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  1. Perhaps the prisons extend much further than some of us may wish to believe, they extend into people’s homes, where they sit and sleep as inmates of an enslaving economic system, a brutal, oppressive, extortionist neoliberal market place, where we are mere numbers, like wheels in a huge machinery, to “function” and generate output for the bosses and rentiers.

    I sense a wider reaching social problem, where intolerance, tension, aggressiveness and so forth are growing, as people try to keep up with the pressures, like ever increasing expectations, high housing costs and the endless drive to keep up with the Jones’.

    Of course, prison inmates, once released, are facing a life at the very bottom of the pile, and rehabilitation only works if society allows it. Sadly too many out there, led by such as the “Sensible Sentencing Trust”, do not believe in true rehabilitation, they are sitting and looking out, to find any fault, and to attack those who are released, and try and prove, they cannot be trusted.

    When society is not prepared to give people a second chance, the prison doors will remain to be revolving doors, forever, no matter whether some alcohol or drug program may have been offered and attended for a short sting inside.

  2. Yes agree New Zealand doesn’t need a Donald Trump but we have a John key who is just as nasty and divisive.

  3. The problem is the people who end up in prison are damaged goods, they come out even more damaged, we as a society have given up on caring for people particularly people in the lower socio-economic sectors of society, hence we are seeing more problems.

    When people can not earn enough money to pay the rent and put food on the table people look to other means to supplement their income, unfortunately many of these activities are not legal.

    However now prisons are private I guess it is in the Governments best interests to keep them full.

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