• MidsizedSedan@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        So… Person does a crime. Person goes to a room. The person gets food and shelter. Both of those is a cost to the room owner.

        How is the room owner making a profit?

        A Room

        • stabby_cicada@slrpnk.netOP
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          4 hours ago

          Private prisons in the US charge the government a fee per prisoner per day. The government pays it with tax money.

          The US Constitution allows slavery as a punishment for crime. Private prisons can force prisoners to work in prison shops, or rent them out to businesses, and punish them if they refuse to work. The prisons pay the prisoners less than a dollar an hour and make enormous profits off their cheap labor.

          Let me emphasize: this is slavery. This is actual literal slavery. The US government, and the private prisons it contracts with, collectively own almost two million imprisoned slaves, the majority of whom are Black. Slaves who refuse to work are punished with solitary confinement or loss of “privileges” like food, hygiene products, or communication with friends and family outside the prison. United States law and the United States Constitution allow it. And slavery is extraordinarily profitable for the slave owners.

          Finally, private prisons are allowed to charge prisoners more or less whatever they want for things like phone calls and purchases from the prison commissaries. A prison can charge $5 for a 15 minute phone call or $10 for a bottle of shampoo. Since prisoners, again, earn less than $1 an hour, these ludicrous fees are generally extorted from the friends and family of prisoners, providing another revenue stream for the prison.

          All this is so profitable that private prisons’ contracts with the US have minimum occupancy guarantees. The US government guarantees it will supply a certain number of prisoners to each private prison to guarantee its income. Somehow, despite crime rates falling consistently for decades, the US government never fails to make quota.

          FYI, the private prison industry was one of Trump’s biggest donors, and their investment paid off massively - the industry is making billions from imprisoning and enslaving immigrants thanks to Trump’s immigration crackdown.

      • Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Not to anywhere near the same degree. Also, just a few decades ago, you guys didn’t have them at all. The 1980s is where everything went bad for you guys.

        In the first Robocop film, there’s even a scene where the board members of the evil megacorporation OCP are discussing traditionally non-private sectors where they’re making inroads, and prisons are listed.

        The UK has a handful, and the contractor that runs them, G4S, is the name everyone instinctively listens out for in news reports about escaped prisoners, event security disasters and probes into site mismanagement.

      • MidsizedSedan@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        If Australia does, I’m too “stuck indoors with no TV” to notice.

        I do know there are too many teens/indigenous Australians locked up.

        Extras

        (The way I see it, they were here first. Why are they going to jail for walking freely on their land? Just because Town Council put a road there?

        I’m in a part of Australia where there is the White Mans Name, and the Indigenous Name for the land, and I am happy to put their name first.)