My nephew had a terrible childhood despite the alleged involvement of the social services. He needed to be removed from his parents and put up for adoption but instead it was decided that his parents had rights which were more important than his. Please don't think I stood by and watched without doing anything but that's another story.
After a troubled time at school he turned to alcohol, drugs and crime. By 15 he was in a teenage secure unit. He's now 30 and has spent over 10 of the last 15 years in units and prison. In fact, he's now so institutionalised that he can't exist in the normal world and committed his last crime in order to go back to prison.
This suggests to me that our current system doesn't work. This young man is so used to being locked up that he can't function when he isn't. He's not the only one because recently a man broke every car windscreen in my daughter's street because he was desperate to go back inside.
I'm not justifying my nephew btw just giving an example of how the system doesn't work.
Privatisation won't make it better. We need to ask ourselves why we incarcerate people. Is it to remove them from society? Is it to punish? Is it to rehabilitate? Or are we simply locking them up and forgetting about them? What about the people we put in prison who have mental health problems and really should be in hospital?
Whatever the reason they don't cease to be human beings and as such need to be treated with decency no matter what they've done. Have you ever seen a lion in a cage pacing up and down with boredom and slowly going insane? Imagine what being locked in a cell 23 out of 24 hours does to a human being.
: What has been your most wasted purchased made in preparation for a holiday?


