Johnnybravo300
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- Jan 3, 2016
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Teach those convicts to work!
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There is nothing good that comes from this situation (either to the victims or the perpetrators).
Being wrongly convicted..that would be horrible. I'm not sure what can be done to eliminate that from ever happening.
I still have no problem having prisoners do public service while serving time.
In fact I feel there should be more of it with vocational training as a goal.
Arguing different aspects of the legal system..that's a conversation for a different day and probably a different forum.
I have no issue with prisoners being put to work on road gangs to help pay for their imprisonment.
This is a great thread with some great advice... exercise personal responsibility in all aspects of life (reduce, reuse, recycle properly, etc.), contact decision-makers, make your feelings on pollution and litter known. How’s that saying go? “Do not accept the things that you cannot change. Rather, change the things that you cannot accept.” Something like that.
As far as inmate labor goes, I’m all for it when it comes to non-violent offenders. I’ve recruited inmate crews for my projects, instructed them, and worked side by side with them. They’re just people who (for the most part, excepting wrongly convicted folks) made poor choices or got caught doing something that may not be wrong, but is presently illegal. I think it’s a good way for them to pay off their “debt to society,” rather than just sitting around, getting 3 hots and a cot on the taxpayer dime. Of course I’m talking about the low risk short-timers... jail inmates... not the serial murderer, rapist, whatever... scary documentary type criminals. I’ve never been inside, but the inmates that I’ve spoken with were thrilled to get out and work, eager to learn, new good laborers. They say it gives them a break from the boredom of the jail. I don’t know about the documentaries, but I’d say that it’s largely sensationalized for ratings.
Kindest regards,
Kantuck
I run asphalt crews during the summer all over the state. We cant ever find enough help so we have to hire guys from the bottom of the barrel and most cant even drive, some have ankle bracelets for monitoring. Most have extensive schedules of court dates, parole stuff, pee tests, probation stuff and you cant keep up. Makes it real tough to travel for work.
We have mental cases, anger management problems, problem children/men, all the felons you can think of, even rapists.
I always get my own hotel room needless to say. I wouldnt ever room with any of them and my boss wouldnt expect me to. Not that I'd worry of being raped but just saying.
We had a guy the was in jail for throwing a bag of kittens in a fire at a party. He was also an escapee and was locked up for that, all by the age of 22 or so. Had another kid that went to prison fighting over a girl and shot another kid in the neck.
Most are from the bottom of the barrel but when you need bodies you need bodies and we need laborers.
If they arent 18 yr old kids straight out of high school then they are fresh out the penn.
A few of us are like the guards and we work them hard and keep an eye on things for the boss and he pays us well for it.
It can be done and I dont even get a cool horse and a shotgun.
Yikes!!! Burning kittens!!! What happened to the crying Indian?
Moved from Florida to Maine (temporarily in my eyes, wife.., not so much) some 7 years ago. I used to go to the dump in FL to drop off "stuff" but they also allowed me to take things, including paints, chemicals, pesticides, etc. They would rather have them used up and not having new ones bought than to have to incinerate it all. Didn't cost me a dime dropping off or taking. Here in Maine, costs me $$$ to do it all. When we moved here I asked about the hazmat materials to get rid of and was told they don't have anything like that and would have to travel and pay to get rid of it at some distant location. I was shocked!!! Lots of poor people up here who can't afford doing that. Ergo, everything gets dumped in the woods. I don't understand how this state operates the way it does and can't see the repercussions of their decisions. I know all states have these issues but it has to be made easy for people reuse, recycle and/or dispose of. There are sooo many facets to this pollution problem that even a little Swedish girl yelling "How dare you!" gets drowned out.
. . . . We just don't give a damn.
Also all the history mentioned in this thread is useless...unless we learn from it.
I only skimmed the thread so if this was already mentioned I apologize for repeating it...
Fun Fact:
The Indian in the commercial, "Iron Eyes Cody" wasn't an Indian at all. He played Indian roles in movies and portrayed himself as an Indian but he was an Italian American. His name was Espera de Corti.