Some 1,100 prison recruits are battling LA’s infernos, risking life and health for less than $2 an hour—yet still the jobs are coveted.

  • zero_spelled_with_an_ecks
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    10 hours ago

    They have the opportunities, then the opportunities are taken away. That’s punishment. The opportunities the ACLU mentions are not the same as the reductions that are promised to workers.

    Those who refuse to work also typically lose all privileges, including access to personal telephone calls, family visitation, and access to the commissary to buy food and other basic necessities. If they refuse a work assignment, incarcerated people in federal and most state prisons additionally risk losing the opportunity to shorten their sentence through earned “good time,” effectively extending their incarceration.

    Exactly what percentage would make using denial of family visits acceptable to you? Solitary confinement?

    If you’re actually interested in the information and not just trying to justify being a dick, here’s the ~150 page report that I pulled the quote from https://www.aclu.org/publications/captive-labor-exploitation-incarcerated-workers

    Please read it, follow the citations to the documents where the statistics come from, and let us know the breakdown of the statistics that make slavery justifiable for you.

    • hypna@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Imagine responding to someone’s concern without flipping your shit at them.

      • zero_spelled_with_an_ecks
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        10 hours ago

        If you were concerned about the people and not the statistics, which you bothered to cast doubt on but didn’t bother to actually look anything up, I might take you seriously.