| Yes, you can indeed continue to move the goal posts, but acknowledge we're far into the weeds and even further from what the article focused on - Religious Slave Labor Camps in China. Why aren't inmates paid a "fair" wage? Well, that's up for debate and I think I'd enjoy hearing pros and cons. Some cons I could think of are: * These are inmates, serving a sentence as punishment for a crime they were convicted of. * Most of their living expenses are already provided. * Alternatives include doing nothing all day instead of a job. * If inmate labor cost what non-inmate labor costs, why would anyone hire inmates? * The labor programs are largely voluntary. * The money earned is used as a reward for participation, good behavior, and showing a willingness to work and get along with other inmates. Misbehave and you don't get to work, and don't earn money. Now maybe it is time to step up some sort of minimum wage for inmates... but that doesn't distract from atrocities the CCP is committing in present day. |
If the gaol sentence is their punishment, why are they being penalised further by reduced wages?
> * If inmate labor cost what non-inmate labor costs, why would anyone hire inmates?
Government-backed incentives. It's in everyone's best interests for people convicted of crimes to have a path back on to the straight-and-narrow. Investing in reducing recidivism is far better value for money than almost any other anti-crime measures.
> * The labor programs are largely voluntary. [...] Alternatives include doing nothing all day instead of a job.
These statements are contradictory.