[UK] Prisoners face ban on Sky TV in tougher prisons

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Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 1:38 am

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Prisoners face ban on Sky TV in tougher prisons
  • Prison inmates are to be banned from watching Sky TV as part of a crackdown on conditions in Britain's jails, a Cabinet minister has said.
In an interview with the Mail on Sunday, Chris Grayling, the Justice Secretary, said it was unacceptable that those serving in some private prisons were able to enjoy satellite television and other perks beyond the budgets of many working families.

Mr Grayling is considering a range of measures to make life in Britain's prisons less comfortable for criminals as part of an ongoing review expected to report in late spring.

Inmates may face greater restrictions on wearing their own clothes, fewer televisions and a cut in their pocket money.

We'll see how this pans out. I'm not hopeful. I suspect this is talk to keep the Mail readers happy.



Alien_Papa
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03 Feb 2013, 2:01 am

Almost makes it sound like prison is not a fun place to be anymore

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CYZ5XoHxC3I[/youtube]



1000Knives
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03 Feb 2013, 2:34 am

But what exactly will it accomplish? Just making it tougher for tougher sake? In USA prisons are damned tough, and we have high as hell recidivist rates, and absurd amounts of violence inside of our jails. As laughable as UK jails looked to me in USA, you guys are doing better in actually rehabilitating criminals than us.

From wiki...

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As reported on BBC Radio 4 on 2 September 2005, the recidivism rates for released prisoners in the United States of America is 60% compared with 50% in the United Kingdom. The report attributed the lower recidivism rate in the UK to a focus on rehabilitation and education of prisoners compared with the US focus on punishment, deterrence and keeping potentially dangerous individuals away from society.



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 5:25 am

60% v 50%? Is that something to be proud of? Really?



J-Greens
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03 Feb 2013, 5:50 am

1000Knives wrote:
Just making it tougher for tougher sake?

Well it is a prison.

Rehabilitation should be about learning and changing criminal recidivism, not being all cosy with luxuries that the lowest in society can't even afford.



The_Walrus
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03 Feb 2013, 8:11 am

I support this to an extent, people shouldn't have more luxuries in prison than outside. However, I think the issue is massively overplayed. Very few prisoners have Sky TV in their cells. Also, I don't want this to go the way the Tory and UKIP loons want it to go, back to the days before Elizabeth Fry.

1/6th of prisoners who would re-offend in America don't reoffend here, which clearly shows we're doing something right that America isn't doing.



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 8:14 am

The_Walrus wrote:
Also, I don't want this to go the way the Tory and UKIP loons want it to go, back to the days before Elizabeth Fry.


Prison should be a punishment. It shouldn't be a barbaric Thai-style hellhole, but it shouldn't be a pleasant stay either.

Happy?



The_Walrus
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03 Feb 2013, 8:32 am

Tequila wrote:
The_Walrus wrote:
Also, I don't want this to go the way the Tory and UKIP loons want it to go, back to the days before Elizabeth Fry.


Prison should be a punishment. It shouldn't be a barbaric Thai-style hellhole, but it shouldn't be a pleasant stay either.

Happy?

Depends what you mean by that.

For me, punishment is way down the list of things a prison should do. Protecting the public from the most dangerous criminals, deterring crimes in the first place and rehabilitating offenders are more important.

I would want the following:
1) Rooms at 20 degrees Celsius
2) Three meals a day, one of which should be a hot meal. They shouldn't be luxury meals, but should be healthy, well balanced, and edible (not gruel). An example of a hot meal I would feel appropriate would be mashed potato, carrots, peas, and baked beans. Maybe a value sausage or two.
3) Opportunities to work- not hard labour, maybe litter picking, running the prison shop, working in the cafeteria, cleaning. These would pay less than minimum wage, but would hopefully install a work ethic into people.
4) Educational workshops, including help fighting addiction, gaining qualifications for work, lessons on raising children, managing a budget...
5) Luxuries like Freeview television provided for good behaviour and hard work, but not as a starting point and can be withdrawn at any point.

I think that's more or less what we have now...? One difference is that I'd go for the most basic Freeview/Freesat with a fairly limited range of channels rather than Sky with Sky Sports and Movies or whatever. Living at home should hopefully be at least as good as prison, even for the worst off. With the luxuries I'd emphasise "hard work" over "good behaviour", because outside of prison nobody gives you a TV for being good (though of course people who clean like mad and also hit people wouldn't get rewarded beyond a pittance wage for the work).



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 8:35 am

The_Walrus wrote:
rehabilitating offenders are more important.


Personally, I don't think some people can be rehabilitated. What do you do with these people, if they're a danger to others? Do you let them out again, or do you try to keep them inside for as long as possible?

As for your five-point plan: and the justice system is working amazingly well now, isn't it.

Frankly, most of what the prison system should be about is protecting the public from the bad guys, and possibly rehabilitating and treating well those that can be rehabilitated. Some people shouldn't be inside, and it's important that these people are helped.



The_Walrus
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03 Feb 2013, 9:02 am

Tequila wrote:
The_Walrus wrote:
rehabilitating offenders are more important.


Personally, I don't think some people can be rehabilitated.

On what basis do you think that?

Quote:
What do you do with these people, if they're a danger to others? Do you let them out again, or do you try to keep them inside for as long as possible?

Do you really need to ask this question? :roll: Of course people shouldn't be released if they're thought to be a danger to the public!



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 9:03 am

The_Walrus wrote:
On what basis do you think that?


Because there are people there who keep offending and keep showing absolutely no remorse for their crimes. That's true for a lot of child sex offenders, for a start. The best techniques haven't worked on these guys - and it's usually guys - so the best thing is simply to keep them away from the public.



The_Walrus
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03 Feb 2013, 9:26 am

Well a lot of child sex offenders aren't treated properly. Rather than being offered pills to weaken their sex drives or animated pornography to give them a proper outlet, they are branded as paedophiles for life and cut off from the community.



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 9:34 am

The_Walrus wrote:
Well a lot of child sex offenders aren't treated properly. Rather than being offered pills to weaken their sex drives or animated pornography to give them a proper outlet, they are branded as paedophiles for life and cut off from the community.


I don't think pills would work because they can refuse not to take them. I do agree with repealing some of the laws on child pornography, specifically those around drawings and animated pornography, if it leads to less children being hurt as a result. Also, I think that it needs to be a lot easier for paedophiles to receive help than it is at present.



xenon13
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03 Feb 2013, 12:41 pm

Tequila wrote:
Quote:
Prisoners face ban on Sky TV in tougher prisons
  • Prison inmates are to be banned from watching Sky TV as part of a crackdown on conditions in Britain's jails, a Cabinet minister has said.
In an interview with the Mail on Sunday, Chris Grayling, the Justice Secretary, said it was unacceptable that those serving in some private prisons were able to enjoy satellite television and other perks beyond the budgets of many working families.

Mr Grayling is considering a range of measures to make life in Britain's prisons less comfortable for criminals as part of an ongoing review expected to report in late spring.

Inmates may face greater restrictions on wearing their own clothes, fewer televisions and a cut in their pocket money.

We'll see how this pans out. I'm not hopeful. I suspect this is talk to keep the Mail readers happy.



The rack I presume also will make things less comfortable. Will he bring back the crank? How many revolutions? 1,440 per day? Mondays is skilly, Tuesdays is pea soup, Wednesdays is skilly, Thursday is pea soup...



Arran
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03 Feb 2013, 3:44 pm

It's all Daily Mail style populism to look like the government is acting tough on crime when it isn't

My personal stance is that television in prisons should only offer educational programmes, current affairs, and high class arts. They should not offer trashy entertainment. If Sky is banned then so can ITV.



Tequila
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03 Feb 2013, 4:04 pm

Arran wrote:
It's all Daily Mail style populism to look like the government is acting tough on crime when it isn't


Clock strikes right twice a day.