McDonald's, Wendy's, and Starbucks use prison labor for processing foods and packaging. Walmart uses prison labor for relabeling UPC on products. Sprint and Verizon use prison labor for telecommunications services and call centers. JCPenney sells clothing sewn by prisoners. Fidelity Investment funds ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) which has created laws authorizing and increasing the use of prison labor. And much much more. Then you have overseas prison labor, a lot of things made in other countries is done by prison labor by people who have not committed any actual crimes other than being born a certain way in a certain place.
@kobaltkweenАй бұрын
It's cute you think that's different than here. Look up the black codes. US law enforcement and penal system is firmly rooted in laws made to re-enslave African Americans after the Civil War. That's why "loitering," or just existing in public without work to do, is a crime you can be arrested for pretty much everywhere in the US. And even if they couldn't legally get away with that, if you object, well, a ton of African Americans get arrested for the sole charge or resisting arrest. No justification needed for the arrest in the first place.
@KaiLucasZacharyАй бұрын
Awesome. At least they’re doing something other than starting new gang wars.
@davidmcleod5133Ай бұрын
The problem I’ve run into is I’ve quickly run out of places to shop, entirely, once I started weeding out the unethical ones. I’m not even joking.
@KaiLucasZacharyАй бұрын
But fuck Donald Trump wanting to being labor back into the USA, right? All those “unethical” places are the best option.
@strawpigletАй бұрын
Yep. What we need is a new government. I vote third party. It would be nice if most Americans would.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
@@KaiLucasZacharyNo, fuck him for being a fascist bigoted PoS and lying about bringing jobs back to the US. His economic policy (or better said his team economic policy, because you know he doesn't know shit about economics) is an absolute disaster, but you'll see it shortly.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
@@strawpigletcongrats on wasting your vote. With a first past the post system voting for a third party is the same as not voting, and that's not a political opinion, that's math.
@Xhumed29 күн бұрын
That's Capitalism for you.
@bethybee565Ай бұрын
Prison labor kind of seems like an incentive for overcriminalization. Just saying. You can pay a non-inmate $7.50 an hour or an inmate $.50 a day. Our capitalist overlords definitely have a vested interest in making sure the littlest things end up with a jail sentence. 💁🏼♀️
@JubeiKibagamiFezАй бұрын
And this is why there is a such thing as the prison industrial complex. This is the direct product of a privatized prison system, aka For Profit Incarceration.
@edzejandehaan9265Ай бұрын
Yeah, slavery never really ended in the US. It just got renamed.
@michaelmammoth101028 күн бұрын
Did you know that if you avoid drugs, rape, murder and stealing then you won't be "enslaved" in the US?
@AshLilyNekoАй бұрын
Prisons are how the US can still legally use slaves. Basically if someone is a prisoner under US law it is legal to use and treat them as a slave. Idk if that is true for all states but here in the hell that is Texas it definitely is. Also our prisons are not air conditioned. Also keep in mind that most prisoners suffer from severe mental illness. So yeah the prison system is just another way to enslave minorities and those who are mentally unwell.
@strawpigletАй бұрын
True.
@foogod4237Ай бұрын
It varies a lot by state. Some states have actually eliminated or put substantial restrictions on old provisions that allowed for forced labor, other states still have them on the books but do not make use them that often (but they still can any time they feel like it), and some states see it as perfectly normal to treat the prison population as free labor for anything and everything they want to make them do. It's really important to check and understand what the situation is in your particular state...
@gloriastroedecke2717Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this. So many people have no idea. And,yes, it's great to have fun but a moment of seriously will do us no harm.
@lavenderpetals6421415 күн бұрын
As of 2023 Costco doesn't use prison labor in their own Kirkland brand. However they are a warehouse and they stock random brands from everywhich nook and cranny i swear. Unfortunately some of the random brands they might bring in might end up being from prison labor but no not their brand
@nixypixy3474Ай бұрын
Thanks for the reminder that the USA still has slavery. Did you know that the privatization of prisons lead to some states having body count requirements that the state has to fulfill lest they owe money.
@martinstammbach2894Ай бұрын
"and while some ... make up to 52 cents per hour" is a horrifying statement on its own tbh 😞
@captainpoppletonАй бұрын
well they get free food & board
@RB-vg5igАй бұрын
I believe JDDelay (among others)has talked about the wages and how it doesn't just translate to accessible money for them either. The way they get money on the books to buy commissary is convoluted and shady, too. This is generalized, of course.
@robinhood2454Ай бұрын
It's prison. Who do you think pays to house, feed and provide medical treatment, send them to school, give the classes to better themselves upon release ECT...??? Should our taxes be responsible? I think looking at the big picture 52cents an hour is pretty good
@martinstammbach2894Ай бұрын
@@robinhood2454 Well, take a guess what happens when someone gets out of prison and has nothing (just like when they got into prison). Do you not think that maybe they'll go right back to stealing stuff and commiting worse crimes while stealing? I get that it's expensive, but with the way things are in the US atm (at least from what I know) around 75% of all people who were in jail go back to jail within 5 years - is that cheaper for society?
@robinhood2454Ай бұрын
@martinstammbach2894 I get that but I don't think it has anything to do with making them work to earn their stay.
@RitaSixxАй бұрын
You just described literal slavery. They’re being treated as slaves
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
Because that's what the 13th amendment says.
@firstmkbАй бұрын
Yep - literally an exemption on forced labor for prisoners. Why do people get upset about the same thing in China?
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
@@firstmkb Why don't people get upset at it in the US?
@johnball8758Ай бұрын
Some countries give prisoners job training and help them find jobs after they get out. The US kicks them out in the streets with $50 and the clothes on their backs where they often commit crimes again. Wonder why?
@michaelmammoth101028 күн бұрын
Best advice: Don't do stuff that will get you tried by a jury of your peers and placed in prison...
@zenwolf104617 күн бұрын
They know they will be back in prison soon, they need recetivism to keep making money off the prisoners.
@theninearemine849915 күн бұрын
To be fair, the prisoners get a chance to work. A good solution might be to allow them to work off some of their time. If they are not violent or a predator.
@DeidresStuffАй бұрын
The Constitution specifically states that slavery is legal if they're imprisoned.
@dragonwings36Ай бұрын
Yep. I remember learning about that and of course was absolutely horrified. Still am horrified.
@KaiLucasZacharyАй бұрын
@@dragonwings36 Why? Explain. When your parents said “no TV” and then you watched TV anyway, did you then get an allowance for washing dishes when you’re currently grounded for watching TV?
@kenrickman6697Ай бұрын
Haven’t you heard? The US Constitution says you can have all the guns you want. Nothing else. There are no other protections, rights, or freedoms stated or implied.
@andromedaspark2241Ай бұрын
@@KaiLucasZachary You can't compare prisoners to children getting grounded. Did you hear the part about no legal health or safety protections for work conditions, and sentences getting lengthened for noncompliance? Prisoners get penalized for not working when they are ill; that's surely a violation of a basic human right. Children have legal health and safety protections so hopefully someone can and will step in if they see them mistreated, and they eventually they turn 18 or get empancipated from their parents. It would only be the same if children could be forced to work in potentially harmful conditions by their parents and could have the age of adulthood moved to an older age as a punishment for refusing, no matter how reasonable their objection.
@strawpigletАй бұрын
It also used to allow slavery of black men and forbid minorities from voting.
@jessicalingo4346Ай бұрын
Peope comment on the 52c an hr. When i was in prison i was working in one of the higher paying jobs (sewing garments. Some of which went to local fire crew). I maxed out at 25c an hr. In there thats a surprisingly high number. The kitchen (which was on the low side) was about 10 to 12c an hr. So tbh i was fine with my wage. It kept me off the yard and, therefore, out of trouble and enough money to sustain myself while inside
@jonathan198627Ай бұрын
Definitely some mental health issues you need to work through if you think this is ok, not joking or trying to get a rise out of you, your not well if you think this is ok. Get help and you'll see how wrong you were being treated. Just because they stopped beating you doesn't make them kind.
@jessicalingo4346Ай бұрын
@jonathan198627 I understand under most (if not all) circumstances having this pay is disgustingly low but compared to other spaces within that community this is high. I'm not saying this is right cause I know it's not but it is what it is. We're trying to get people to stop going to prison. If we have the pay they receive even remotely close to the pay we have out here I truly don't see why people (who are already wanting to stay) wouldn't want to stay. A free bed, 3 free meals, a guaranteed job that pays, let's say, $8 an hr, free Healthcare, no bills except for food and if your lucky a snail mail or telephoneform of communication..... compared to some of the ways people are living while on parole its truly better. No place wanting to rent to you, no job wanting to hire to you, forced to be on the streets in the winter, no money to support yourself, bills stacking up like transportation, communication, storage, a gym membership (if your allowed for showers), Healthcare you have to pay the big bucks you don't have for. I understand full well why people continue to go in and out of prison. It's so very sad to say but sometimes prison is safer and better.
@michaelmammoth101028 күн бұрын
Honestly, prisoners should not be paid anything and commissary should not exist.
@rogerelliott154621 күн бұрын
You never have nor will ever be a let down to me.
@andyschofield6677Ай бұрын
You have a fantastic sense of humor and honest beauty. Keep up the good work, I'll keep watching!
@fluteykatАй бұрын
I hate this planet 😭
@cyrussoxlegionАй бұрын
Reminder: the punishment for crime is incarceration, not losing your civil rights.
@jamezkpal2361Ай бұрын
How is incarceration not an infringement on your civil rights?
@privatecitizen1246Ай бұрын
Actually you'd be wrong. They lose the right to vote and they lose the right to get a good job because nobody will hire a felon.
@techpriestsalok8119Ай бұрын
Reminder: this is not true in >90% of countries. The majority of Europe and nearly everywhere in not-Europe do not follow this policy, incarcerated prisoners lose nearly all rights.
@hinoron6528Ай бұрын
It's simpler than that. While nearly all countries in the world abolished slavery, America is the country that had to have a civil war with itself, because half of the pop though slavery was a great idea and fully committed to it. Losing didn't mean they changed their minds at all. Instead of "I guess we need to accept that slavery is wrong", they went with "what if we didn't call them 'slaves'... and also accused them of crimes so those whiny humanitarian types had no sympathy for them? Let's write some new laws that give us excuses to arrest people who aren't doing anything. How does 'loitering' sound?" Thus today, in a country that already champions having some of the worst worker's rights of all 1st world nations as being "Freedom" somehow, there's a huge Penal Labour System that fits pretty much every definition of slavery except the name.
@dmhiixАй бұрын
Thank you for showing the filter to non-filter comparison. I think real people look better than barbie dolls.
@PrydeWater901Ай бұрын
I started with “Stuff My Dad Sends Me”, and ended up on “Stuff Inmates Made Me”.
@JubeiKibagamiFezАй бұрын
Me too.
@spacebaby420OGАй бұрын
That's why it's so important to make everything illegal
@ClubbingBabySealzАй бұрын
As someone who did time in King County California in Corcoran prison. They used alot of us as cattle for making all sorts of things for costco. Was only paid 43 cents an hour if that. No days off no medical and horrible working conditions and environment obviously.
@Firestar-TVАй бұрын
Would be cool as Hell if some of the Money would be saved for them and then they would get it when they are released. 😑 But the crappy US Government wouldn't do that anyways
@exiledengineer169710 күн бұрын
The filter gag was great, also glad to hear whole foods is in on the prison labor market, cause they clearly have a low profit margin
@stthomasmore4811Ай бұрын
I would be okay if it was optional compensated employment given to those who merited a headstart reintegrating before release.
@RaphaPortoRPАй бұрын
The more you show your social/political views, the more I think you are an amazing person to live with! ❤
@theunknownreturnsАй бұрын
Rough stuff. Fyi, you look fine without the filter.
@MortMe04306 күн бұрын
At this point it's hard to find brands / retailers that don't use either prison labor, or almost or equally heinous practices. I haven't heard of Aldi doing it, but I'm not holding my breath.
@kujmous3 ай бұрын
I appreciate this. Thank you.
@kb3svjАй бұрын
If a bag of potato chips from a prison and another comes from a mfg with free people working for in come both cost $1 then the extra profit made on the cheap labor of the prison labor should go towards the prisoner's cost of staying at the Greystone Hotel, or restitution to the victim if applicable.
@ThaGrimbler11 күн бұрын
I think I could make an exception. If I knew a particular piece of crap was doing forced labor, intentionally buying the products they may have made, to experience the schadenfreude
@ShavinMcCrotch13 күн бұрын
So they found a way around The Emancipation Proclamation. So clever.
@usmc1992usmc6 күн бұрын
I have zero problem with violent criminals or thieves doing hard labor for years/decades/life. I damn sure don’t care if they have to make some products.
@EvgeniSharapov11 күн бұрын
The problem is that in the United States slavery was never totally abolished. It is perfectly legal as a form of punishment by the state. Slavery to this day in 2024 is inshrined and protected in the Constitution
@Casper042Ай бұрын
California had Proposition 6 on the ballot which would have made forced labor illegal for prisoners in the state, but this measure failed to pass during the most recent election. Need to post/re-post stuff like this a month or so before elections.
@mikevidal4896Ай бұрын
How do we look into how our products are made?
@AdriftLegendАй бұрын
Prison labor starting to sound a lot like ordinary labor.
@AshLilyNekoАй бұрын
I think u got this backward
@AdriftLegendАй бұрын
@AshLilyNeko oh yeah, you're right lol
@eco2geek.Ай бұрын
I don't know what products I buy are made with prison labor. I wasn't aware they sold products to retailers. That's odd. I do know that there is a law in my state (that was passed via the initiative petition process) that states that prisoners have to work. They make license plates. They answer the customer service lines for the DMV (believe it or not, and it's the incarcerated women who do it).
@christiannacolbert560311 күн бұрын
Slavery never died, just changed shape.
@LadyDragonbane6 күн бұрын
Crazy that sickness can extend their sentence. Please fix your shit, America!
@cirquedutournesol3 ай бұрын
I've never been this early to a video but god damn. Current events just keep getting crazier.
@A_Lion_In_The_Sun17 күн бұрын
I decided not to renew my costco membership this year for a couple of reasons, and now I'm glad I did. The other reasons: last years christmas cheese plate made us sick (later found the cheese had been recalled), their chicken is trash, they sold me spoiled ground beef, and I've found roaches in their packaging. Plus, the place is always super crowded and I find it overwhelming, the parking lot is a war zone.... I'm better off just shopping at my local supermarket.
@lavenderpetals6421415 күн бұрын
As someone who doesn't work directly for costco but inside of costco I might suggest calling to complain on that one
@Zach-e2jАй бұрын
They got nothing but time
@chiefjoseph8154Ай бұрын
Don’t go to prison.
@MandieKearns-MooreАй бұрын
Also when you hear movies and stuff oh they only get nine cents an hour they only get 11 cents an hour and that's not true they only get 11 cents a day
@strawpigletАй бұрын
It’s called fascism. Thanks for covering this.
@captainpoppletonАй бұрын
maybe you check out how communists treat their prisoners
@carilarson2109Ай бұрын
18 to life, yep, that wrapped this up.
@Greg-s5vАй бұрын
There you are! You weren’t popping up in my feed but your back today 😉
@shsummersАй бұрын
Did you mean "Cosco" or Costco? Cosco makes household items - Costco is only a retail chain AFAIK.
@firstmkbАй бұрын
Retail “membership club” like Sam’s. They have private label products as well as name brands. I liked them better before I watched this.
@shsummersАй бұрын
@@firstmkb Costco's private brand is called "Kirkland", not Costco.
@samday6621Ай бұрын
oooh, slave labour?! Just when you thought they banned that sh}t.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
They, whoever they are, didn't ban it. Look up the 13th amendment
@laurastreleАй бұрын
On one hand we don't want the criminals have everything provided for them. Like and rent..
@KaiLucasZacharyАй бұрын
No, it’s both hands. They chose to do something that deserves removal from society, so they should be forced to do something for society in return. No ifs, ands, or buts. If they refuse, there are still more extreme measures than simple confinement. Getting to work in a prison is actually a fucking grace over being in solitary.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
@@KaiLucasZachary"...choose to do...", nobody in jail chose to do crimes, people, most people, do illegal things all the time, the stats are like over 90% of USsians break the law frequently because there is an overcriminalization problem but it's worse than that because most people in jail also didn't choose to do the things that landed them there, we live in a system where you either have money or you can "choose" to die of hunger, exposure or lack of medical attention, how is that a choice?
@thatguy66271Ай бұрын
Maybe im just a pos but i dont see anything wrong with prison labor. Im glad to hear that they are still doing something productive for society well being a financial burden on it do to their own mistakes
@Jami_rainstormАй бұрын
Yeah I think you are a pos considering this is literal slavery :/
@nevaehanglique516827 күн бұрын
i think even if you believe that, they at least have the right to proper medical treatment and safe working conditions
@thatguy6627127 күн бұрын
@nevaehanglique5168 I definitely can stand with you on that
@jamesrogers2780Ай бұрын
Catch the wall! Get off the head running!
@johnleeson6946Ай бұрын
Still looking good w/o the filter. Your beautifully big eyes shine brightly throughout the video Danka, Gracias, & Gracie!
@alvermillioncranky8360Ай бұрын
Didn't let me down.
@tbthedozer15 күн бұрын
Da fuq? That’s not cool on sooo many levels! It a job even in the clink it’s still a job. Prisoners should make the state or federal minimum wage or better depending on skills required. They should get 10 days pto like a regular work place. The health care is covered by the taxpayers but if they are working for a business they need to cover the other half of the taxpayers bill. And lastly it’s a job and safety is required. People can be sent to jail for running unsafe companies so yes there’s a hard mandatory state or federal OSHA inspection required to ensure these people make the transition from prisoners to working adults with skills, knowledge and the self esteem to start a new life when they get out and to have enough banked up to do so so they can escape the cycle. How is this so f’ing broken?
@JN-xb6pq11 күн бұрын
I don't see anything wrong with prison labor.
@colonelflagg9669Ай бұрын
I thought the filter was just make-up.
@briondionetolerАй бұрын
Still beautiful
@robinhood2454Ай бұрын
I support this. I worked at a prison. Its prison. Your there for punishment. You should have to work to earn your keep for the state having to take care of you. You do not get a free ride even in prison.
@peterclarke7006Ай бұрын
Nah, it's a system that actively encourages States to increase their prison populations, and exploit the prisoners they have, as well as incarcerate them for as long as possible. Also, it's taking factory and manufacturing jobs away from working class people. You're basically advocating for mass unemployment.
@firstmkbАй бұрын
Who should profit from incarcerating people? Seriously, there is a lot of money made from the prisons between the virtually free labor to the very profitable management contracts. Would you want to depend on a doctor if every visit, treatment, or medicine literally came out of his pay?
@peterclarke7006Ай бұрын
@@robinhood2454 so... You support slave labor? Good to know...
@ronwilliamson-uz7kbАй бұрын
Here I thought prison was supposed to be fun.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
Not fun doesn't mean slavery, but the 13th amendment exists even though the constitution also says that the punishment won't be cruel. The US is a fakakta country.
@jamesrowles924919 күн бұрын
Joke's on you... I'm into that shit! 😊
@ouroborisАй бұрын
Sooooo don't commit crimes that'll get you thrown into prison. Got it!
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
Nobody in prison has chosen to commit crimes. Reality is there is an overcriminalization problem in the US, remember that poverty is a crime, things like not having enough money for a home are crimes. And again people don't choose to commit crimes, in an economic system where the alternatives to not having money are dying of hunger, exposure or lack of healthcare you have no alternatives other than doing anything to survive Also a huge chunk of prisoners have mental illnesses and that is why they are there, not because they are criminals but because the US doesn't have a proper healthcare system. But even if of all the above weren't true, that would still not justify slavery, a cruel and unusual punishment.
@seofra8252Ай бұрын
If there were safety requirements then it would be fine.
@sasensham19 күн бұрын
The main issue with criminals is that they have an inability to work. So I don't see an issue here. If they could work they wouldn't be criminals. That said there should some incentive, like better treatment than those that won't work. Teach them there is reward in work.
@TheSharkman336Ай бұрын
This gal is crazy
@sydneyshallow186Ай бұрын
They are prisoners, I don’t feel bad for their working conditions, but my health and safety yeah not cool
@ChuckLewАй бұрын
No prisons make a person work as a volunteer work now at work release camps they make you work but regular prisons they do not force you to work and I ought to know
@markb176410 күн бұрын
They are already costing the taxpayer so why not get something back
@cases2939Ай бұрын
The bigger problem with prison labor is, like us competing against the CCP.... Who can compete?
@cases2939Ай бұрын
p.s. you're still sexy without filters.
@NoFilter1962Ай бұрын
I have no problem with this.................
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
Wow, you have no problem with slavery, and under an economic model that encourages and forces people to commit crimes. You are either very uninformed or a disgustingly morally corrupt individual, hopefully the former.
@MidMorningFarmerАй бұрын
I grow my own and raise my own. I bought a cheap piece of land in the middle of nowhere California. Went off grid, got weird and homeschooled and now i have a very successful cbd for livestock business and pretty much only buy toilet paper and bleach in town. Farming is hard, but easy. Just do it.
@mgratkАй бұрын
shm, there are leaves.
@Subdood04Ай бұрын
Don't care. They are in prison for committing crimes. They ought to contribute in some way in lieu of becoming career criminals.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
Your opinion is disgusting. Let me point out a few problems with your take. 1) the justice system makes mistakes, often 2) there is an overcriminalization problem in the US, remember that poverty is a crime, things like not having enough money for a home are crimes 3) people don't choose to commit crimes, in an economic system where the alternatives to not having money are dying of hunger, exposure or lack of healthcare you have no alternatives other than doing anything to survive 4) a huge chunk of prisoners have mental illnesses and that is why they are there, not because they are criminals but because the US doesn't have a proper healthcare system. 5) even if of all the above weren't true, that would still not justify slavery, a cruel and unusual punishment
@carlbrenda6518Ай бұрын
@eleSDSU 1) The system has made mistakes. Getting harder and harder to use that with AI Cameras, DNA, Cell phone technology.... 2). I wouldn't call it overcriminalization. Something has to be done. Leaving homeless,drug abusers, unemployed unchecked leads to bad consequences for society at large. 3) Work is the alternative to not having money. How is it that I have worked for 35 years and others can't? Did I have some lean times? You bet! One time I had nothing but some weight gain powder to use for my meals. No bed or cable either. It was a tough few months, not once did I ever think to commit a crime to survive. 4) Can't speak much to the mental health argument. However, if someone needs to be diagnosed as having a mental health problem, then they do need to go to a facility for life. Too easy to "forget" to take meds and commit crimes....
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
@@carlbrenda6518 Firstly let me tell you that crime is not a problem, it's a symptom caused by underlying problems. Secondly, here are replies to your morally corrupt takes. 1) I don't understand your point about this, no amount of technology is going to create a perfect justice system, period. That is something that has to be taken into account and that is also without taking into account the purposely designed and implemented "mistakes". 2) You clearly don't understand what overcriminalization means based on your "Something has to be done. Leaving homeless,drug abusers, unemployed unchecked leads to bad consequences" comment. - Homelessness is not a crime, there is a shortage to artificially inflate the price of housing and rents. - Drug abuse is also not a crime, it's a health issue. No amount of punishment is going to help this issue the same way criminalizing diabetes, smoking or alcohol consumption would remedy any of those. - Unemployment is also not a crime, there has to be unemployment for the economy to be healthy, 100% employment means the economy is 100% stagnated and too high an employment rate means there is little to no chance of changing jobs apart from meaning that everyone is working which is not sustainable for the economy nor the environment. There are too many negative repercussions about too high employment to list them here. 3) Also, crime is not a vocation, nobody grows up wanting to be a criminal nor do illegal stuff, people do them out of necessity, how hard is that to understand, that not everyone has had your opportunities? 4) Oh so you don't trust people to take their meds but you would make them responsible and criminalize them not getting treatment, specially in a healthcare system that requires you to have the means to get that treatment. You are divorced from reality. Please explain to me how a person that has a severe mental disorder is going to a) realize they have a mental disorder, b) get the money to get help and c) do it while being undiagnosed and untreated? You are living in a fantasy scenario. Also, again how does punishing them helps either them or society? Your opinion is basically that you rather have people that are mentally ill, have had bad luck, victims of an economic system that runs on exploitation, a lack of opportunities or just dire needs and had to resort to crime as slaves instead of actually fixing any of the issues.
@eleSDSU11 күн бұрын
@@carlbrenda6518 wow, you are even more disgusting than you showed before. Homelessness is not a crime, is just not having enough money. Drug abuse is not a crime, it's a health problem. Unemployment is not a crime, it's a vital part of the economic system we have (which is why all of the problems We are talking about cannot be eradicated, they are all baked into de system and required parts of it). Also the thing about technology fixing the mistakes is beyond ludicrous, the mistakes are going to happen anyway because, to make sure few, juries are fallible, judges are fallible and corruption exists and that is even before we take into account the design flaws in the system like the existence of for profit prisons that need, depend and thrive on imprisoning ad many people as possible for as long as possible independent of justice, reason and societal wellbeing. Your position is the same as every fascist ever, you should be ashamed and examine your views asap.
@jerry4256Ай бұрын
So.
@lolas185Ай бұрын
do not care
@KaiLucasZacharyАй бұрын
Okay. They’re being punished. When a teenager is grounded, you don’t still give them their monthly allowance out of fairness. Depending on what they did to get grounded in the first place, they have to WORK to get trust and privileges back, and they sure as hell aren’t paid for it. It could potentially take MONTHS of unpaid distrust to even get an allowance back. If these people wanted to get paid for jobs, then they should have been at jobs getting paid instead of committing crimes. I’m honestly happier with my “products” coming out of America rather than overseas.
@eleSDSUАй бұрын
You endorse slavery as punishment under an economic system that forces people to do crimes. You are either morally corrupt to your merrow or are severely uninformed, hopefully is the latter.
@jessezassАй бұрын
Oh man, do you know what prisoners do to the food they feed the other inmates?🤢 What do you think they do to food being shipped out to the free world? I am definitely looking up a list of food companies to avoid.
@jessezassАй бұрын
I am so damn glad I get my food from a local/international Texas based grocery chain (H-E-B).