English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We hear many stories about repeat offenders, who have spent some time in jail, only to be released and re-offend.

If someone has a long, repeated history of violent offences, is it not sensible for them to be permanently restricted, for the sake of protecting the public? Perhaps a permanent prison sentence, or permanent monitoring using some kind of electronic device, or geographic restriction (exile) to a small community, etc. or at least permanent daily parole.

A sequel to this question is: many people with recurrent patterns of criminal behaviour have a low potential of being "rehabilitated". Should the first priority of a prison be to simply protect the public from dangerous individuals--accepting that some prisoners have an intractable problem that cannot be "rehabilitated"? Or do you believe that every individual prisoner should have costly, time-consuming therapy to help them change their ways, so they can rejoin society?

2006-07-13 07:21:23 · 13 answers · asked by garth_d 1 in Social Science Sociology

13 answers

People with a life long history of crimes against others should be incarcerated, not only for the safety of the public, but also for their own safety.

2006-07-13 07:24:55 · answer #1 · answered by WC 7 · 0 1

The rehabilitated system sucksa-ss. Once an individual keep recreating his or her offenses- her or his becomes officially a menes to society without care and should be locked up without parole or proper health care, food (only bread and water like the third world countries implements). Uncommon behavior should not be accepted under any circumstances. We offer these pirates treasures normally on the outside are impossible to achieve. After the second offense it is impossible for a criminal mind to return to society to them its a way of surviving inside and still doing the things they love doing- after all, the government picks up the tab, always.
Therapy? what the hell is that. There's no counseling of any magnitude that could regain a criminal trust of society in any form, shape or notion. To them its like a vocation, wow!! fifteen second of fame. To be studied on like a foreign enigma.....

2006-07-13 08:58:09 · answer #2 · answered by NEMESIS 3 · 0 0

Some People just can never change. Everyone deserves a chance or two or three. But depending on the crime if its bad enough they should lock the offender up and throw away the key and only feed'em White unground wheat and water till they die.

2006-07-13 07:27:06 · answer #3 · answered by Scott 6 · 0 0

Nope. section colonization and what's most suitable as a lot because it particularly is brought on via dwindling aspects right here at residing house and the possibilities and income via exploiting diverse aspects interior the cosmos. it really is purely a small percentage of the inhabitants who're pastime in section for the sake of section, exploration and such beliefs. for individuals who dislike politics and authorities and what is going at right here at residing house, they are going to purely create diverse subject matters in section and valuable circumstances worse than what exists already. authentic freedom is a proper it particularly is easily now not a reality till eventually someone chooses to stay interior the depths of section in absolute isolation. The minute you get 2 people collectively....

2016-12-10 09:03:46 · answer #4 · answered by shoaf 4 · 0 0

YA DO THE CRIME YA DO THE TIME <<

2006-07-13 07:36:51 · answer #5 · answered by Penney S 6 · 0 0

Yes!

2006-07-13 07:31:16 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I firmly believe in the "three strikes you're out" laws.

2006-07-13 07:25:10 · answer #7 · answered by cyanne2ak 7 · 0 0

ofcouse

time served let them go

u wana keep them lcoket up couse ur a wossy?

2006-07-13 07:24:46 · answer #8 · answered by NeO Anderson 3 · 0 0

Yes people do stupid stuff and they should be forgiven

2006-07-13 07:24:39 · answer #9 · answered by msxchink 1 · 0 0

no

2006-07-13 07:24:12 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers