Tue Oct 04, 2005 10:59 pm by Mike G
As someone said, is prison for rehabilitation or punishment? However, if you commit crime, you must be punished, because what is the motivation to not commit crimes otherwise?
Rehabilitation is important if you wish to release crims back into society if they have served their time. Unfortuately, as it currently stands - when released a high percentage are not even remotely rehablitiated at all. They commit crime again (I think it was a statistic that 80% commit further crime - or 80% that are caught commiting further crime). The short sentences and seemingly "luxurious" circumstances surrounding the criminals seems to detract from the rehabilitation of themselves. If we are failing to rehabilitate them due to short sentences (you get 50% off for good behaviour in this country, which makes the sentences a farce!) then you are neither punishing or rehabilitating them. Indeed, it's failing society as a whole in its mandate entirely, but sadly there appears to be no change to this, only further progression towards negative means.
Whom is the prison and rehabilitation supposed to serve? The nation, or the criminal?! Right now it appears to be the criminal, at the expense of the nation.
Furthermore we currently have an idea - if the jails are getting full of crims, to make room... we simply release them. Excuse me, but exactly what is the prison service for again? Are we going to start letting some crime go completely unpunished because we haven't the room? Oh, hang on - we do that already - how stupid of me. Punishment may now be in the form of a "curfew" of 9pm. Oh dear, how limiting in my life, what punishment - to be in at 9pm, wonder if anyone will take it to the EU court of human rights, that it's violating their human rights, and then to sue for it.
hmm, gives me an idea...
Edited by - Mike G on 10/5/2005 12:07:50 AM