|
|
|
|
|
by ruined
186 days ago
|
|
>If a person is in jail, they are a ward of the state and have no expenses at all. There is no sense in paying them a "living wage" because they don't have to live off it. In any case, most stereotypical prison jobs would not cover the cost of incarcerating the employee. only the last sentence here is true. https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/amer... many prisoners receive a bill for their incarceration and will come out of prison with debt, even if they're working while in prison. it varies prison to prison, but even basic toiletries may not be provided. the most commonly purchased items at commissary are food. > The US definitely puts too many people in prison, but that's for cultural reasons and not because of some nefarious plan to get cheap labor. the constitutional amendment abolishing slavery contains a single exception: prisoners. the largest maximum security prison in the united states is a slave plantation, operated continuously since the 1830s. they still farm cotton. |
|
Paying to stay in jail should be done on an availability of funds, like bonds are (mostly), else it costs the tax payers. The shell companies that operate these prisons shouldn’t be allowed to charge inmates per diems if they are receiving tax payers dollars for them.
People think it’s all murders and rapists when that’s only 5% of the population at most. Most are in there for petty crime, drug charges, 3 strike rules, administrative chains, or mental health issues.
Yet for 27¢/day, will pick cotton for a local textile.