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Widow Slams Killer's 'Jail Is Easy' Boast 
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ShockWaffle wrote:
Zippy wrote:
There was really very little convincing about the actual "punishment" side and nothing at all about rehabilitation apart from the ability of the prisoners to do work within the prison for money to spend in the tuck shop?!

You seem to be at odds with the philosophical basis of imprisonment in the UK and all other civilised nations.

Making people miserable is not the purpose of prison. The point is that imprisonment itself is the suspension of one's fundamental human right to self determination. In normal life you have the right to decide where you go, what you eat, when to take a dump, and so on. When you are placed under arrest, this right is removed for a limited time, when you are imprisoned it is revoked for a given duration. Your punishment is not that you are made cold for lack of blankets, nor that you are made hungry for lack of food. It is that you are made to suffer the loss of control over your life, and somebody else tells you when you can take a poo, or walk on some dirt, or go to bed.


But that's sort of my point. Making people miserable should be the point of prison, it should be such a miserable experience that people a) never want to go back and 2) remember how miserable it was, at the point when they are considering committing a crime.

I am not talking about making people freeze or starve to death, I'm merely suggesting that they have the very basics of human rights. Yes, enough blankets to keep warm and yes a reasonable number of calories, I even went as far as to suggest a library, gym, exercise yard etc etc.

My experiences of prison in the UK is of it being more like a 'locked-door' Comfort Inn where the inmates have access to pretty good food, a suprising amount of freedom, the ability to educate themselves and "creature comforts" like tv and computers. I don't consider those things "basic human rights" because if they were, everyone who wanted them would have them. My idea of prison would be single celled accomodation with access to a communal area (with one shared tv perhaps) during the day, basic nutrition and the ability to exercise either the mind or the body (or both.)

I'm not at odds with the idea of prison, just the method of execution of the sentence. I can't find the original reference at the moment, but there is a study into re-offence based on the location of the offenders last prison, which basically said that the cushier the prison, the more likely the person was to re-offend. As far as I'm concerned, prison should be as unpleasant as possible, and any rehabilitation should come after the sentence is served.

ShockWaffle wrote:
You don't need to see anything "convincing about the actual "punishment" side". If the people are there, they are being punished within the terms of the system and to its maximum constituted extent.


But that doesn't mean that the inmates see it as such. Inmates in the prisons I've visited have access to toilets whenever they want/need, they go to bed when they want etc etc because the human rights protestors see it as their basic human right. Just because the system says they're being punished, and to the fullest extent of the system, doesn't mean the inmates perceive it as punishment, in which case what's the point?

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 3:33 pm
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Zippy, don't forget that we operate different categories of prison depending on the severity of the crime. Dartmoor, when I saw it (c.2000), was certainly not a locked-door Comfort Inn.

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 3:52 pm
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ProfessorF wrote:
Zippy, don't forget that we operate different categories of prison depending on the severity of the crime. Dartmoor, when I saw it (c.2000), was certainly not a locked-door Comfort Inn.


Yes, I guess that's true, I've only seen "maximum" security prison in the US, perhaps I should find a Cat.A prison in the UK for a visit (if you can?) for comparrison. But Dartmoor is Cat.C and so are Wealstun and Maidstone (which I have visited) so I can't understand why they'd be so different.

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 4:01 pm
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It wasn't Cat. C when I was there, that happened in 2001.

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 4:03 pm
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Zippy wrote:
ProfessorF wrote:
Zippy, don't forget that we operate different categories of prison depending on the severity of the crime. Dartmoor, when I saw it (c.2000), was certainly not a locked-door Comfort Inn.


Yes, I guess that's true, I've only seen "maximum" security prison in the US, perhaps I should find a Cat.A prison in the UK for a visit (if you can?) for comparrison. But Dartmoor is Cat.C and so are Wealstun and Maidstone (which I have visited) so I can't understand why they'd be so different.


Although, I just went to have a read about Belmarsh which is Cat.A and found the following:

Quote:
Belmarsh is a Category A Prison holding prisoners from all over the United Kingdom. In addition Belmarsh is a local prison, accepting different categories of prisoners from primarily the Central Criminal Court and magistrates Courts in South East London. In addition the establishment serves Crown and Magistrates Courts in South West Essex. Accommodation at the prison is a mixture of approximately 60% multi occupancy cells and 40% single cells, distributed mainly across 4 residential units.

Inmates at Belmarsh are offered access to education, workshops, and 2 gyms (one focusing on Physical Education courses and one for recreational gym), with use of a sports hall and a weights room. The gym staff also have a partnership with Charlton Athletic Football Club to deliver F.A. accredited coaching courses for prisoners.

A listener scheme for prisoners at risk from suicide or self harm is in operation at Belmarsh. There is also a support group for foreign national prisoners, providing advice on immigration law.


Seriously? FA accredited coaching for prisoners? I wonder how many truly talented teens have that opportunity? :roll:

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 4:05 pm
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ProfessorF wrote:
It wasn't Cat. C when I was there, that happened in 2001.


Fair enough, I didn't know that.

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Sat Oct 03, 2009 4:06 pm
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Don't worry chaps, the reassuringly high suicide rate in British prisons indicates that they are still nasty places; TV and flushing toilets not withstanding.
http://www.prisonreformtrust.org.uk/sub ... sp?id=1221

Men are 5.1 times more likely to kill themselves in prison than in the general population. Young men, between 15-17, were 18 times more likely to commit suicide.
http://www.prisonreformtrust.org.uk/sub ... asp?id=328


Sat Oct 03, 2009 8:22 pm
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