• @SirDerpy
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    111 month ago

    If a prisoner works a day $3.50 and calls cost $0.25/min, then a prisonor can afford a 14 min call for a day’s labor. Yes, these numbers are quite realistic.

    Supply maintenance is near zero. Demand is elastic but there’s no alternatives. Max profit is obviously not at the highest prices.

    Helping prisoners was never the goal. It’s convenient optics, icing on the cake of profit maximization.

    Did you know that the US never abolished effective slavery. It’s perfectly legal for prisoners. Always has been. It’s even in the federal Constitution.

    • @rockSlayer
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      51 month ago

      Incarcerated labor organizers are god damn heroes. Every barrier to educational information in prison means one less informed slave.

      • @SirDerpy
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        51 month ago

        When I was incarcerated the Chaplain was the one to understand this and act upon it. I called a friend, who bought books at a specific store, that the Chaplain picked up, smuggled into prison and left in my cell. He did this about once a month for a year, about a half dozen books at a time.

        Mad respect for this man. He made so many people better for just being around. I stayed friends with him until his end. I hope he met his God as he wanted.