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  • #46
    Originally posted by DickHardman View Post
    because he said he sees his victim as a woman. he pretends in his mind it is a woman, and he treats him like one. he says he gives him bread and a place to sleep and makes him wash his underwear. a guy like that who is doing life is not going to see a woman again so he pretends his victims are women.
    Why?
    Why not just admit he is Gay?

    seriously though, you dont think prison is a vacation do you? its pretty raw.
    If you read back at the context of what was written, you'll see what I was talking about.
    If prisons were truly a deterrent, we'd be knocking them down, not building new ones.
    Like I said, that's because there appears to be insufficient consequence for criminal activity.

    Do you really think they should have TV sets & Nintendo?
    I suppose those things occupy their time in between random bouts of Anal buggery eh?

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    • #47
      prisons dont work as deterrents because prisoners dont get any kind of rehabilitation in there. they just get worse, and then get released. 95% of inmates are eventually released back into society, so if they are doing nothing but partaking in gang rapes, fights, murders, and drugs behind bars, then for sure they are going to come out worse than they were before. that is also why inmates have high return rates to prisons after serving lengthy sentences. i posted an article in this thread earlier talking about how prisons are churning out monsters into our society; taking bad people, making them worse, and then releasing them back into the world. the article mentioned a guy who go raped in prison, and went on a anti gay shooting spree once he was released, when he wasnt a murder before going to prison. people say, oh who cares they are inmates, they have no rights, let them kill eachother off. uh, the problem is they are all going to get out at some point and they are just going to cause more crime and cause more tax dollars to be used.

      if you want real deterrents then we need real rehabilitation programs that will make inmates feel like they have some kind of purpose or some goal they can work towards. if they feel they are a part of something, even something minor, it can make all the difference. prisons need to be cleaned up, for the sake of the good citizens.

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      • #48
        So explain to us all what your wonderful rehabilitation program would entail then?
        Trips to Disneyland perhaps?
        Choir practice?
        Maybe a little Tai Chi under a tree every morning?

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        • #49
          Originally posted by Troll Virus View Post
          So explain to us all what your wonderful rehabilitation program would entail then?
          Trips to Disneyland perhaps?
          Choir practice?
          Maybe a little Tai Chi under a tree every morning?
          bee keeping. giving each inmate bee-keeping skills, a suit, and a hive to care for is an easy and lucrative way to keep inmates not only busy but give them a tiny sense of belonging/purpose/responsibility. they also get a unique job skill.

          as you know, fresh honey = $$$
          these inmates can raise the bees, care for the hives, and collect honey that can be sold by the gov for cash for whatever program they want to use it for. th

          this little program has already been going on in certain prisons in the usa, and the results have been promising.



          "For a select group of inmates in South Carolina state prisons, work detail no longer means pounding out license plates or picking up trash. Under a pilot program with Clemson University, these inmates are developing and maintaining honey bee colonies that will help agriculture across the state.

          Clemson entomologist Mike Hood and several undergraduate students are joining in a collaborative effort with the South Carolina Department of Corrections to run "Project Bee 2000," a three-year program to train inmates in the art of beekeeping. Inmates from the Wateree River Correctional Institution near Camden, and Goodman and Walden Correctional Institutions in Columbia are participating in the program.

          Hood praised the contributions of Clemson horticultural student Nathan Bradford and mechanical engineering student Brian Witbeck. "They gave hands-on instruction, assisted in placement of the bees in hives and inspected colonies," he said. "They were invaluable to the success of this project."

          Inmates participating in Project Bee 2000 will receive certified level instruction in the South Carolina Master Beekeepers Program. Besides alleviating the tedium of day-to-day prison life, there are advantages for the inmates long after they leave prison.

          "Beekeeping is a form of rehabilitation that can become a skill for life and maybe even a means of earning a living," said Hood. The first-year goal of the program is for the inmates to pass tests qualifying them as hobbyist beekeepers.

          Immediate benefits from this project should be noticed by farmers and recreational gardeners as harvest improve because of increased honey bee pollination around the project locations. In recent years, the capability for natural pollination has diminished because a mite infestation drastically reduced the honey bee population.

          In the future, the South Carolina beekeeping industry may be strengthened as Project Bee 2000 participants are released from prison and bring their knowledge into the field. Finally, the project will share the sweet taste of success with all inmates at the participating locations as healthier, all-natural honey replaces some of the granulated sugar used by the Department of Corrections for food preparation. "

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