drastically reduce the medical costs and day to day problems between inmates. Go spend a day in a Max. security pen, you're idea that they have it good will vanish in a matter of seconds. You're right on one count, they should have a hopeless line drawn where those that are beyond help are not provided with any sort of rehabilitation and are simply kept away from society until they pass on. But if you want to throw away the little bit of civility that our prison system has and let them rot in a corner, then you are treading a fine line between being just as evil as they are. We are the ones handing out the sentencing because we are the ones that are civil and we have to show that.
When you hear about the prisoners that get all the goodies, they are the prisoners that are at min. security joints and have only comitted a petty crime and pose no threat to the public. If you change that to the hell that the Max security joints are, you'll have to spend 5 times what they're spending now, to uprgrade a building, increase the number of guards, and upgrade suveilance. Stick them in that type of place and no matter what kind of danger they pose, they'll all escape if given the chance and when they get out they'll commit the real crimes. What's better, to give the low time prisoners a lifestyle that somewhat resembles the outside world and provide counseling etc. or treat them like dogs for 5 years and then turn them loose with a pitbull mentality?
LH I agree with you that the sentencing needs to be increased and that there is a line where you simply put the prisoners away for the rest of their lives. I think it's really important to try and not let it come to that though, cause if it comes to that it means that someones paid with their life and that is what we should be concentrating on not happening with our Justice System. I went to school with a kid that invaded an ealderly guys home and the guy died of a heart attack. I knew the kid fairly well and he was a really good kid just got caught up with the wrong crowd and was in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was convicted with Manslaughter. I think it was his first real offence and given a second chance, with some help the kid could easily go clean. I also worked with a fucking pedophile nutcase. He raped an 8 year old then dumped her body in the river. He was convicted of 1st degree murder. I also went to school with a girl that was gunned down along with 10 of her relatives because her Uncle was pissed that her Aunt left him. She died along with 8 other family members. I think it's important to distinguish between the kid that had no intent on ever harming anyone, just caught up with the wrong group and the last two assholes. The kid needs a second chance, the rapist needs isolation and if the last guy never blew his own head off, I would have done it for him. If the death penalty cost less than a life sentence I'd be all for it when it comes to guys like them, not for retaliation but to ensure that they never cause that type of tragedy again.
We have no effective screening methods to make sure pilots are sane.
— Dr. Herbert Haynes, Federal Aviation Authority.