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  1. The NewZealand Public Service is incapable imcompetent, and is simply unable to perform its job.

    More money won’t help – it’ll just buy more of the same slop and dribble.

  2. In the current climate of jail emptying and judicial sentencing that sees people who most definitely should be going to jail not, all deliberately part of the progressive lefts action on law and order, we’ve got a crime wave problem that I’ve never seen in this country. Criminals acting with impunity because state have their back. This crime encouragement model has to stop.

    No one wants to see another human caged up but more of us even more hate seeing victims of crime especially those who are treated like some afterthought like a disgarded pie wrapper, and worse good law abiding people become victims repeatedly. Sadly the progressive left don’t feel their pain, they see the criminal as a victim who needs to be cuddled. And the intangible thing called prevention really does exist and when criminals realise there is serious time for their crimes, it’s turns some off, and that saves lives. But that prevention factor has severely diminished.

    Labour Green, unfortunately but predictably, have blood on their hands for this naive pathetic kindness to crime experiment they practised. It’s time it stopped. Another well intentioned but disastrously flawed policy that will cost this government it grip on power.

    1. You can write as much as you want but until you provide examples to back up your allegations it is just your opinion probably based on some urban myths you heard 4th hand.

      1. How’s all those Ramraids going Bonnie, or the blatant retail thefts, just for openers? Auckland has become Gotham City!

      2. Bonnie When a government minister like Kelvin Davis tells the Parliamentary opposition that their ancestors were land thieves, he’s lying for no discernibly good purpose. When, as a school teacher, he says this sort of thing to impressionable children, he’s being divisive as well as dishonest and sowing the seeds of discontent which can breed criminals, and even justify them. He probably shouldn’t be Minister of Prisons, or whatever he is, with such a simplistic outlook, but this being so, one would expect him to do his damndest to help rectify the situations that may have put miscreants in the clink, and to want to help rehabilitate them and better their lives, but this doesn’t seem to be being done either.

        These politicians are all as bad as each other, and ACT signalling creating more job opportunities for Serco or various immigrants, as usual avoids addressing the circumstances and conditions which can lead to lives of crime. Few would literally want to cuddle criminals, but putting them into places which makes them worse is downright idiotic, ergo more constructive approaches have to continue to be both considered, and implemented.

  3. Guess who’s fault all the unpalatable policies that we will have to swallow for the next 6-9 years?
    Hint. Its not ACT or National.

    1. What goes around comes around. Besides, undoing what this disastrous Government has inflicted on NZ can’t be done without some negative consequences, so it is correct to blame them for it.

  4. You can bet that banging up just a handful of these feral scum for long sentences will send a message to the rest.

  5. I’m ideologically opposed to contracting out of public services but at this stage, one would have to ask – why not privatise it out if corrections is so fundamentally flawed. Yes we could poor tons into it but Corrections was a well known dog 20 years ago and it still is today apparently. Also suggest this because we need solutions quickly and not in ten years time.

    I read an interesting article about the justice debate this week. The writer suggested that seeking Justice was an outmoded idea as we all know that in the world we live in there is no justice. Crime and punishment does not fit and wealth almost always wins out in some way. The suggestion was that we do away with Justice as a concept around imprisonment and we change that with a focus on Public Safety/ Safe communities.

    Cultural reports that say someone has had a hard life would be turned on their head to say: Lets look at the offenders history and ask how likely to reoffend they are and how much of a danger to the community they are and then sentence accordingly. With the main area of consideration being both youth and particulars of the crime (the battered woman who killed her husband after 20 years of abuse?)

    They also discussed rehabilitation with the conclusion that only about 20% of them can be rehabilitated and from what I know this is likely to be true.

    Anyway long story short, they supported a 3 tier prison system. Minimum, medium and maximum with most opportunities for rehabilitation available in minimum prisons and I would suggest ability to learn trades and skills maybe through prison industries where both the state and inmates can earn money while they learn and become skilled (ideally) or as a minimum (experienced).

    Many crims would go into medium prisons and those whose behaviour and in house evaluation suggested good chances of rehabilitation would be moved to minimum. Similarly those who were bad would move up to Maximum.

    Few maximums would make their way to medium etc but it would still be possible for those who really wanted to turn their lives around. Rehab services would be available at all levels but mainly concentrated in the medium and minimum levels.

    Bracelets would still be available as appropriate. I know that people will say profiting from prisoners is slavery but I dont think it would be if people could opt in. 1/2 the money could go towards the cost of maintaining the prisoner and the other 1/2 to the prisoner themselves so they could support a better lifestyle (within prison) or potentially give money to the wife and kids.

    In the States where they routinely make prisoners work, the work that some of the prisoners do is fantastic. One prison is known nationwide for it’s hand crafted furniture for example. What better way of ensuring a future for someoone outside of prison than to give them a desirable skill they can use in their own right or even be seen as a cachet in employment. You no longer come out of prison as ‘just some crim’ but you come out as recognised artists and craftsmen or skilled chefs or whatever.

    I do think it could work. The baddies get locked away but if they want to change, they can work their way out but generally they are in there and mostly stay in there. Long sentences for bad crimes committed by the worst people.

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