Thank you for your reply. You make some good points about positive reinforcement and the studies regarding it
Grotto19 in post #117 wrote:Criminals who defy the law today do so because they are quite likely not like the majority.I doubt the accuracy of that. In the United States, things like marijuana and prostitution are illegal. In fact, the vast majority of those incarcerated in the USA are only charged with nonviolent 'crimes'. Worse yet, about half of the people incarcerated have not been convicted. The people who end up in prison aren't the criminals, but just poor people who cannot afford bail. The laws are so removed from defined by violence that everyone is a criminal.
Grotto19 in post #117 wrote:I feel that those currently in the norm of being lawful would more often stray without the threat of prison.There is a lot of evidence in psychology and behavioral economics that suggests that is not the case. People are not rational agents and their behavior isn't explained by the cost benefit analysis that guides rational agents. Dan Ariely has lead several experiments on the matter, in which people in studies were given the opportunity to cheat. The rate at which they cheated was not affected when, through controlled comparison, the payout for cheating was increased. However, cheating rates could be affected by other factors that experimenters could control, namely whether or not other people cheated and whether or not those other people were part of the in group or out group.
Grotto19 in post #117 wrote:I feel reform to the prison system and more effort for reform of inmates is actually needed despite the expense.I agree, which is key since this seemed to more of the conclusion.
Grotto19 in post #117 wrote:I think the only realistic results will come from an effort to change societies view of crime, an effort to educate and display positive reinforcement of right behavior in high crime areas. Media spends so much time displaying the crime and so little on people rising above it. I know the project of altering societal views is daunting, but I think our lack of this effort is the key contributor to current and future crime.I don't agree that crime is "wrong behavior" and that not committing crime is right behavior. Martin Luther King was a criminal, for example. So was Henry David Thoreau. So was that elderly man arrested earlier this year for feeding the homeless.
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@Beyondthecave
Thank you for your reply.
Beyondthecave in post #118 wrote:Calling the facility a mental health hospital rather than a prison does not make things better unless their are genuine differences that make the hospital more humane.I agree. A rose by any other name smells just as sweet.
You also mention make arguments that drug use and prostitution are not victimless. In short, I think these arguments fail because they show that those behaviors can sometimes entail victimization (e.g. when a sex partner happens to have an STD) or tend to lead to victimization (e.g. when a drug user steals to fund his addiction. However, there is difference between something sometimes entailing or leading to victimization and it being victimization. Those parenthetical examples are indeed victimization, and someone engaging in such victimization cannot be said to be committing only victimless behaviors. If you wish to discuss whether particular allegedly victimless crimes like drug use or prostitution are in fact victimless, or wish to debate their legal status, let's do that in a different topic; Consider all these threads each about allegedly victimless/consensual activity that is or has been illegal in many places: prostitution, homosexual civil unions, marijuana, alcohol, all drugs, paying employees poorly or choosing to work for low pay, and gambling.
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@Bezelbub
Thank you for your reply.
Bezelbub in post #119 wrote:We need prisons as a way to get rid of those which are harmful to our society.Ipse dixit. Even worse, your post does not address the points in the original post.
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@Celtick
Thank you for your reply.
Celtick in post #120 wrote:After reading all of your replies to the question, I can safely assume that not one of you has experienced a crime committed against you or your family by a criminal.Ad hominem fallacy.
Celtick in post #120 wrote:Does Society Need Prisons? The answer is no. Execute the bastards on the spot. Your instinctual reaction is to eliminate the threat to you and your family. If you hesitate or feel compassion towards the criminal, you put your family at risk. NO QUESTIONS ASKED.Ipse dixit. Saying something is our "instinctual reaction" doesn't mean it is smart to do. The instinctive, fearful behavior your describe is primitive and animalistic and thus itself dangerous.
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@Wilson
Thank you for your reply.
Wilson in post #121 wrote:The objective of our legal system should be primarily to protect the law-abiding members of our society.Why? What do you mean by the word "should"? Does "should" refer to some kind of religious or metaphysically moralistic belief held without evidence?
Why "protect" law-abiding members of a society--such as law-abiding Nazis in historical Germany--from criminals--such as Martin Luther King, Henry David Thoreau, and the man who just this year was arrested for feeding the homeless? Even calling it protection seems inaccurate. People need to be protected from non-defensive violence (e.g. murder, rape, etc.) not crime (e.g. marijuana, prostitution, etc.). Right?
The very reference to some need to protect suggests agreement with my ideas including the underlying sympathy towards victims of violence, right?
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@JOGeran
Thank you for your reply.
JOGeran in post #122 wrote:If the crime directly deals harm to someone because of the act for example Murder, Stealing, Rape, then it would make sense that there should be a prison sentence for it otherwise people would have little reason not toThat's not true. Dan Ariely's aforementioned experiments in cheating show that risks and benefits of cheating do not determine that rates at which people engage in the behavior. It's important to not just make claims without evidence. We need to check the large body of research in psychology and behavior economics before making strong claims about what leads to people committing actions like violent crime or not.
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@Hosshere
Thank you for your reply, post #123.
You make a great point about the lack of fathers or even both parents in many families. Interestingly, this is one of the worst effects of the mass incarceration problem. So many of these millions of nonviolent people locked up for things like marijuana are parents who have been stolen from their families. This has devastating effects not only directly on the family but rippling out on the rest of us.
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@Wilson
Wilson wrote:Anyone who thinks a society can function without prisons is not in touch with reality.The above quote is a quote of the entire post. That is an absurdly weak argument that has no place on a philosophy forum. It's structure is clearly shown as absurd since everything before the last 6 words can be changed to any proposition and placed a reply to any argument.
The post in no way responds to or rebuts the points from the OP.
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@Logic_ill
Thank you for your reply.
Logic_ill in post #129 wrote:Society may need prisons for now because incarceration is a form of punishment and sometimes "rehabilitation". Maybe we can come up with some other way of dealing with criminals. I cannot think of many right now...I'm sorry; I don't understand this post in the context of this topic. How is it response to the proposals for dealing with criminals in the OP? Can you elaborate on how this related to that?
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@Supine
Thank you for your reply. You make a great point about gang members not being bothered by going to prison and about prisons help fueling the problems outside of them. Another terrible aspect of mass-imprisonment is this: Nonviolent people who are sent to prison are much more likely to join a gang in prison. That's especially scary in a country like the USA where the vast majority of people in prison are only charged with nonviolent crimes.
In the OP, I propose rehabilitating crazy violent people in humane mental health institutions. What we have now is not just the lack of that but the opposite: Prisons filled with sane nonviolent people being turned crazy violent by the hell of prison.
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@Belinda
Thank you for your numerous replies. Sorry, I don't have much to say because I agree with most of what you have written.
Belinda wrote:As I was trying to say our gut reactions of anger and fear are human and to be expected. But we need to be rational even in cases of gross cruelty and criminality. I don't know what caused those criminals you mentioned to do what they did. But don't you think it is better for all our futures when we can rationally seek for causes of gross criminality instead of simply blaming?Very well stated!
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@Grecorivera5150
Thank you for your reply.
Grecorivera5150 in post #135 wrote:Yes , we need a prison system. It is were people are sent who make it unbearable to exist in the greater prison.How do marijuana smokers and prostitutes make it unbearable to exist in society? Even if that's true, how does the rebut the reasons I gave in the OP for why we don't need prison. Keep in mind, I never suggested setting everyone in prison free.
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@Felix
Thank you for your comments. Great points about the prison industrial complex.
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@Lucylu
Thank you for your reply.
I am intrigued by your ideas of non-military conscription. However, if it is to be used on anything but the small minority of inmates actually convicted of a violent crime, then I cannot support it.
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@Theophane
Thank you for your reply.
Theophane wrote:Their primary function is to punish criminals and to protect the public from such criminals.Why do we need to punish criminals? It doesn't make sense to say we need A because of B unless it can be shown we need B.
I don't understand the "protect the public from such criminals". What does it mean to protect the public from pacifist marijuana smokers, to reiterate just one example from the OP?
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@Algol291
Thank you for your reply. You make a great point about how the role of money and profit. Indeed, there's billions of dollars in the prison industry. That's a lot of money to wealthy special interests to push destructive policy through lobbying and campaign contributions.
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@Roel
Thank you for your reply. You are unfortunately absolutely right in the example about prisons teaching people to commit crime. Prisons do the opposite of rehabilitation, which is doubly sad since most of the people going in our nonviolent.
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@ScottieX
Thank you for your reply.
ScottieX wrote:I think the decision faced by society is never "is X necessary or not necessary." It is Is X better than the available alternatives. So We have for example the non violent offender who could be in prison or could be outside facing some other restrictions.This is a false dichotomy, and I'm a little confused by it considering the OP specifically makes a proposal that is not either of the two options.
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ABreedApart wrote:[...] what about the violence and injustice created by the production, transportation and distribution of these drugs? As a society, are we not allowed to legislate morality to some degree?There is no science to backup the "morality"; it's basically religion. So I would say no. We can debate each of the specific allegedly victimless crimes in the respective topics: prostitution, homosexual civil unions, marijuana, alcohol, all drugs, paying employees poorly or choosing to work for low pay, and gambling. For each of those you want to be illegal, I invite you to discuss it with me in the respective topic.
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@Whitedragon
Thank you for your reply.
Whitedragon wrote:Police long discovered that if petty crimes are more strictly punished more serious crimes decline as well.Ipse dixit. Please provide credible sources with evidence for that statistical claim.
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@Simply Wee
Thank you for your reply.
Simply Wee wrote:For the sake of the innocent we need prisonsThis statement makes no sense to me in the context of the OP. Why wouldn't the alternative solution in the OP work? Why do we need to imprison pacifist marijuana users "for the sake of the innocent"?
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@Integrity
Thank you for your reply. You make great points about violent behavior being the result of environmental factors. We can much more effectively protect ourselves from violence by addressing those factors and thus preventing violent crime.
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Thanks again everyone!
"The mind is a wonderful servant but a terrible master."
I believe spiritual freedom (a.k.a. self-discipline) manifests as bravery, confidence, grace, honesty, love, and inner peace.
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