towny44 wrote: 03 Sep 2021, 09:53
Ken, I suspect that because human nature is so varied that your ideas of re-educating prisoners would only work on a certain percentage, and that it is likely you would need several treatment regimes to convince enough prisoners to reform when released, and of course not all would succeed.
Which sort of leaves the cheapest and most effective system as deterrence, make prison so uncomfortable and dire that a life of crime loses its appeal. Not necessarily what I would propose but it does have its appeal to the masses.
Not that long ago I would probably have agreed with you almost completely, however over the last few years I have learned that people are easily manipulated and they are not as individual as they like to think they are. When you think about it that actually becomes more obvious. We receive similar education, read the same news, similar upbringing and get roughly the same moral values instilled in us ... although the 'weight' each individual puts on what they learn determines what we call individuality ... but, in the main, they are minor deviations from a median.
Part of my job is to get feedback from users .. the most difficult part of that is trying to determine a set of words that does not lead or sway the user (and yes I have had to throw results away because I have used the wrong phraseology). There is a running joke between me and one of the project managers whereby I can simply change the question slightly and I will be able to get the answer he wants, 100% reliably.
The prison service has, at best, a mediocre track record in relation to the prevention of recidivism. I have heard many different reasons for that but one thing I would be pretty sure of is that if you treat prisoners like animals then all you will do is produce more feral personalities with even less respect for civilised society - that has been proven. Countries that allow for the death sentence or torture do not necessarily show a lower crime rate.