Come to Jail With Us. You’ll Need a Calculator. | NYT Opinion

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  • Опубликовано: 20 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @desmond-hawkins
    @desmond-hawkins Месяц назад +2814

    It's not an accident that the 13th amendment abolished slavery _except_ as punishment for a crime. What else would you call a job that pays 42 cents an hour?

    • @DAndyLord
      @DAndyLord Месяц назад +75

      The only difference is that a prisoner can /technically/ say no and can't be sold as chattel.

    • @CharlesRaines4946
      @CharlesRaines4946 Месяц назад +17

      You mean except for a dead end job without a future?

    • @desmond-hawkins
      @desmond-hawkins Месяц назад +165

      @@DAndyLord Technically say no? It depends where they are: in four states (Texas, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas), inmates are usually *required* to work and can be punished if they refuse, like sent to solitary confinement. Work is usually *mandatory and completely unpaid.* In Texas, 80 PIECP inmates are paid and the remaining 140k+ are *all unpaid.* Zero dollars per hour. And they can't be sold? What do you think a prison transfer is, to go work for free somewhere else? Read about all this and learn, it's a terrible system. Again: it's not an accident.

    • @pointyposeidon
      @pointyposeidon Месяц назад +9

      Not slavery... Because its OPTIONAL.

    • @ValidatingUsername
      @ValidatingUsername Месяц назад +4

      @@DAndyLordJust a reminder the chattel part of the law was meant in terms of legal liability for the owner as in if the slave caused any damage it was similar liability and case law.

  • @ca8rio8ca
    @ca8rio8ca Месяц назад +1511

    Co-pay for health costs inside a prison is the most American thing I've ever heard of!

    • @Mr.Happy7ODSubscribe
      @Mr.Happy7ODSubscribe 26 дней назад

      With a McDonald's nurse and a obese Warden

    • @theotheleo6830
      @theotheleo6830 26 дней назад +15

      Better the criminal pays it than the already overburdened taxpayer.

    • @ca8rio8ca
      @ca8rio8ca 25 дней назад +56

      @@theotheleo6830 a universal health system it's better

    • @soulscanner66
      @soulscanner66 25 дней назад +43

      @@theotheleo6830 It will cost the taxpayer more because the prisoner will be in prison longer. Typical government bureaucracy.

    • @derimmerlugt3032
      @derimmerlugt3032 25 дней назад +23

      @@theotheleo6830 If he ends up in prison again because he can't pay the debt he accrued in prison then you will pay anyway lmao. And that's entirely by design. Recurring "customers" are good for business.

  • @Anavski
    @Anavski Месяц назад +2154

    Almost as if it was designed to keep them in prison

    • @orcast1046
      @orcast1046 Месяц назад +37

      Good don't be useless to society then

    • @Twigjit
      @Twigjit Месяц назад +88

      @@orcast1046 Yeah, seems like that is your job and you dont want to lose it to someone else.

    • @rb95051
      @rb95051 Месяц назад +10

      Not almost, exactly how it is…. Sad!😔

    • @anonemus2971
      @anonemus2971 Месяц назад +6

      It is designed to keep people paying forever

    • @billf1748
      @billf1748 Месяц назад

      This is what you get when prisons are run by for-profit corporations. Tax payers and society lose.

  • @benoody6766
    @benoody6766 Месяц назад +695

    I had to pay all that to prove I was innocent. Justice system is so broken.

    • @jay_m4160
      @jay_m4160 Месяц назад +26

      I am so sorry you went through this.

    • @ffc1a28c7
      @ffc1a28c7 26 дней назад +19

      @@Dorton-fj6ox what, because he of the around 50% of people who are either found not guilty, or whose cases get thrown out?

    • @Dorton-fj6ox
      @Dorton-fj6ox 26 дней назад

      @@ffc1a28c7 Liar.

    • @tiberiussempronious6252
      @tiberiussempronious6252 26 дней назад +28

      ​@@Dorton-fj6ox- So no one ever makes a mistake and innocent people are charged with crimes they didn't commit? You have the mind of a 5 year old.

    • @Dorton-fj6ox
      @Dorton-fj6ox 25 дней назад

      @tiberiussempronious6252 Obviously you have zero professional training, knowledge, experience, or skills in this area. I don't have ANY of those problems. So when I tell you that you know nothing, it's because you know nothing. You know LESS than nothing.

  • @chad9971
    @chad9971 Месяц назад +1008

    It's expensive to be poor.

    • @TheAlgomalo
      @TheAlgomalo Месяц назад +41

      You can be poor and not break the law. I grew up very poor and never had any trouble with the law.

    • @oceandinner
      @oceandinner Месяц назад

      Thats the problem in this world everyone excepts free hand out !
      Ppl keep relying on the government you never get out of the cycle many people become to comfortable.
      So many people use every excuse I can’t work I can’t go to school bla blah I bet many can bleed the system claim workers comp lie fake injuries many fraud the insurance companies for money stealing lying! Life of a narcissist.
      Younger generation needs to break the cycle!
      Problem is people who are poor. Shouldn’t be having children having children when you are poor as a tragedy!! It’s childhood trauma! If grown adults can’t afford themselves then stop reproducing.
      99.9% of prison population many I bet struggle with mental illness
      ADHD, misconduct disorder, borderline personality, disorder, bipolar disorder,
      Many not knowing how to regulate their own emotions
      Many not fitting in and when they found themselves fitting in
      They were manipulated many ppl come from poor home environments.
      Children are a product of their own environment.
      97.% of the prison population lack communication skills comprehension, and reading skills as well. It’s easy for them to just commit crimes or get into fights because they don’t know how to communicate their emotions correctly.

    • @techcafe0
      @techcafe0 Месяц назад +24

      indeed, poverty takes a huge toll on a person's mental and physical well-being, and often leads to premature death.

    • @acd1168
      @acd1168 Месяц назад +5

      @@techcafe0I think it’s the worse thing that can happen to someone. Growing up poor

    • @digojez
      @digojez Месяц назад +14

      ​@@TheAlgomaloI am aware that avoiding law breaking is the right move, but not everyone can avoid being in trouble with the law, even if they have learned their lesson, it would take monumental effort to recover from the isolation in prison and an extra punishment debt. It's literally a recipe for disaster for everyone else, because people who came out of prison in that state is more likely to commit another crime (whether out of psychological trouble and monetary struggle).

  • @ingridm4910
    @ingridm4910 Месяц назад +1299

    That's so crazy that they're paid .42 cents and then expected to pay inflated prices. This is not how we expect people not to fall back into crime when they get out

    • @MarsPriest
      @MarsPriest Месяц назад +9

      They should create a program in which generous people, such as Ingrid, adopted a poor criminal or two into their homes.

    • @KellyR-qx7wn
      @KellyR-qx7wn Месяц назад +9

      It's so crazy that people are upset that they are only required to pay a fraction of their debt to society, where every hardworking lawful tax payer should be upset they're not required to pay the full cost.

    • @lsmith8659
      @lsmith8659 Месяц назад

      where every hardworking lawful taxpayer knows theyve also done something illegal at least once in their life but hadnt been caught 🐷🐷 ftp

    • @ramonsmediablog
      @ramonsmediablog 28 дней назад +1

      They are lucky to get anything.

    • @ConfusedBoombox-vu4oh
      @ConfusedBoombox-vu4oh 28 дней назад +16

      Its to keep people in, you dont make a profit if there are no criminals to lock up.

  • @xanthonjp
    @xanthonjp Месяц назад +1247

    This is not rehabilitation.

    • @orcast1046
      @orcast1046 Месяц назад +22

      Good don't be useless to society then

    • @newbladey
      @newbladey Месяц назад +65

      @@orcast1046 that's crazy, why didn't they think of that?

    • @lonesome3958
      @lonesome3958 Месяц назад +69

      ​@@orcast1046do you know what rehabilitation means?

    • @rundown132
      @rundown132 Месяц назад +15

      its a business

    • @100bulletsmiranda9
      @100bulletsmiranda9 Месяц назад

      jesus is stuck in a computer.

  • @blueknight3393
    @blueknight3393 Месяц назад +805

    This is the modern day debtor’s prison.

    • @lsmith8659
      @lsmith8659 Месяц назад

      when they system was first built for the purpose of entrapping the non-white man, now inadvertently white men have also become entapped.. finally we take notice 😂

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +10

      The 18th century has returned in that regard

    • @benwagner5089
      @benwagner5089 8 дней назад

      @@Libertaro-i2u I don't think it ever left.

  • @V3racious3
    @V3racious3 Месяц назад +471

    It's all about money. Its always about money.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 29 дней назад +7

      Govt. pays them too. Double dipping?

    • @jamesmorell1758
      @jamesmorell1758 27 дней назад

      Double dipping? You pay taxes on everything. You pay income tax and then sales tax on top of that. You're never not getting double, triple, quadruple dipped. Everyone gets ripped off, even government employees.

    • @pman3293
      @pman3293 26 дней назад +2

      Money is a powerful force that creates control.

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording 26 дней назад +1

      ​@@pman3293indeed. Money buys weapons buys armies buys control.

    • @AluminumOxide
      @AluminumOxide 22 дня назад +1

      It’s what happens when a country’s ideologies revolve and idolize money.

  • @joshxkerrigan
    @joshxkerrigan Месяц назад +418

    The PRIVATE prison system, like everything else in this country, is completely RUINING it for us. Private companies profiting off of prisoners means there will ALWAYS need to be prisoners to sustain the business. THIS is why prisons & jails should be setup by the GOVERNMENT, NOT CORPORATIONS.

    • @meekacee3530
      @meekacee3530 26 дней назад +33

      absolutely true. Private prisons should not exist

    • @rudradixit460
      @rudradixit460 26 дней назад +9

      This is describing government prisons.

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +21

      Prisons are one of the things that shouldn't be privatized

    • @meekacee3530
      @meekacee3530 26 дней назад +8

      @@rudradixit460 yes, you are right. This should not be happening. I thought it only happened in private prisons. Eye opening

    • @scottrobinson9334
      @scottrobinson9334 26 дней назад +8

      It does only happen in private prisons. I live in a state that doesn’t have private prisons, when I was younger I was in and out of jail and everyone I knew from then served time. All any of us ever were charged are fines imposed upon conviction, restitution, and the probation/parole officer. In our state none of these other fees exist

  • @nebularspace
    @nebularspace Месяц назад +614

    no idea this was happening

    • @coreyswaz5702
      @coreyswaz5702 28 дней назад +13

      Its not all states, im from NY and they pay for everything necessary while incarcerated. The only thing you need to pay yourself is phone calls and commissary. You CAN survive with the minimum things they give you but its not a joyful stay. If you work in the kitchen you can charge inmates for spices, laundry you charge inmates for doing a wash and fold service, etc. you’ll make more money “working for yourself” than for the jail…

    • @Joe-sg9ll
      @Joe-sg9ll 26 дней назад +2

      because it isnt

    • @limbeboy7
      @limbeboy7 26 дней назад +5

      Well let's blame immigrants. Not the 1% that own 50% of the wealth. Let's blame ppl who make less than 35k a year

    • @Joe-sg9ll
      @Joe-sg9ll 26 дней назад

      @@limbeboy7 ok

    • @poppasmurf2044
      @poppasmurf2044 11 дней назад

      ​@Joe-sg9ll what do you mean? It IS definitely happening!

  • @andergarcia4953
    @andergarcia4953 24 дня назад +180

    Prisoners are still charged for their stay at the prison. So why are the tax payers money still going to these places?

    • @goldenfish5390
      @goldenfish5390 21 день назад +30

      So the prison companies get to be monopolies.

    • @gregheffley2
      @gregheffley2 16 дней назад +14

      It costs way more than $0.60 per day to house a prisoner.

    • @voradorhylden3410
      @voradorhylden3410 12 дней назад +8

      ​@@gregheffley2not when theres millions of them and the conditions are crap, and you charge the crap out of them and dont face consequences for poor care and treatment, not to mention the poor condition of the jail itself. Ive seen and hea4d of some pretty bad stuff. Point being, its a puypy farm with people. They only spend 60 cents a person. While getting paid billions.

    • @poppasmurf2044
      @poppasmurf2044 11 дней назад +4

      Obviously, someone is pocketing the money. I wonder who...

  • @PraetorianAU
    @PraetorianAU 29 дней назад +67

    Time to wake up America. You dont have a country, you have a corporation.

    • @EmeraldsQuartzLight
      @EmeraldsQuartzLight 27 дней назад +1

      Yeah, but we also have these corporations giving people that killed someone 2 years in jail.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 23 дня назад +1

      @@PraetorianAU Ralph Nader published a book on Corps. late 90's. It really explains this b.s. perfectly.

    • @gucciflipflopbleep
      @gucciflipflopbleep 11 дней назад

      Cyberpunk 2077 predicted it all

  • @m.eladraoui2649
    @m.eladraoui2649 26 дней назад +146

    So glad I live 5000 miles from the US. Americans live in a dystopian system without even noticing.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 25 дней назад +11

      @@m.eladraoui2649 oh,we notice it. We are constantly forking over Taxes to help every other Countries shortfalls.

    • @jvees7916
      @jvees7916 25 дней назад

      Cool we don’t need people like you

    • @Akoba23benin
      @Akoba23benin 24 дня назад

      ​@@terywetherlow7970after stealing from them or murdering them in cold blood. You're monsters

    • @jakeelwood612
      @jakeelwood612 23 дня назад +3

      Video is not true , at least for California I don't know what state this is they are talking about I been to jail and prison and never had to pay a dime they gave me 200$ when I got out and did not have to pay it back.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 23 дня назад +7

      @@jakeelwood612 What year are you talking Cali paid you $200?

  • @michaelhodgkins3540
    @michaelhodgkins3540 Месяц назад +127

    I've heard of this but never seen a report, thank you for bringing this issue up

    • @Debra-q2u8k
      @Debra-q2u8k 25 дней назад +3

      Yes, this is happening for years and it needs to stop

    • @user-gu9yq5sj7c
      @user-gu9yq5sj7c 16 дней назад +1

      Watch More Perfect Union and Second Thought talk about prisoners being treated like slaves.
      Watch the Market Exit.

  • @matthewleys6504
    @matthewleys6504 Месяц назад +110

    This insight is long overdue. The family members who have to pay for this have never been accused, charged, much less convicted yet they too are at the mercy of the DOC

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 27 дней назад +6

      The family doesn't HAVE to pay anything.

    • @NatoSkato
      @NatoSkato 26 дней назад +12

      @@homelessalcoholic2716 Just like how in extortion cases the victim doesn't HAVE to pay up.

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 26 дней назад +3

      @@NatoSkato Except the family isn't at risk like an extortion case, they could just let their relative pay for their own crimes.

    • @missmia196
      @missmia196 21 день назад +1

      ​@@homelessalcoholic2716 except if you do care about your loved one, you are extorted to pay to see them and communicate with them and provide for their life behind bars.

    • @homelessalcoholic2716
      @homelessalcoholic2716 21 день назад

      @missmia196 Why support monsters?

  • @colorfulchrissy74747
    @colorfulchrissy74747 Месяц назад +128

    The American prison system is a perfect example of human trafficking, especially when prisons are selling $500+ office chairs within state departments.

    • @shaniece1300
      @shaniece1300 Месяц назад

      I was thinking that. The prison system is so similar to trafficking. They are working to get their freedom but in reality, they're trafficked. It's a lie. It's a trap

  • @andreyromashchenko8967
    @andreyromashchenko8967 Месяц назад +45

    One time cops stopped me and detained me because i partly matched the description. And i was all they had.
    The amount of stress i had to thru with each court appointment was unfair.
    And the public defender said that i should plead guilty to get a good deal.
    THAT’S ALL YOU HAVE TO KNOW ABOUT THEM MAKING A CUSTOMER OUT OF YOU.
    (eventually i was free to go, but oh my god, how did i deserve any of that?)

    • @benwagner5089
      @benwagner5089 8 дней назад +2

      When a public DEFENDER refuses to do their job, settling to just get you a reduced sentence, I'd be reporting that to the judge and seeing if I can get that lawyer disbarred.
      A friend of mine just experienced that himself, and they're waiting months for another public defender to become available so they can finally start the trial.

    • @Steven-le5oc
      @Steven-le5oc 2 дня назад +1

      Detained for looking alike to discussion of a plea with a public defender?
      There are a few steps missing here. You don't go from detained to trial/plea

  • @bipolarmomandnowwhat
    @bipolarmomandnowwhat 29 дней назад +81

    I was an adult probation officer and the idea of community corrections was good. However, it has become corrupted and is now a scam.

  • @unitedskiesunderthemoon
    @unitedskiesunderthemoon Месяц назад +166

    Never say America is the land of the free again. jfc this is pure insanity

    • @landline00
      @landline00 Месяц назад

      Then why do migrants from all over the world want to come here?

    • @bestredditstories1158
      @bestredditstories1158 7 дней назад +1

      Considering the vast majority of us are free and that it's very easy to not go to prison, I'd say it still holds true.

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 6 дней назад +1

      @@bestredditstories1158 The US still has the largest prison population in the world despite only being the third most-populous nation by a WIDE margin. It is also all too easy to end up in prison through no fault of your own.

  • @jksanrio
    @jksanrio Месяц назад +69

    Welcome to the revolving door of the CJS.

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +2

      AKA the PIC (prison industrial complex)

  • @silverXnoise
    @silverXnoise Месяц назад +105

    Check out the exploitation taking place surrounding offenders’ families, and their ability to communicate and/or visit their loved one during incarceration. Hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians being extorted, every day, right now.

  • @AntonioSalinas-p5d
    @AntonioSalinas-p5d Месяц назад +58

    The connection between high incarceration rates and the use of prison labor in the United States has been widely criticized as a system that exploits inmates for cheap labor. This system, often referred to as the “prison-industrial complex,” has economic incentives that benefit both government entities and private corporations.
    Here’s a summary of how this system operates:
    1. Incarceration as a Labor Source
    Many states allow inmates to work for private companies or on public projects at very low wages, sometimes as low as a few cents per hour. Prisoners are often employed in manufacturing, agricultural work, and service industries, including packaging products or operating call centers. One notable example is the use of inmate labor to produce goods or services for companies such as McDonald’s and Walmart through third-party contractors or suppliers.
    2. Economic Incentives for States and Companies
    • For the state: Governments reduce labor costs by using prison labor for public works, such as road maintenance or sanitation. Prisoners do not have the same labor protections, and since their wages are so low, they generate significant savings for states.
    • For companies: Partnering with prison labor programs offers an inexpensive workforce, as inmates do not receive benefits, and wages are often controlled by the correctional system. This reduces production costs and boosts corporate profits.
    3. Mandatory Labor and Inmate Rights
    Incarcerated individuals are often compelled to work under threat of punishment, such as solitary confinement or loss of privileges. Unlike other laborers, they have limited ability to refuse work or bargain for better conditions. In many cases, inmates work under unsafe conditions, with little oversight or recourse for labor violations.
    4. Privatized Prisons and Recidivism
    Private prisons and companies with a stake in the system have an incentive to maintain or increase incarceration rates. Policies like harsh sentencing laws, such as the war on drugs, minimum sentencing requirements, and parole restrictions, contribute to high incarceration rates. This ensures a steady flow of labor to sustain the system.
    5. Impact on Communities and Society
    This system disproportionately impacts marginalized communities, especially people of color. It perpetuates cycles of poverty and incarceration by exploiting inmates while offering them little in the way of rehabilitation or meaningful employment skills upon release.
    For more in-depth insights on the prison-industrial complex and the role of corporate interests in mass incarceration, sources such as The Sentencing Project, ACLU reports, and research from academic institutions like Columbia University offer detailed analysis. These resources document the exploitation within the system and provide recommendations for reform.
    This issue is a stark example of how the justice system, driven by economic motives, has created structural injustices that treat incarceration as both a means of social control and a tool for profit-making.
    That’s why southern states are big on law and order the prison and jails are their modern day plantations. And they get a boost by arresting and discrediting future voters

    • @lsmith8659
      @lsmith8659 Месяц назад

      thank for providing that info! too many ppl are unaware! this is why they work so hard to demonize criminals smh this system is bad for everyone but the money makers 🤬 and now they doin it to immigrants too with the border industrial complex as a way to justify mass surveillance 😱

    • @Michael-j4l3d
      @Michael-j4l3d 26 дней назад +2

      Go look up what the democratic candidate said about the "cheap Iābour"
      *I'm just sayin*

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +5

      I'm all for inmates working, but living and working conditions should be humane.

  • @JD-mm7ur
    @JD-mm7ur Месяц назад +221

    that's why we don't need a 'businessman' to run our country like a corporation

    • @zenjon7892
      @zenjon7892 Месяц назад +10

      But... He didn't start this

    • @georgewagner7787
      @georgewagner7787 Месяц назад +20

      So lets elect the person who put people in prison for marijuana?

    • @georgewagner7787
      @georgewagner7787 Месяц назад +5

      So let's elect the person who put people in prison for marijuana??

    • @Cmac-jk8zz
      @Cmac-jk8zz Месяц назад +9

      ​@@zenjon7892it doesnt matter he's not gonna make it any better.

    • @zenjon7892
      @zenjon7892 Месяц назад +7

      @@Cmac-jk8zz I'm starting to think no one will make it better; too much money involved

  • @Shibasu_
    @Shibasu_ 29 дней назад +47

    This is so ridiculous. Going to prison IS their punishment, they don't need an extra punishment after they get out

    • @piouspigeon9327
      @piouspigeon9327 13 дней назад

      Yeah they do…. They keep committing crimes.

  • @joemacy2776
    @joemacy2776 Месяц назад +82

    It's sad that so many people forget the fact that prisoners are still human. If it just lands people back in prison, then it shows that our justice system is doing something wrong. Prison should be about giving criminals the tools to not commit crimes again, but it basically does the opposite in this country.

    • @misstbull
      @misstbull 29 дней назад

      What tools they need??????? They found a way to commit the crime so they could have found a way NOT TO COMMOT A CRIME. ITS NOT ROCKET SCIENCE!

    • @comentariopolitico1014
      @comentariopolitico1014 29 дней назад +4

      Hahahahahahaha! Oh, wait! Are you serious? Let me laugh even harder. HAHAHA HAHAHA HAHAHA HAHAHA!

    • @EmeraldsQuartzLight
      @EmeraldsQuartzLight 27 дней назад +3

      Imagine if your daughter or son gets hurt by a innocent little criminal, and you'll be two brainwashed to fight for them.

    • @strangelyukrainian7314
      @strangelyukrainian7314 26 дней назад +16

      @@EmeraldsQuartzLight
      Great! Now imagine your son or daughter is accused of a crime that you know they didn’t commit. You pay thousands into trying to prove their innocence, but it ends up coming down to your word against the police, and the jury just doesn’t believe you. Not a big deal if you just appeal the case to another court, right? Except that you lose money, on every appeal. And every day in jail is another few dozen dollars that can’t be paid off.
      So tell me, is this punishment worth it? Truly innocent people get caught up in the process just like the guilty do, all the time. And before you even get convicted, you’re getting charged thousands just to try and show your innocence.

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 20 дней назад +2

      @@strangelyukrainian7314 Ding, ding,ding!! Best comment yet.

  • @johnnygoodman2003
    @johnnygoodman2003 10 дней назад +7

    To everyone saying "solution is don't do crime" the state of Tennessee is now investigating dui police quotas where last year 600 sober drivers were arrested for drunk driving and some went to jail. The state makes money from crime, when profits are down, innocent people go to jail, defend and release, and still end up with debt.

    • @bestredditstories1158
      @bestredditstories1158 7 дней назад

      But you still have rights. They still have to prove the crime they're alleging you committed.

    • @somethingelse9228
      @somethingelse9228 5 дней назад

      @@bestredditstories1158 Court cases and appeals cost money, none of which will be refunded if proven innocent. That's the point, the state and corporations are earning enormous profits from this

  • @JeighNeither
    @JeighNeither Месяц назад +42

    Anytime the NYTs, the periodical for & by the wealthy, calls out the fact that it's the rich vs the poor, it's a good thing.

  • @hinatagirl33
    @hinatagirl33 12 дней назад +3

    The American Exceptionalism is so prevalent in our incarceration system. We don’t believe in rehabilitation but punishment. What an informative video!

  • @GrowWildOutdoors
    @GrowWildOutdoors 27 дней назад +96

    Maybe this should be played in high schools before juveniles can be charged as adults. Solid reality check.

    • @teen5089
      @teen5089 26 дней назад +16

      Went over your head.

    • @acepilotson3331
      @acepilotson3331 25 дней назад +3

      @@teen5089what did they miss? 😂

    • @GrowWildOutdoors
      @GrowWildOutdoors 25 дней назад +2

      @@teen5089 Not at all. I've worked with at-risk youth & law enforcement my entire career.

    • @Kataharrison6974
      @Kataharrison6974 18 дней назад

      Stop US funded slavery.

    • @interestsavvy6813
      @interestsavvy6813 18 дней назад

      Yes. No juve to be tried as adults

  • @Renni-kg6vf
    @Renni-kg6vf 15 дней назад +7

    The US prison system is a microcosm of literally every major issue in the US.

  • @jerlewis4291
    @jerlewis4291 Месяц назад +40

    Geez, and let's not forget how much more these fees are in private prisons where they can literally add a fee for anything. Then they farm out the inmate labor to produce goods that the public buys at ultra low cost making the companies that contract the labor even more money.

    • @chrisbgood2359
      @chrisbgood2359 Месяц назад +1

      Good point. This video is not accurate for NY prisons. I wish this video would be more specific about the states that have these policies and whether or not they are privately funded. This message is disingenuous and bias because it paints all prison systems withbone brush.

    • @jerlewis4291
      @jerlewis4291 Месяц назад

      @@chrisbgood2359 Yes, the Prison Industrial Complex is bigger than most people believe

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 24 дня назад +1

      @@chrisbgood2359 A problem doesn't need to be ubiquitous to be worth solving. It's happening in lots of prisons across many states. It needs to stop immediately.

    • @ManMountainMetals
      @ManMountainMetals 13 дней назад

      1 point you got wrong is prisons don't produce consumer goods but things like military uniforms and license plates.

  • @lanceweinert2590
    @lanceweinert2590 21 день назад +19

    ✋56k owed in fines to Illinois for my "lock up" smh glad you guys are bringing this issue to light.

  • @Pserene47
    @Pserene47 Месяц назад +43

    What a criminal system!! The justice system should be incarcerated for predatory practices.

  • @shirleyjhaney1041
    @shirleyjhaney1041 Месяц назад +67

    I thought public defenders were free. I see absolutely no reason that outside of egregious financial crimes and restitution to victims people should be fined and I agree this sounds deeply unfair; calls cannot be charged bc isolation is illegal; room and board charges and food charges represent cruel and unusual punishment; commissary should really be at cost. This is outrageous. It would probably be incredibly easy given disparities in the system which technically many people pay for with time energy and so on landing hypothetically some people in prison and then additionally hammering them with money fees…. Someone can make this stop I think. Also you can’t send someone to jail for not paying this in all likelihood unless IMO they committed a financial crime or are paying restitution to a victim. Plus don’t we seize often enough their assets involved in a crime and shouldn’t that rectify something financial? This sounds criminally bad to me.

    • @wendezzy554
      @wendezzy554 Месяц назад +6

      Only in certain states

    • @silverXnoise
      @silverXnoise Месяц назад +1

      Ha! Only if you win your case. Look up conviction rates for any district in the nation, and see the problem writ large.

    • @silverXnoise
      @silverXnoise Месяц назад +5

      “…don’t seize enough assets”?
      This is even funnier. We seize a ton of assets, a lot of which is never tied to crime, we seize it anyway. Civil asset forfeiture. It’s wildly abused, so just imagine what LE forces do when there is an actual justification?

    • @shirleyjhaney1041
      @shirleyjhaney1041 Месяц назад +1

      @@silverXnoise you know if commenting on a progressive cause means I get crackpot commenting from sloppy people I just don’t know if it’s worth it

    • @shirleyjhaney1041
      @shirleyjhaney1041 Месяц назад +2

      Don’t ppl have a certain amount of time to contest it and it costs money to store things and to resell them even so frankly I doubt we do substantial forfeiture deserved or not- the prison system by it’s nature Isn’t going to be helped by becoming or being a for profit system; it doesn’t need innovation it just needs reasonable standards and although dinging people with fees may be substantial I doubt it’s really necessary- an American probably wouldn’t say that for profit prison run by business people is a bad idea but I think ironically it’s readily apparent it’s a stupid idea at the outset

  • @afghans0ldier
    @afghans0ldier 28 дней назад +19

    Thank god I live in Denmark. Here when you goto Jail or get a public defender it is FREE. Even when you are out of jail, there are you no bills!

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +8

      You have a much different approach to incarceration, and lower recidivism. Almost like you want them to be successful. We can't tolerate that in America. Seeing a criminal succeed seems to make people angry lol.

    • @dragonwitch27
      @dragonwitch27 20 дней назад

      @tylerkinley268 they also have a SIGNIFICANTLY smaller population (both incarcerated and in general). The US prison system most certainly needs reform, but some of things that Europeans enjoy aren’t really feasible when you have 100s of millions of people.

  • @jiffyb333
    @jiffyb333 24 дня назад +3

    I had no idea about so many of these costs, absolutely crazy! Thank you for shedding light on this.

  • @mastermati773
    @mastermati773 12 дней назад +3

    I’m not surprised. We are talking about the only country to oppose the idea that food is a basic human right.

  • @mikemondano3624
    @mikemondano3624 Месяц назад +25

    This is largely because of the Puritan background of most Americans. Rehabilitation is the stated goal, but revenge is the real one. Some European countries are abolishing prisons altogether. Norway's model system with almost no recidivism has "prisons" that are like small communities where inmates learn how to live in a society normally and productively.

    • @georgewagner7787
      @georgewagner7787 Месяц назад

      No.
      Rehabilitación
      Punishment not revenge
      Deterrence

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад

      The conservatives keep prisons inhumane. While the Nordic system wouldn't work in America, we could stand to learn something from that model.

    • @VonSly
      @VonSly 26 дней назад

      So there are no prisons for violent offenders either?

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +1

      ​@@Libertaro-i2uhonestly the current model is failing anyway. I'm not sure how we could do any worse considering the recidivism and crime rate.

  • @anvi.a8976
    @anvi.a8976 21 день назад +3

    Great journalism! I remember doing a High School presentation on criminal recidivism.

  • @Psychoactive_Music
    @Psychoactive_Music Месяц назад +43

    I am paying off over $4600 right now for 7 months in jail and some probation. I have $0 in restitution because there was no actual victim in the crime. Just the "State of Florida". If the "State" is the only "victim", it's not really a "crime", just money extraction. I own what I did, it was just stupid, but the fees are absolutely ridiculous.

    • @Psychoactive_Music
      @Psychoactive_Music Месяц назад +14

      And don't get me started on the poor families of inmates and the commissary and telephone systems. The families are the ones being punished, not the inmates.

    • @Mirandanns
      @Mirandanns Месяц назад +7

      What did you do?

    • @austinballard6815
      @austinballard6815 Месяц назад

      any way you could move from the state? that would make it exceptionally hard for them to enforce/garner anything you make once you're outside jurisdiction...I'm not saying it would absolve everything but it certainly would make it much harder for the State to force payment or arrest you once you're not within their jurisdiction anymore.

    • @KellyR-qx7wn
      @KellyR-qx7wn Месяц назад +6

      7 Months in jail cost the taxpayers way over $4600. You're lucky the US system of 'justice' finds the taxpayers guilty for your debt you caused with your criminal activity.

    • @austinballard6815
      @austinballard6815 Месяц назад +7

      @@KellyR-qx7wn do you get blood out of an onion?

  • @ekiti
    @ekiti Месяц назад +29

    What happend to taxpayers money? 🤔

  • @jec_ecart
    @jec_ecart 16 дней назад +3

    What kind of dystopian world is this! Utter shame on the administrators. 😡 😮

  • @06howea1
    @06howea1 13 дней назад +1

    Thank you for raising awareness

  • @DutchBikeGuy
    @DutchBikeGuy 13 дней назад +3

    I have a solution to all of this: Don't be a criminal!

    • @dragskcinnay3184
      @dragskcinnay3184 5 дней назад

      What about innocent people in prison?

    • @DutchBikeGuy
      @DutchBikeGuy 5 дней назад

      @@dragskcinnay3184that’s an American problem. It happens too often that innocent people end up locked up. Such a Third World Country

    • @dragskcinnay3184
      @dragskcinnay3184 5 дней назад

      @@DutchBikeGuy I meaaaaan... it happens in all countries to a degree, but sure, it probably happens in the US more often than it should

  • @jenniferburns2530
    @jenniferburns2530 Месяц назад +6

    I was aware of the ridiculous fees for phone calls and commissary and the obscenely low wages. Co-pays for healthcare? Bills for public defenders? All the other fees? There is no way anyone who doesn't start out with personal or family wealth to leave prison without debt.

  • @benwagner5089
    @benwagner5089 8 дней назад +2

    Working earns 0.42 USD/hour (before garnishments)
    Placing phone calls cost 0.14 USD/min, 30 minute calls, 4 times/week.
    He has to work for an hour to talk for 3 minutes, so 10 hours per call. That's a 40 hour workweek just cover his phone calls. Nothing else.

  • @UK-sm4co
    @UK-sm4co 26 дней назад +5

    Really? I thought the public defender's were provided totally FREE to them and it was the government that paid their bills. oh wow! an eye opener indeed

  • @jodycarter7308
    @jodycarter7308 Месяц назад +4

    Thx for shining light on this.

  • @Carmen-.-
    @Carmen-.- Месяц назад +10

    This show how the system is rigged by design. Now how many of those people shouldn’t even really be in there?

  • @JuveZavala
    @JuveZavala Месяц назад +31

    Arrest the politicians that allow this to continue in every state

    • @EsotericBreakfastBuffet
      @EsotericBreakfastBuffet Месяц назад

      This is a Red state issue…Republicans bewail crime statistics at any opportunity they have but only have themselves to blame

  • @tomwalsh96
    @tomwalsh96 12 дней назад +1

    What a lovely country you folks have...

  • @r8chlletters
    @r8chlletters Месяц назад +21

    Yeah so…we have got to reform prisons. They need to be free of privatization and as independent and self sufficient as possible. This means growing crops, preserving food, making some kind of product from their crops that can be sold to defer the cost of goods they cannot otherwise purchase. Everyone working together like a co-op. This has been done many centuries before and should return to this model. The prison hires very few people to provide security. All other positions come from those living in the prison. Federal programs provide educational subsidies, libraries and transitional programs to integrate people who have served their time as functional members of society. Look at any prison model in Northern Europe-incarceration is not about punishment. It’s about course correction. Making people more desperate, nickel and dime-ing them into debt only leads to more crime.

    • @ffc1a28c7
      @ffc1a28c7 26 дней назад

      We definitely need something much more structured (I'd say this and add some sort of educational reform. If someone wants a PhD in higher topos theory, they should be able to pursue that.)

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +1

      Prison farms have a bad history of exploitation. Look at Angola.

  • @user-rf3lu1fe5m
    @user-rf3lu1fe5m 12 дней назад +1

    Wow, this is insane! How do we teach people to go straight when we set them up for failure? The punishment is jail. The fines are a money-making scam

  • @scipioafricanus4875
    @scipioafricanus4875 Месяц назад +17

    This is criminal both parties must be responsible for this

  • @Waterhead
    @Waterhead 5 дней назад

    So much for getting rid of Debtors’ Prisons.

  • @nilsp9426
    @nilsp9426 Месяц назад +5

    If a society does not invest in rehabilitation of prisoners, it invests in a mounting problem instead. Both with money and a lack of safety.

  • @mymobilebuddy4392
    @mymobilebuddy4392 Месяц назад +11

    I still owe 3 grand. I refuse to pay it. I left the state.

    • @jay_m4160
      @jay_m4160 Месяц назад +3

      I’m so sorry you went through this ❤

    • @nathandennis8078
      @nathandennis8078 25 дней назад +2

      A Warrant in the works I see

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад

      ​@@nathandennis8078ha! I almost never pay fines or fees. Once it goes to collections I just call and say "I got X amount, take it or leave it", and they always do.
      I have no obligation to a society that I'm excluded from.

    • @realKarlFranz
      @realKarlFranz 12 дней назад

      I hope that the law makes you pay the 3 grand.

  • @pualanalstyle
    @pualanalstyle 26 дней назад +4

    Eye-opening. Thank you.

  • @calebmcgowan2493
    @calebmcgowan2493 19 дней назад

    Ronald Reagan’s dream of “Make America Great Again” coming to fruition. So much for trickle down economics!

  • @courtneyliu
    @courtneyliu 26 дней назад +7

    Mind blown 🤯. Shouldn’t the social worker in the prison system line up jobs for these folks before release? They have months and years to set this up. No wonder recidivism rate is so high

    • @marketads1
      @marketads1 26 дней назад

      If you’re interested, you can do some research. I know the answer but you should check it out yourself.

    • @MattHrela
      @MattHrela 26 дней назад

      Parole officer does that, i know in Illinois they pay for 7 months rent for a apartment

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +1

      Trouble is that the permanent punishment system ensures ex-cons are permanently denied economic opportunities

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +1

      ​@@MattHrelaWHAT? Wonder when that happened cause my PO never told me about that. I got stuck in a homeless shelter upon release, and then bailed on that so I could find work.

  • @CarLos-by5xl
    @CarLos-by5xl Месяц назад +5

    We tend to tell our kids when they are grown they can do whatever they want, go to school for whatever, but if I as a parent have to be there financially when you make poor choices, or I'm expected to... then I should be able to tell you what NOT to do, because I'm not going to take a second job or come out of retirement to help pay for your Lawyer or fund your prison phone calls and food.
    That being said, I do not agree with all these Junk Fees, and making families suffer. However, now that your aware, you should make your kids aware as well.

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 24 дня назад

      Those parents are voluntarily helping. No one requires them to pay. Plenty of people in society would let you off the hook for not helping once your kid went to prison. What does any of this have to do with telling your kids what school to go to?

  • @terywetherlow7970
    @terywetherlow7970 29 дней назад +6

    Slave labor....

    • @comentariopolitico1014
      @comentariopolitico1014 29 дней назад

      What labor are they actually doing, pray tell? AFAIK, they want to mope around, living off of taxpayers' dollars. Do you see then slaving around in the sun, fixing potholes? I don't.

    • @Libertaro-i2u
      @Libertaro-i2u 26 дней назад +1

      Basically

  • @knowledgeispower6192
    @knowledgeispower6192 29 дней назад +2

    For profit private prisons should be illegal.

  • @2Burgers_1Pizza
    @2Burgers_1Pizza Месяц назад +16

    I wouldn't expect for an entire judicial system to improve rehabilitation overnight, which makes the inmate's wage the real issue here.

    • @precooked-bacon
      @precooked-bacon Месяц назад

      if wage is too reasonable some may be incentivized to stay in prison

    • @Kataharrison6974
      @Kataharrison6974 18 дней назад

      Fair wages then for ALL human beings.

    • @reddragonflyxx657
      @reddragonflyxx657 14 дней назад

      ​@@precooked-baconIf the wage is unreasonable prisons may be incentivized to keep inmates. Plus if they get out in debt they may be incentivized to commit more crimes (which is a well documented issue mentioned in this video, US recidivism rates are too high).

    • @-gundy-187
      @-gundy-187 13 дней назад

      @@reddragonflyxx657why not pay them fair wages until they are out of debt and reduce their wage just enought to keep them debt free until their release? Like this they don't walk out with money but without debt either.

  • @Dubjaxfilms
    @Dubjaxfilms Месяц назад +16

    I'm not from the US, but I was struck by a term the narrator used "striving to rehabilitate".
    I wonder how much effort the prison services put into rehabilitating offenders over and above removing their freedom for their crimes, do they get education, therapy, what efforts are put in place to prevent these people from reoffending upon their release, what help do they receive after their release ? what steps are taken to help these people reintegrate and become useful members of society ?

    • @MarsPriest
      @MarsPriest Месяц назад +2

      Teaching those Little Angels that actions have serious consequences in the real world is all the rehabilitation they need.

    • @Dubjaxfilms
      @Dubjaxfilms Месяц назад +9

      @@MarsPriest their incarceration teaches them that, don't you think that education and learning new skills to prepare them to be lawful members of society would benefit them and benefit society as a whole by reducing recidivism ?

    • @adhishyajnik9771
      @adhishyajnik9771 Месяц назад +4

      Little to nothing is done in most cases. Since the 70s, America’s model of corrections has been primarily punitive rather than rehabilitative. For minority groups, it’s been punitive far longer than that.

    • @Serjo777
      @Serjo777 25 дней назад

      @@Dubjaxfilms Having a working train (t = b) doesn't hurt, you should try it.

  • @mohammedshahjehan9135
    @mohammedshahjehan9135 Месяц назад +10

    What happens though if you don't/can't pay????? They gon make you homeless in jail 😂😂😂

    • @dirkhamilton2709
      @dirkhamilton2709 26 дней назад

      No soap, shampoo, no food, no antibiotics for infections. Thats what.
      Oh, not pads or tampons for female inmates, and no way to wash your bloody clothes either.
      You do NOT get a fresh pair of underwear, or even a shower every day.

  • @GorgieClarissa
    @GorgieClarissa 25 дней назад +1

    "my whole life i feel like they've set me up for failure'' it's so interesting to see and hear this and then listen to how much each person owes... and then i look at my student loan debt and the insanely high interest rate and can't help but make the legit comparisons.

  • @paradisepointlandscapedesi4886
    @paradisepointlandscapedesi4886 28 дней назад +8

    Don’t go to prison💯💯💯💯🙏🏽😎👍🏽

  • @NTVT1999
    @NTVT1999 20 дней назад

    I can’t even watch this fully- the sheer anxiety that it was causing, seeing these inescapable fees rack up mercilessly, while the family is being driven into involuntary hardship, is too much to bear.

  • @trevorsabo1824
    @trevorsabo1824 25 дней назад +4

    Is this supposed to make me sad? STAY OUT OF JAIL. Seems rather simple to me.✌️❤️🇨🇦

    • @dragskcinnay3184
      @dragskcinnay3184 5 дней назад

      Isn't the point of sending people to prison to _prevent them_ from commiting crimes when they get out?
      Because this system _encourages_ it...

  • @youngmicrowave127
    @youngmicrowave127 16 дней назад

    Sympathy for criminals is insane!! People need to check their priorities and help the innocent.

  • @1234itbeme
    @1234itbeme 29 дней назад

    Free them. They shouldn't have to pay for anything.

  • @solidorsharp3091
    @solidorsharp3091 29 дней назад +4

    Ask the lobbyists !

  • @bh2o
    @bh2o 28 дней назад +1

    This is despicable!

    • @EmeraldsQuartzLight
      @EmeraldsQuartzLight 27 дней назад

      Like the criminals that commit the crimes you fool. 😞🦍

    • @bh2o
      @bh2o 27 дней назад

      @@EmeraldsQuartzLight : How’s anyone a chance at change when burdened with all these additional incidentals, unrelated to the courts, which may put them right back in jail, due to their inability to pay, default - this on top of already court assigned penalties / fines for crimes committed. These people are supposedly being rehabilitated, not turned into perpetual debtors. If you bothered to listen all the way through, inmates explained why some had to return back to a life of crime in order to pay off additionally applied insurmountable debts. Yes, pay for the crime, do the time, but don’t jack fees to the point where it is impossible to repay… The burden of constantly housing these inmates falls upon tax payers and doesn’t need to be perpetual. The U.S. incarcerates more people than any other country in the world, while this, in the long run only encourages repeat offenders, not dissuading… Think 💭

    • @bh2o
      @bh2o 27 дней назад

      @@EmeraldsQuartzLight : BTW, wages paid for inmate work during their incarceration, payed for by tax payers… it isn’t magic money. So, in effect, we as tax payers are also assisting in paying back these ridiculously accrued incidental fees, while they’re incarcerated - an oxymoron. At the same time there has to be some form of incentivizing, humanizing inmates, a means for paying off one’s debt to society, otherwise they will lose any and all hope at improving themselves, their lives, their families. Bottom line, keep fee structures realistic, not impossible.

  • @V3racious3
    @V3racious3 Месяц назад +3

    A new meaning to debtor's prison.

  • @MysteriousSoulreaper
    @MysteriousSoulreaper 12 дней назад

    Gives a whole new meaning to "pay your debt to society."

  • @marketads1
    @marketads1 27 дней назад +3

    The point the op-ed makes has flown by many. No one is excusing criminals because it costs money. The point is: what is the current system achieving? Instead of attacking the process by looking at recidivism, or barriers to re-entry to society, let’s look at it this way. Now the story is bleaker. So, things aren’t working well for this set of Americans on the outside, and it doesn’t improve on the inside, what are we saying? They don’t deserve to live at all?? So put up your political or religious blocks about “getting what they deserve.” No laws say that and no religion says that. Think who are the people who want these humans to suffer so much….

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +2

      Return customers, that's all we've achieved. And an unsafe society cause all we produce is angrier criminals with more connections and knowledge.
      If I only succeeded 25 to 30 percent of the time, I'd be fired. So if 70+ percent are back within 3-5 years, then the system is failing society. Debt and misery is supposed to make them successful and self sufficient?

  • @ryanmoncton8022
    @ryanmoncton8022 5 дней назад

    Crime doesn't pay. Plain and simple, don't be a criminal. This video should be a deterrent.

  • @433mea4
    @433mea4 22 дня назад +5

    Maybe don't commit the crime. Ever thought of that?

    • @dragskcinnay3184
      @dragskcinnay3184 5 дней назад

      Innocents in prison is a thing.
      Besides, the _whole point_ of punishing people for their crimes is to make society safer by preventing
      1) culpritd from commiting crimes again when they get out of prison
      2) discouraging others from commiting crimes
      The US prison system does the _exact opposite:_ people out of prison often have no choice but to commit crime to pay all the fees and bills, so the system litteraly encourages crime.
      Which of course is the whole point since the prison system is set up in a way where it provides super cheap labor, so the whole thing is motivated by purely economic incentives instead of societal ones

  • @elginbeloy9066
    @elginbeloy9066 27 дней назад +1

    Really important video. Sad it doesn't get many views. Things will never change.

  • @rachaelgoldman5846
    @rachaelgoldman5846 Месяц назад +5

    Piper Kerman's Orange is the New Black narrative talks about these fees. It was slightly shocking.

  • @_clarkey
    @_clarkey 17 дней назад +2

    America… rawwwhh 🦅🦅🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @LikEaPhoX81
    @LikEaPhoX81 Месяц назад +4

    42c is crazy, whats terrible is they dont make enough in a full day to even pay for food and bedding.

  • @JacobJohnson-lh4gx
    @JacobJohnson-lh4gx 12 дней назад +1

    No wonder people prefer "unaliving" themselves instead of going to prison, better that than being alive suffering with absurd taxes and debt designed to keep you locked up for the rest of your life. Imagine of the crime isn't as severe, like stealing a two dollar chocolate caramel bar and you end up locked up paying these absurd debts. The legal system debt is like a loan shark in a sense, and the only victim here is the criminal. It's like modern day slavery with those job rates inside the prison. 😢

  • @kenscott9656
    @kenscott9656 25 дней назад +6

    best thing to do is not break the law!!!

    • @terywetherlow7970
      @terywetherlow7970 23 дня назад +2

      @@kenscott9656 Ignorance of law is becoming easier to catch in the net.

  • @angelchoy856
    @angelchoy856 11 дней назад

    The key is to stay out of prison. Don’t commit crimes.

    • @johnnygoodman2003
      @johnnygoodman2003 10 дней назад +2

      No no no no no ... that's dumb logic....
      To everyone saying "solution is don't do crime" the state of Tennessee is now investigating dui police quotas where last year 600 sober drivers were arrested for drunk driving and some went to jail. The state makes money from crime, when profits are down, innocent people go to jail, defend and release, and still end up with debt.

    • @krisshnapeswanipeswani3190
      @krisshnapeswanipeswani3190 10 дней назад +1

      Um people do crimes to survive. Tell don't do crimes to a mother who had to steal bread for her starving children. Btw once the crime is done it is down. The point is to be PRAGMATIC after.

  • @homelessalcoholic2716
    @homelessalcoholic2716 27 дней назад +6

    I mean the video makes it sound like any of these people got thrown in prison for stealing a loaf of bread. Stay out of trouble, free-folk don't have to pay the courts

    • @jvanek8512
      @jvanek8512 26 дней назад

      I know. It's weird how NYT is making these criminals victims.

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 24 дня назад

      None of the people in the video had their crimes mentioned. They could be nonviolent drug users or they could be murderers. But that's not the point. No one should have to pay these ridiculous fees regardless of their sentence. Sentences that deserve fines already have them attached. Prisons shouldn't be able to worsen inmates' sentences like this.

  • @RyanUehara12345252Rpage
    @RyanUehara12345252Rpage Месяц назад +1

    I have called out these fees as a problem for a long time. The goal should be rehabilitation over punishment.

  • @Jackj28
    @Jackj28 26 дней назад +8

    I’ve been there. I know all about that. It sucks. Bottom line, the criminal justice admiralty royalty sea courts are not for justice. It is a for-profit system. Period.

  • @udipta21
    @udipta21 17 дней назад +2

    This is dystopia

    • @Elisa9395-y4z
      @Elisa9395-y4z 17 дней назад

      Exactly!! I think it's even worse in India ?

    • @jec_ecart
      @jec_ecart 16 дней назад

      It is

  • @rebeccaboudreau7589
    @rebeccaboudreau7589 Месяц назад +4

    Sounds like Victorian England. 🤬

    • @duo315
      @duo315 Месяц назад

      Where children were went to jail as punishment for their parents' debt? How, exactly?

  • @bernarrcoletta7419
    @bernarrcoletta7419 12 дней назад

    Oh FFS! This is ridiculous. Monopolies and predatory practices inflicted with no alternatives. Most of these are costs that should be borne by the state.

  • @ZekeZable
    @ZekeZable Месяц назад +13

    Let's visit victims. You'll need a calculator.

    • @himmie1
      @himmie1 26 дней назад +5

      Most people in jail don't have a victim

    • @ffc1a28c7
      @ffc1a28c7 26 дней назад +6

      Did you ignore the fact that the entire point of the video was about how these people, no matter what they have done, are trapped inside the criminal justice system? The quotes where people say they have done crimes to pay debt? If you have a system, where you want *any* sort of rehabilitation (whatever bar you set, if it is not zero - literally if *anyone* is redeemable), then you can not support the US prison system.

    • @ZekeZable
      @ZekeZable 26 дней назад

      @@himmie1 hard to argue with logic like that.

  • @Dcjc25
    @Dcjc25 Месяц назад

    Interesting! My goodness the tab for life sentencers is definitely ASTRONOMICAL!

  • @melov7629
    @melov7629 28 дней назад +3

    Cant pay the fine dont do the crime

  • @SA-ol3xi
    @SA-ol3xi 3 дня назад

    Debt keeps people in criminality. America is a business.

  • @karanrana7874
    @karanrana7874 28 дней назад +9

    Maybe Mike and "Mikes of the world" should have thought about what the potential consequences are when commiting a crime

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +3

      The consequence is loss of freedom; nobody was sentenced to massive ongoing debt. Never heard that handed down.

    • @tcbobb1613
      @tcbobb1613 14 дней назад

      I bet nobody knows the actual fees associated with going to jail/prison

  • @motswaps
    @motswaps 17 дней назад +1

    A never ending cycle,then they have the nerve to call it “rehabilitation “

  • @honestlynate7922
    @honestlynate7922 28 дней назад +9

    They keep acting like they didn’t put themselves there.

    • @Purple_jamjelly
      @Purple_jamjelly 27 дней назад +1

      😂😂😂😂 I know

    • @mzprince4139
      @mzprince4139 26 дней назад +5

      If they had resources for a good lawyer, some might not have been behind bars.

    • @teen5089
      @teen5089 26 дней назад +5

      Again it went over your head. tunnel vision does it every time.

    • @Serjo777
      @Serjo777 25 дней назад +2

      Which they didn't. Did they make the laws or sentence themselves?

    • @tylerkinley268
      @tylerkinley268 25 дней назад +3

      Technically they didn't. They were sentenced to a period of incarceration; not crippling debt for BS services/fees.