So all we need to do is find a way to put people in prison!

Win-win!

  • @[email protected]
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    41 hour ago

    A large force of inexperienced indentured servants fighting the blaze, yet so much coverage about the horror of a handful of female hires.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 hour ago

      A lot of them are experienced though. They’ve been using prison labor for wildfire fighting for years.

      • @RagingRobot
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        111 minutes ago

        Maybe they should pay them the real wage the other firefighters get then? I’m cool with them working but not with them being taken advantage of. That lowers the salary of every fire fighter not just the prisoners. That means a real firefighter is out of a job if a slave can be forced to do it.

    • @[email protected]
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      253 minutes ago

      I mean…if you’ve got a trained firefighter, someone who understands fire science…do they need to be the ones holding every hose? Why not just a bunch of muscle holding the hose (or digging the trenches) under the guidance of a pro?

  • @captainlezbian
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    333 hours ago

    Important to add, once freed they will be ineligible to take a job as a firefighter in California.

    • @LovableSidekick
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      142 hours ago

      That’s the first sensible advocacy point I’ve seen sense I started reading these threads. It really doesn’t make sense to assign prisoners to jobs they’re legally barred from.

      • @captainlezbian
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        22 hours ago

        From what I’ve heard this is actually an excellent job for many of them. It’s good pay (for prison labor) doing valuable work with a lot of dignity. And it’s work for their community that’s valuable on the outside. It should always be truly voluntary else it be horrifying, but if they can’t do it once they get out it’s not job training and it’s not reducing recidivism. These prisoners are doing heroic work, let them be heroic once freed.

        • @Maggoty
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          122 hours ago

          All prison jobs should pay actual wages and be voluntary though. While the firefighting job is voluntary, many prison jobs are not. Including jobs making products for private companies.

          • @RagingRobot
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            19 minutes ago

            They absolutely should not be allowed to work for private companies for less than a normal employee. That’s infuriating. Those companies should be burned to the ground. Disgusting

        • @LovableSidekick
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          41 hour ago

          Fine by me - I’ve hired ex-cons to do work on my house and would hire them again. But there’s a lot of vindictiveness about people’s past deeds. An excellent computer programmer I worked with got fired when her background check turned up a prostitution arrest from when she had been a homeless 18-year-old. Then at age 32, after turning her life around, she found herself being abruptly escorted from the building by two security guards. The problem was that we worked in a school district headquarters - nowhere near away students, but rules are rules and bureaucrats gonna crat, right? I would have had her give talks in front of high school kids. But it isn’t just misdirected authority - ordinary people social media will equally crucify somebody for Liking the wrong tweet. Maybe flinging shit is just a primate instinct, I dunno.

  • @BonesOfTheMoon
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    44 hours ago

    I don’t think we have chain gang type prison programs in Canada. It’s so archaic. Making license plates to have an occupation might be reasonable, but this chain gang shit is inhumane.

  • @Furbag
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    307 hours ago

    Ah yes, California’s penal legion of slaves “indentured servants” that we uh… voted to keep around in the last election.

    Man, CA politics are fucking bizarre. Sometimes the slam dunk no-brainer propositions fail and there never seems to be a really good reason why.

    • @Wogi
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      316 hours ago

      Money, and liberals.

      California is liberal. Not left. Every once in a while some leftist proposition comes up that threatens money, and money always wins.

      When they say liberals are wolves in sheep’s clothing, this is kinda what they’re talking about. They care, they really care about their fellow man, as far as their comfortable standard of living allows.

      • @Quadhammer
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        -24 hours ago

        😌✊✊ Liberals 😫✊💦✊💦

      • @Quadhammer
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        -85 hours ago

        Liberals huh? So where are the leftists in all this? Destitute in the streets?

          • @Quadhammer
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            -75 hours ago

            Oh, so only leftists fight fires huh?

            • @Hackworth
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              85 hours ago

              For $6.80/hr before taxes.

              • @Quadhammer
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                -75 hours ago

                Yeah for sure all of those prisoners are leftists. Yeah youre starting to sound about as smart as a leftist keep going

                • @Hackworth
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                  104 hours ago

                  Oh, you’re serious. I thought we were doing one of those fun bits.

  • @blazeknave
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    75 hours ago

    Isn’t there an amendment about this? We had that whole interval railway war over capitalism under the guise of fighting for that amendment?

    • @randon31415
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      175 hours ago

      “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction”

      • @PlantDadManGuy
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        32 hours ago

        Oh I see, so Southern plantation owners just have to run individual prisons with open air detention centers for incarcerated individuals of color that happen to be lined with cotton plants and coincidentally they can sell that cotton for profit.

        • @Maggoty
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          22 hours ago

          They did exactly that. Right up until the 1940’s when FDR’s Department of Justice went after them.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 hours ago

            They’re still doing it, like there are still prison plantations in Louisiana where they send black people for having half a joint on them.

            • @Maggoty
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              01 hour ago

              The thing about peonage is they kept people forever. That was the big problem. Putting a definitive end date on a sentence made it magically better. I agree that forced labor is slavery, I’m just referencing the dying gasp of the actual plantation system. While we should eliminate prison slave labor, it’s also nowhere near what the peonage system was.

              • @[email protected]
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                111 minutes ago

                Things being worse previously does not make what is now any better. Raise your standards.

        • @randon31415
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          12 hours ago

          You joke, but … well, it is not a joke.

  • @LovableSidekick
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    2 hours ago

    So you and people who get free room and board should get equal pay, or they’re slaves, but you’re not. Got it.

    • @Maggoty
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      52 hours ago

      In most states it’s not free. You have to pay room and board after you get out. Or they send you back, even if you served your full assigned time. The fees are legislated as part of your sentence and you’re not clear of the system until you’ve paid it for imprisoning you.

      • @LovableSidekick
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        1 hour ago

        My issue really isn’t how fair it is or isn’t, and you can always bring up the most unfavorable laws as if they’re a universal standard. My issue is simply with calling prison labor “slavery”, which not only is inaccurate but cheapens the experience of people who have endured actual slavery.

        • @Maggoty
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          21 hour ago

          What are you thinking slavery actually was? American slavery ended up being the worst kind. But there were all kinds of other slaves throughout history. At the end of the day, forced labor is slavery. Even if it has an end date.

          • @LovableSidekick
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            -21 hour ago

            If by “at the end of the day” you mean “overdramatic words make my argument sound stronger.”

      • @LovableSidekick
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        01 hour ago

        I totally agree with that and I believe the end of the scarcity economy is definitely on the horizon, but let’s discuss current issues within the current real world if that’s okay.

  • catsarebadpeople
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    388 hours ago

    Also keep in mind that they are getting charged by the day to be in prison and if ever released will owe a large bill. Usually this results in immediate bankruptcy which further increases chances of future incarceration. By design

    • Omnipitaph
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      4 hours ago

      Yo, what?? I need to do some research apparently, because I was under the impression that their stay was paid by for taxes. It can’t be both, and if it is I may need to change careers.

  • @randon31415
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    35 hours ago

    If someone lands on your property, you don’t get paid if you are in prison. Though if the board is loaded up with hotels on orange and the other players aren’t near your properties, you can stay in for a bit rolling doubles to avoid going broke.

  • @But_my_mom_says_im_cool
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    56 hours ago

    Any billionaire is free to step in and properly compensate these heroes, but they won’t

  • @bitjunkie
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    238 hours ago

    They mention how much money they’re making but not that everything they have to spend it on comes from the institution imprisoning them and unconscionably price-gouged even by outside standards.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 hours ago

    I already thought this was bad when they were asked made to work fast food jobs. Asking Making them to risk bodily harm is an entirely different idea. I think I want my first responders to feel fairly compensated when I call for help.