2/16/2009 9:19:59 PM
damn....you really DO wear a beret and live in your parent's basement, don't you?but seriously. what's sad is how you libertarians never see how divorced from reality you truly are.
2/16/2009 9:32:15 PM
2/16/2009 9:57:08 PM
2/17/2009 12:41:18 AM
What are y'all tryna achieve with prisons exactly?I mean, we gotta settle on a purpose before we can decide how they are best administrated.
2/17/2009 2:12:52 AM
2/17/2009 7:25:28 AM
Anarchists have traditionally been leftists. If we don't make much sense, we at least have a solid history of incoherence.
2/17/2009 6:17:54 PM
2/17/2009 6:29:19 PM
2/17/2009 8:46:08 PM
Has Lonesnark explained how a private industry bribing judges proves that private industry is better for running prisons?
2/17/2009 9:34:49 PM
Yes. He explained that a government monopoly, be it privately run or government run, will tend to corrupt the judicial system, as your example demonstrates: a government monopoly (the prison owner) bribed a government employee (the judge) for favorable regulations (convictions). My suggestion is not just privatization, but what should go along with that: a competitive marketplace. In a competitive marketplace, the bribing of the judge would have been a waste of money, as the convicts would have likely gone to someone elses prison.
2/17/2009 10:43:56 PM
lofuckinglwhy not just privatize the judiciary as well. That way defendants and plaintiffs get to decide what judges get to hear their cases.
2/17/2009 11:17:34 PM
I have thought of that, but concluded it would work poorly. While a private prison should have no trouble incarcerating unarmed men on its own property, a true court of law requires the backing of armed men in the form of not just the police but the military, a contrivance which a private court would be unable to muster.
2/17/2009 11:27:35 PM
^^ To a small degree we have that already. Mostly for small claims and civil matters, but private arbitration is becoming quite common.
2/17/2009 11:28:35 PM
^x4 I'm all for privatization too, but I draw the line somewhere. Prisons should be ran by the government. Even if it was privately ran, the government would have so much red tape and regulation that they might as well run the damned thing themselves. Hence we are back where we started. Just let the government handle it. There is less incentive for corruption that way.[Edited on February 17, 2009 at 11:32 PM. Reason : -]
2/17/2009 11:31:25 PM
^ all my arguments to the contrary not withstanding? Have the decency to present a logical reason why "prison" automatically means "heavily regulated". They are currently heavily regulated because they must be to prevent the newspapers from filling up with stories of abuse and mis-management, a situation that would not occur in a competitive marketplace.
2/18/2009 11:17:43 AM
2/18/2009 11:19:59 AM
^What's "infowars"*?... and where's his beret? Hot pockets are overpriced and (at least used to) have trans fats (Oh but you're saying his mom buys them... fail and fail)Also, I love what Al Gore has done to advance our environmental policy and the mandate to continue.(environment > liberty.... which is why big L libertarians don't like me.)
2/18/2009 11:38:16 AM
^ I suspect most anarchists would suggest you shoot them.
2/18/2009 11:45:51 AM
2/18/2009 9:31:28 PM
2/19/2009 12:40:20 AM
It is an odd fact that crime rates today far exceed the crime rates prevalent in the 19th century. A time of extreme inequality (some died of malnutrition) and piss-poor police forces. It does lend some credence to Vipers anarchistic assertion. Afterall, there was far less "system" back then.But I mostly credit it to effective policing (no need for a trial; let's just beat the robber senseless right here) and lax reporting.[Edited on February 19, 2009 at 1:16 AM. Reason : .,.]
2/19/2009 1:12:44 AM
^ It could also have something to do with more things being crimes. I mean, go back in time and you didn't see grade school kids being arrested for bringing steak knives and water pistols to school. Then there's the whole war on drugs thing.
2/19/2009 10:04:07 AM
2/19/2009 1:12:03 PM
Suppose that private prisons could give us longer prison sentences with better conditions for inmates at the same cost. I would tend to support this.Bettering the conditions should help balance against longer sentences in terms of the "harshness" of punishment. However, my best estimation from looking at the data is that violent crime has a large biological component and locking criminals up works because it gives time for their testosterone levels to fall naturally. The longer you lock them up the lower their rates fall too. Thus society gets a better deal.
2/19/2009 3:54:20 PM
Wait wait wait wait waitSome of you actually don't see an issue with someone profiting by locking another person up?LikeYou don't see a certain, shall we say, conflict of interest there?I mean I know you guys think its a good idea to have the care your health and well being be directly linked to a stock portfolio but...
2/19/2009 4:06:29 PM
^ So, hmm, you don't have a point, then?
2/19/2009 4:30:56 PM
^^ As a general rule, any time someone is doing something for someone else, they're profiting in some form or fashion. Government control over the prisons doesn't prevent people from profiting.
2/19/2009 4:51:05 PM
I think there are applications for what GoldenViper is describing right now, no Revolution necessary.Incorrigible criminals really are very rare.People want to improve themselves.Falling back on prisons as a means to accomplish anything is just really, really lazy.
2/19/2009 5:13:31 PM
2/19/2009 5:22:11 PM
Lonesnark I know you're pretty daft dude but really think for one second.My profit derives from stuffing as many human beings into as small of a land area as possible.Hmm. Don't see any problems here at all
2/19/2009 5:55:12 PM
^^^ Quite true. The US incarceration rate should be a national embarrassment. Other countries put far fewer folks behind bars.
2/19/2009 6:11:14 PM
2/19/2009 6:28:29 PM
2/19/2009 7:57:51 PM
I don't know what castration experiments they're talking about, but history shows you don't need balls to kick ass. Various eunuchs have assaulted, murdered, and fought, sometimes leading armies. China played around with military units including only the castrated. In current India, eunuch gangs commit countless crimes, some of them violent. As long as your body and mind function, you can kill under the right circumstances. Besides, my understanding of prisons suggests that locking people up is the worst way to pacify them. Plenty of folks do time for a minor offense and end up going straight thug. Does this not happen to older people? If not, how long would they have to stay behind bars to avoid the effect?
2/20/2009 1:16:06 AM
^The question is does being in jail cause them to go thug or1) Were they on that path anyway. Sort of like smoking pot doesn't led people to heroin so much as anyone who predisposed to shooting heroin probably also doesn't have a problem smoking pot2) The stigma of being an ex-con only increases their incentive to turn to anti-social behaviorAs for the eunuchs, I don't really know much of that history. My understanding is that castration as punishment dramatically reduces recidivism. And, of course we know women are far less likely to commit violent crime. Again, they do of course but at far lower rates.[Edited on February 20, 2009 at 10:22 AM. Reason : .]
2/20/2009 10:21:07 AM
2/20/2009 3:50:44 PM
2/20/2009 4:26:45 PM
2/20/2009 6:46:44 PM
2/21/2009 12:39:35 PM
^ wini know some of you are very religious -- your religion being either that the free market is god or that the free market is satan -- and some of you simply need this sort of absolutism to validate your masculinity/decisiveness/quest for the alpha male status that you'll probably never achieve..but try not to sacrifice civility and common sense at the altar of your bloodthirst
2/21/2009 3:51:45 PM