Re: Crime and Punishment

From: Terry Donaghe (tdonaghe@yahoo.com)
Date: Thu Dec 03 1998 - 12:58:24 MST


The most important thing to society ought to be the preservation of
individuals’ self and property. Those who show that they can not help
but to encroach on others (murder, rape, assault) or their properties
(theft, fraud, burglary, etc.) should be removed from society.

It is positive to return those individuals back to society if and when
they are capable of refraining from their previous activities. All
productive members of society add to each other’s welfare. What we
need, therefore, is a way of determining if an individual is
rehabilitated – that is, is he capable of being productive and can he
keep from hurting others or their property. Until an individual can
show that he is capable of this, he should be kept away from society –
i.e. no defined prison terms.

Currently, I don’t know if we have any way of accurately determining
whether an individual is likely to commit more crimes. We do, though,
have statistics that tell us that sex offenders are X% more likely to
continue committing sex crimes than petty theives. Those individuals
who exhibit behavior that has been found to be largely “unfixable”
should remain away from society indefinetly.

Since criminals must be removed from society, society should not have
to bear the costs of their incarceration. Criminals should be given
the choice of self-sufficiency (growing own food – selling excess to
pay guards or other such enterprises that can keep them away from
society) or death – no free lunches. Any excess profits (i.e. more
money than needed for administration) made by these “business” prisons
should go towards a reparations fund to pay the prisoners’ victims.

Prisoners who can convince a subset of society (perhaps businesses
could compete to serve this function – perhaps they could receive a
percentage of his future earnings if he stays out of trouble or pay a
hefty fine if he returns to his old ways) that they are rehabilitated
should be released back into society. Obviously, each time a released
prisoner returns to prison, his chances of ever getting out again
should be greatly diminished.

Those prisoners who show they can’t deal with any sort of society
(assault other inmates, guards) should be either put to death or sent
to some remote location with no contact with the rest of society.
Either way, society should not have to pay at all for the upkeep of
prisoners.

Comments?

==
----------------------
Terry Donaghe: terry@donaghe.com
Individual, Anarcho-Capitalist, Environmentalist, Transhumanist, Mensan

The Millennium Bookshelf: <http://www.donaghe.com/mbookshelf.htm>

_________________________________________________________
DO YOU YAHOO!?
Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com



This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.5 : Fri Nov 01 2002 - 14:49:54 MST