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submitted 1 year ago by unions@lemmy.ml to c/worldnews@lemmy.ml
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[-] radiofreeval@hexbear.net 28 points 1 year ago

Systems of rehabilitation and methods to prevent crime, not punish it. Look up Angela Davis for someone smarter than me who has explained it better.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago

It's very hard to rehabilitate a foreign spy while the government they work for is still around. What we would do to handle crime in a hypothetical global commune is very different from how socialist states fighting for survival need to handle such matters.

[-] greywolf0x1@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 year ago

Perhaps a starting point would be to expose their acts and lawfully charge them to court based, the spies should bear the full brunt of that. No state should arrest or accuse an individual based on suspicion or speculations without any proof or evidence to support it.

And for what its worth, China is neither a socialist state nor is it fighting for survival.

[-] GarbageShoot@hexbear.net 14 points 1 year ago

nor is it fighting for survival.

Those US military bases are just surrounding it to keep it warm and the CIA fronts and agents are doing PR.

Few things are as annoying as immensely ignorant social chauvinists masquerading as progressives.

[-] Mic_Check_One_Two@reddthat.com 8 points 1 year ago

Prisons will still be necessary for the most egregious and irredeemable criminals. The sad reality is that there are certain people who simply need to be sequestered from the rest of society for the general public’s safety, and no amount of rehabilitation or intervention will solve that. But that should be the exception, not the norm. The massive prison population is absolutely a problem, but it isn’t something that can be completely abolished. It may be called something else in the future (like a long-term involuntary mental health facility,) but it’s still serving the same basic function while wearing a more friendly mask.

[-] spectre@hexbear.net 10 points 1 year ago

It could be abolished in the sense that the "location where we keep the most irredeemable people in society, who absolutely can not be left unsupervised" may not be a "prison", but some other secure facility that maximizes the ability of these people to make whatever contribution they may be able to make to society.

[-] Mic_Check_One_Two@reddthat.com 3 points 1 year ago

but some other secure facility that maximizes the ability of these people to make whatever contribution to society they may be able to make to society.

Yeah, I touched on that with my last sentence:

It may be called something else in the future (like a long-term involuntary mental health facility,) but it’s still serving the same basic function while wearing a more friendly mask.

There are two problems with that. The first is that “maximizing contribution to society” can easily be interpreted as “being forced to stamp license plates for 16 hours a day.” We already know this is a possible interpretation, because that’s how our system already interprets it. Either way they’re locked up against their will, and are being forced to perform labor to someone else’s benefit. The very nature of their confinement means that any contribution they make will be for someone else and not themselves. And the simple word for that is “slavery”. The second problem is that it’s still prison. We haven’t actually solved the prison problem at all in this scenario; We’ve simply given it a mask so we can say prisons have been abolished. Like if we don’t call them prisons, we can say we don’t have any prisoners.

[-] spectre@hexbear.net 4 points 1 year ago

My bad for the lack of reading before replying

They will be locked up against their will, unfortunately (until a future society figures out something better)

They don't need to be forced to stamp license plates under socialism (prison abolition can't happen under capitalism ofc), but if work were available to them they could receive a fair wage. That would not be slavery, it would be imprisonment, i guess (did I contradict my original point? Idk Maybe, but I still see it as fundamentally different than how a "prison" is defined in the 2020s).

Also "prison abolition" doesn't need to be literal, it's just a goal to work towards over many generations. Is it even viable? Who knows, but it's not gonna get figured out during our lifetimes anyway. In the meantime, we can start to restructure our society in a way that will minimize the scale of prisons, and maybe our grandchildren will find a way to phase them out totally, but that's their problem.

this post was submitted on 10 Aug 2023
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