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Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Obama Bans Solitary Confinement In Federal Prisons

Alan: It is increasingly clear that punishment is chiefly motivated by cruelty. (Punishment for its own sake is categorically different from "time out" and from providing evil doers opportunity to make amends.)

Punishisment tends to harden criminals rather than reform them.

The bible verse "Spare the rod, spoil the child" is perversely contrary what we now know about punishment and the perpetuation/exacerbation of violence and violation. 

Next time you see a parent physically punish a misbehaving child, watch closely and you will see that such behavior is brutal and brutalizing, typically conducted by people who have been brutalized themselves. Often by "good Christian" parents.)

Children who are "whupped" incorporate the false conviction that violence is the default solution to personal and political problems.

Belief in the "virtue" of punitive violence is sanctified in The Old Testament and maliciously manifests even in The New


"Any Religion That Needs Fear To Thrive Is Bad Religion"

"Bad Religion: A Compendium"

It is widely acknowledged "on both sides of the aisle" that American conservatives can not stand the thought of a free lunch.

Similarly, the thought that a guilty criminal might actually become a buoyant, creative, productive person - rather than suffer hellish torment - unsettles conservatives and often sickens them.

Conservative Christians' eager affirmation of eternal punishment is central to their entire moral paradigm.

Not only is the centrality of punishnment what they were taught as impressionable children, punishment is also considered a "divine behavior," which, like all divine behaviors "good Christians" are encouraged to imitate.

Make no mistake. From the vantage of conservative Christianity, mercy and forgiveness constitute a "free lunch."

Christianity's Bedrock Commitment To Torture: Remaking "The Faithful" In God's Image

The Thinking Housewife: "We Can Be Pretty Sure That Many Good People Are Roasting In Hell"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-thinking-housewife-we-can-be-pretty.html

The United States Is A Singularly Cruel, Vengeful Nation. Solitary Confinement For Kids

The Caging Of America: Why Do We Lock Up So Many People

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/04/caging-of-america-why-do-we-lock-up-so.html


George Will: "The Torture Of Solitary Confinement"

Even If Torture Doesn't Work In The Real World, TV Convinces Us It Does

The CIA Torture Report Presents A Real Challenge To American Exceptionalism

On Balance, Torture Is Massively Counter-Productive And Self-Destructive

Obama bans solitary confinement for juveniles in federal prison

Washington (CNN)President Barack Obama said Monday he was moving to ban solitary confinement for juveniles and low-level offenders in federal prisons, a change long sought by advocates of prison reform who argue the punishment exacts a lasting mental toll.
In a Washington Post op-ed, Obama said he came to his decision after a review by the Justice Department determined the practice reduces the chances that prisoners can be rehabilitated into society.
    Writing that solitary confinement has been "increasingly overused ... with heartbreaking results," Obama said he was ordering federal penitentiaries to cease using the punishment on juvenile offenders -- in the federal justice system, those under 18 -- and on prisoners who committed non-serious offenses.
    He said that when an inmate poses a threat to staff or to himself, solitary confinement was necessary. But he said it should "be limited, applied with constraints and used only as a measure of last resort."
    The White House said Obama was also adopting Justice Department recommendations that would limit solitary confinement for prisoners with mental illness and avoid using the practice as a tool to segregate prisoners who face threats from fellow inmates. He wrote in the Post that the move would affect 10,000 federal prisoners.
    "The United States is a nation of second chances, but the experience of solitary confinement too often undercuts that second chance," Obama wrote in the Post op-ed. "Those who do make it out often have trouble holding down jobs, reuniting with family and becoming productive members of society. Imagine having served your time and then being unable to hand change over to a customer or look your wife in the eye or hug your children."
    In his final year in office, Obama has said that he'd redouble his efforts on criminal justice reform, including improving conditions in federal prisons and encouraging states to adopt new rules that hew more closely to updated research on corrections facilities. In July he became the first sitting president to visit a federal prison, and he has spoken candidly about issues like prison rape and criminal re-entry programs.
    The goal, officials have said, is to improve the chances that incarcerated Americans become functioning members of society after serving their sentences.
    "How can we subject prisoners to unnecessary solitary confinement, knowing its effects, and then expect them to return to our communities as whole people? It doesn't make us safer. It's an affront to our common humanity," Obama wrote Monday.
    Along with the new rules for solitary confinement, the White House said Obama was adopting a new set of principles that would govern how federal corrections facilities house prisoners. Among them is the edict that inmates "should be housed in the least restrictive setting necessary to ensure their own safety, as well as the safety of staff, other inmates, and the public."
    Prison officials, the White House said, should always be able to "clearly articulate" why an inmate is placed in solitary confinement and have a plan for returning the inmate to regular housing.
    Obama wrote Monday that states should adopt similar rules for their own correctional systems, citing examples in Colorado and New Mexico that he said had yielded positive results for prisoners' rehabilitation efforts.

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