Originally posted by SueEllen
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Reply to: ok its Vetran's law and order day
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Previously on "ok its Vetran's law and order day"
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Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
I remember reading one enterprising young lad took his tag off and put it in the family pet for the night while he went out. He admitted it months later when he got caught for doing something else.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...onic-tags.html
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Originally posted by TheDude View PostI bet there is a market for fake tags for those that want to look the part.
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostAnyone remember when the Tories were the party of law & order and family values?
Boris Johnson likes creating families just like the Tories of the 90s.
And him and R!sh! are just checking the police are doing their jobs properly.Last edited by SueEllen; 19 February 2023, 13:30.
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I bet there is a market for fake tags for those that want to look the part.
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Anyone remember when the Tories were the party of law & order and family values?
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Originally posted by Protagoras View Post
Just think of the opportunities for the private sector to charge for value-added services
- cell upgrade
- food upgrade, room service
- pay by the hour visiting
- entertainment packages
- excursion days out
- variable lock-in hours
- choice of screws
...
The jails tend to be run by the prisoners currently and conditions are shocking. Talk to a PO occasionally.
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Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
It's not just about the money it is ensuring cases like this don't happen again - https://news.sky.com/story/zara-alee...rison-12794150
Due to mess like this:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/...ling-disasters
First thing is making sure Failing Grayling is not let near anything more important than a whelk Store.
Our prisons are full and the criminals progress from minor offences to major crimes. Tags may well be the solution. What would you do?
https://data.justice.gov.uk/prisons
I would suggest the majority of fraud , motoring and other none violent offences may be better suited to tags than prison.
https://www.theguardian.com/law/2023...analysis-finds
Those on bail again for none violent offenses also benefit from tags, less disruption and less likelihood of loosing their jobs and families.
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Originally posted by WTFH View Post
That would never be allowed, unless the prisons were privatised and shareholders could profit from them.
- cell upgrade
- food upgrade, room service
- pay by the hour visiting
- entertainment packages
- excursion days out
- variable lock-in hours
- choice of screws
...
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Originally posted by Protagoras View Post
If every prisoner in the UK spent 4 hours a day on a power-generating treadmill, this might achieve 30kWh a day, obviously depending on prisoner fitness and enthusiasm levels. This could offset the cost of heating prisons and improve prisoner health. However, it would probably mean that the prisoners would need to eat more food, so may not be cost-effective.
A treadmill may be useful for non-custodial sentences. Rather that 100 hours community service, it could be 100 hours on the treadmill. These would need to be located in the town square (like the stocks) so that the 'law and order brigade' could enjoy the shame factor associated with punishment.
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Originally posted by DoctorStrangelove View PostIs there no oakum to pick?
Even better: the treadmill!
A treadmill may be useful for non-custodial sentences. Rather that 100 hours community service, it could be 100 hours on the treadmill. These would need to be located in the town square (like the stocks) so that the 'law and order brigade' could enjoy the shame factor associated with punishment.Last edited by Protagoras; 18 February 2023, 14:25.
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Originally posted by vetran View Post
or better oversight. I don't wash my car but if its not well done I don't pay.
Due to mess like this:
https://www.theguardian.com/society/...ling-disasters
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