This is not a question of about parroted nonsense and cultural norms. I mean what end product do they produce that justifies their existence in the first place.

I’m physically disabled and have been living in a prison like situation for nearly 11 years. How does my situation balance into the ethics of prisons? I’m on a path to homelessness and a premature death due to institutionalized neglect and abuse from US institutions. Criminals are housed and fed in exchange for similar isolation, abuse, danger, insurmountable debt, and a largely unemployable and destitute future. These seem to conflict in ethics.

  • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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    11 hours ago

    Criminals are housed and fed in exchange for staying away from regular society.

    The disabled are housed and fed in exchange for not having to watch them die of starvation in the streets.

    Having these institutions be nice places to live is secondary to their primary goals. Most of the time they’re out of sight, out of mind.