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  1. I would go further than you here about prisoners not being seen as human beings with intrinsic rights and suggest that under the National Government, all poor and socially deprived persons were perceived in an inhumane way, hence eg hunger, child poverty, increases in third world health problems and major homelessness, while that govt consistently denied that there was even any housing crisis. And oh how Hurimoana Dennis got screwed for showing a nasty Nat minister how to address an officially non-existent problem.

    The Goon Squad report triggered by Mr Haimona’s death is horrific reading about a band of vicious redneck thugs. They sound like psychopaths. As Parliament does sometimes.

    Paul Quinn introduced the bill depriving prisoners the right to vote saying they had transgressed against society and it was time to “draw a line in the sand.” In other words, let’s punish them a bit more. Why ?

    This vicious piece of legislation further alienates prisoners from society, but Paul might have been too dumb to see that, or he just didn’t care, because maybe it made him look like a law-abiding sort of man – like the Goon Squad and their pathetic antics with penises and scrotums- harking back to their childhood games of peeing lines in the sand and buggering around in the dunes.

    Depriving citizens of the right to vote transgresses the Bill of Rights, but that’s not even the point. The point is why enact a law to further divorce prisoners from the society into which the judicial system should be aiming to re-integrate them ?

    Hopefully the legal challenge against Quinn’s folly will be successful.
    Hopefully there may be some legal redress available for the prisoners deprived of this very basic right.
    Hopefully there will be an apology by the Crown.

  2. It was good to hear Kim Workman on the radio today saying that prisons should, in principle, be small, housing only around 200 people. He prefaced this by saying that of course he knew this could not happen. Christchurch Men’s (I am a volunteer there) holds about a thousand and you can find every kind of view or attitude there. We run a Family Pathways Centre aimed at bringing families together to reduce penal harm and recidivism. What is needed there is a mandate for change; a new generation of leadership.

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