All Games Banned From MO Prisons
A while back we mentioned that Missouri pulled violent games from prisons on the basis that hardened criminals shouldn't be practicing their sharpshooting technique. Now, the new governor has removed all video games from the MO prison system. From the AP story: "Blunt, a Republican who took office two weeks ago, called video games 'a luxury that inmates should not be allowed to enjoy.'"
Looking for a new bill co-signed by State Legislator Doobie.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
While I understand that inmates deserve some rights (despite their lack of liberty), I think this is a step in the right directions. Let's try actually _educating_ those that need it. Without video games and TV, maybe inmates will have to resort to... reading. If you haven't graduated high school, I think that a program to help you earn your GED would be particularly helpful.
Instead of encouraging the downward spiral of crime, let's give people skills to use if they wish to fix their ways.
Blunt, a Republican...
Was it really necessary or worthwhile to label him a Republican in the AP article? I'm not necessarily saying there's an obvious bias, but would the author have included this statement had he been a Democrat? Politics have nothing to do with this story at all.
--trb
From TFA:
In prison, inmates should "pick up skills and abilities that will allow them to go back out into society and be productive citizens," Blunt said. "Playing video games doesn't have anything to do with either of those objectives."
Are you kidding? Confined to constricted areas for entire years. Limited interpersonal action creating a sociopath. Far, far too much free time on their hands. Die hard video game players. Always ready to take it up the butt.
This is where Electronic Arts needs to recruit new talent.
They shouldn't have their games banned, they should just get specially made versions of the games already out there.
Is there really anything more punitive than waiting in line for World of Warcraft? Having a queue system that's been modified so that you'll join the server... in 10-20 years? After which you'll time out and have to rejoing WoW 2. Give them all 28.8 modems to play CS:Source with. Ball mice. Nokia N-gages (the side-talkin' versions). The entire Deer Hunter collection.
Those suckers will crack within days!
How can a story about a politician doing something in office fit with your statement "Politics have nothing to do with this story at all" ? If this story has nothing to do with politics, then no story does. Let us next go to the dictionary definition of politics: "The art or science of government or governing". Hmmm. Do you think that prison policy by the Missouri government might count as "governing"? Could be....
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
They presumably did something quite naughty, so they're now being punished. When I was little, my mom would take away my Atari 2600 if I was bad. What do you want to bet that some of these people didn't even -have- video games until they got to prison?
Bleh.
Yes, because pushing a button on a gamepad trains you to handle a real gun more effectively, right? Especially since games offer such realistic bullet physics, right?
I don't see this as bad at all. They're in prison for a reason. Why should the tax payers be footing the bill for this?
I agree with you, inmates in prison should spend their time reading books instead of watching TV, playing video games or spending way, way too much time lifting weights on sitting doing nothing in their cells. BUT, education isn't 100% the solution either. You'd be hard-pressed to find teachers willing to educate inmates (read : high paying salaries) and chances are most of them won't go along with the program (read : destroyed books and supplies). It COULD work but on a macro level (state or nationwide), it would just be seen as a waste of government money.
I think one think Slashdotters need to keep in mind is that these prisoners are often the victim of circumstances that are beyond their control. The way the current structure of laws are currently defined is to limit the ability of the lower class to function in society. It is easy to place the blame on the incarcerated individual but it is important to remember that it is society that have failed these men. These men should be allowed to play video games for it is us, society as a whole, that has failed them, not the other way around.
Really, Blunt just kept getting his ass handed to him in Counterstrike by the inmates.
That green slime had it coming.
No more games in the Massively/Multiplayer Online prison?
Our penitentiaries are punitive institutions where those who have committed crimes against society are sent to pay for their actions.
Whatever happened to rehabilitation? When did we become a nation that values vindication over elevation?
Video games could be used as a reward--stay on good behavior, complete a VoTech course, get gaming privs. They could be a useful tool; they're something an inmate desires, so make it something they strive to get.
But no. First things first: punish the criminal. After all, if we give 'em reasons to be happy or comfortable, they won't be suffering for their crimes--and that's what matters. Make 'em pay.
Heck, why not just turn all 5+ year prison terms into life sentences? All a long prison sentence does for most people these days is make 'em even worse than they were when they went in. It's not like our "tough on crime" policies are designed to make them better people while they're on the inside...
Obliteracy: Words with explosions
Gaming is not a right, it's a privilege, one of which you should lose when you break the law. I don't see how video games help rehabilitate an inmate, unless they give them computers to learn how to build their own video games...
Many criminals are simply predators who view law-abiding citizens are their rightful prey. Short of unconstitutional mind-altering, they're going to leave prison with exactly the same view. Trainging will help nothing. Vidgames will make the incarceration easier to bear (boredom is the punishment), and may hone skills.
I've hoped that someday we reform our "correctional institutions" (which are anything but) more like this:
(Note: first and second felonies assume proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt, ect, ect, ect.)
First felony offense:
5 years mandatory sentence
Job, skills, and educational training to prepare for the work force
Therapy (daily faded to weekly by the end of the sentence) to deal with issues and overcome whatever may have inspired the crime
Upon release, set up with a place to live, a job at a true "living wage" in a new town far from where any "original corruptive influences may reside" (ie: "The gang made me do it!" excuse will not work, since you will be removed from the gang/hood/whatever)
Checkups once a month for the next 5 years.
Mandatory for all felonies, "white collar", or otherwise. You rip of your stockholders, you get the same 5 years as a murderer.
2nd Felony Offense:
You are executed after being found guilty. There is no sentence plea, only "guilty or not guilty" appeals, and once those are exhausted, you are executed. If after 5 years of training, therapy, new job, practically new life, plus 5 years of checkups to get you help if you need it, you have proven you either can not or will not be taught.
For this system to work, however, we would need a better infrastructure of taking care of the homeless, the sick, the poor, hungry, orphans, and so on. If we fixed up these problems, we could implement a "get touch" prison policy the way conservatives dream of because the excuses of society would no apply.
Based on the last requirements, I predict this system will be in place by the year two thousand never.
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
Playing Monkey Ball can only lead to violence. I hate that game because it is so impossibly hard. My girlfriend wanted it because it looks so damn cute, but after playing it for 30 minutes she returned it to the store. It will piss you off and make you want to kill...again.
I doubt this has anything to do with rehabilitation and more to do with some Republican twit wanting to appear tough on crime. For those of you wondering why it matters that hes a Rep., there's less pressure on Dems. to do crap like this. Not saying they don't, just saying not as often. So anyway, these guys loose a major means of relaxation and fun primarilly for some jerk's political career.
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"All Games Banned From MO Prisons"
Multiplayer Online Prisons? Is this some sort of new Everquest/WoW expansion?
When ignorance of sociology, human nature, gaming and their benefits added together meet with the idiocy of bureaucracy, you get a prison in a USA state.
Death penalty is probably more efficient to fight crime and violence than plonking an inmate for 8h in front of Mario Bros. I wonder if it's also less expensive than running a few computers in a room.
How about this?
If you are convicted beyond a shadow of a doubt of committing a crime with the intention of murder, or of murder, then you get the death penalty. You sickos are not accepted in our society anymore.
If you are convicted beyond a shadow of a doubt of committing a crime involving sex, like rape, molestation, etc, then you get the death penalty. You sickos don't belong in our society anymore.
(3) For everything else, you repay your debts and when you've done so, you can go free, under the careful eye of Uncle Sam. You are required to work in prison to repay your debts. You can't get out until the debts are repaid. Good behavior means you get a better paying job in prison. Poor behavior means you don't get a chance to work in prison. Oh, and you have to pay for your stay there as well. Private charities will help you get a better start in your life, should you be willing to participate.
I think this will help reduce the level of violent crime (crime with the intention to murder) and sex crimes to virtually nil, once we catch and terminate those who are guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt. Everyone else who commits serious crimes will pay the price for their crimes.
I think this is most fair.
You take a life, you pay with your life.
You ruin a life, you pay with your life.
You take a $20,000 car and wreck it, you have to make $20,000 and repay the owner.
You steal $5,000,000 from your shareholders, you have to make $5,000,000 and repay them.
The radical sect of Islam would either see you dead or "reverted" to Islam.
Anyone who argues against them playing games I want to hear what you think they SHOULD be doing.
What they do when they are NOT playing VideoGames/Watching TV is generally unacceptable
(*Sex, Weights, etc)
I want to hear how you plan to fund these other activites.
Seriously, ANYTHING that keeps prisoners from further destroying themselves / others from rejoining society peacefully is a good thing. Anything that makes them LESS DANGEROUS to society on release is a good thing. Video games do that by keeping them occupied.
I'm not saying they should live in luxury, I'm saying they should live with a soul and a shred of humanity....many prisons cannot even offer those comforts. Instead furthering the chance once released they will not only repeat previous violense again but in a more gruesome/evil manner.
I consider video games, most television, gym equipment, and other "stuff" found in today's prisons to be luxuries. We should be spending our tax money on books, teachers, and other resources that give prisonors a chance at a better life. Should they choose not to take advantage of it, their failure is through no fault but their own.
* Planning futile escapes or attacks on gaurds
* Committing or suffering through anal rape
* Planning to murder one another for trivial or imagined offenses.
* Smuggling drugs and other contraband.
* Exchanging tips on not getting caught again.
Theoretically, such as Wild Divine. Learning self knowledge and control could be an enormous benefit.
Then only crimanls will have games. umm.. no.. wait.. dang.. catch 22...
Here's the problem as I see it:
No one can agree on the purpose of the prison system. Is it purely to punish people? Is it purely to separate dangerous members of society from society at large? Is it to rehabilitate people?
Unless you know exactly what you're trying to accomplish by putting people in prison, you can't effectively accomplish anything. That's why the US prison system is so screwed up.
They shoudnt have had the games in the first place. Its a damned prison!
They should be doing time, not playing games, watching tv, or whatever on MY dime. Its bad enough that we have to feed and house them.
They convicted felons, not some homeless guy that cant find a job.
If they want 'nice things' that some people cant even afford, then they can stay out of prison. Its their CHOICE to be in there.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I have an alternative: smoke it with them.
Guess what folks? Entertained prisoners are less likely to riot and less likely to stick you with a shiv. Prisoners cost $30K a year for us to house, and that's not counting the medical costs when Joe gets shivved in the nutsuck by Malcolm.
It's simple cost-benefit analysis. If you want to spend more money, go ahead, but our prison system is already doomed for failure. At our current rate of increase of incarceration, 50% of americans will be in prison by the time we reach retirement. THAT IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN. Something is going to break before then. (Hopefully the drug laws.)
But these people calling for mandatory 5 year sentences for any felony? Hate to break it to you, but if you've downloaded an mp3, you've committed a felony. Just about anything can be considered a felony. Steal a mailbox? Felony. Anyone saying someone deserves 5 yrs in prison for stealing a mailbox, at a cost to taxpayers of $150,000 (not counting court and legal costs), should be incarcerated themselves for being a fucking kneejerk dolt.
And america has the highest incarceration rate of any nation in the country. We are the LEAST FREE country on the planet. Prisons are not solving out problems, and turning them into gulags isn't going to help anything either. Grow the fuck up.
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
One thing that most people are missing is that he banned all games because he did not want to spend the money necessary to determine what games are too violent or inappropiate.
Interesting concept. Total de-criminalization of marijuana, but only on the condition that you don't bogart your stash.
Sounds a bit utopian, but probably no worse then our current system.
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.
See you in HELL, asshole!
Video games isn't it.
With the number of prisoners available, we should never, ever, see a pothole. Are they being used to help dig out Boston from all that snow? If not, why not?
Put em to work.
Policicians meddling where they are not needed, or wanted. The argument that inmates should not be enjoying themselves playing computer games can be applied immediately with regard to other forms of entertainment and it shows how ridiculous it is.
A week with little stimulus for entertainment is a long, long time for anyone, and almost certainly not good for them. For people who spend a lot of time locked in a small room, and are only allowed to go outdoors even for excercise at specified times, thumbs get idle.
Neither, I'd wager, is it good for weaning criminals from nasty habits. Ever tried to give up smoking (read: drugs, kicking the crap out of people) with nothing engaging to keep you occupied?
Video games can make for some good, and convenient entertainment - can start and stop playing more or less exactly when you want, and its very engrossing. Sure, prisoners shouldnt be spending all day playing games, but an hour or two in the evening is an easy reward for good behavior that wardens can control comparatively easily.
One of the key skills of management is knowing when to leave responsibility and decision-making with those below you who are positioned best.
Given the changes in the colloquial English language since the public domain died at the end of 1922, I'm not even sure that convicts would understand the language of most works in Project Gutenberg.
The problem with your kind of thinking is that it doesn't take into account what happens to people who live without any recreation.
It's not good.
Ever heard the expression "all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy?" Don't believe it. All work and no play makes Jack desperate, driven, psychologically unsound.
The most particularly fiendish of these is that prisoners have such a restricted sex life. The sex drive doesn't just go away because you're in prison. The result of putting people away without normal sexual contact for twenty years is some of the most twisted and disturbed people in our society. Particularly since they're in a building full of people with the same problem.
Really. The restricted sex life is enough punishment on its own. If you don't think being locked away for years without women is the worst thing a man can go through, I worry for you.
If you are convicted beyond a shadow of a doubt of committing a crime involving sex, like rape, molestation, etc, then you get the death penalty.
What happens when a man a day over legal age has sex with a girl a day under legal age who produced a fake ID? Is the man guilty of statutory rape, or is the girl guilty of fraud?
You are required to work in prison to repay your debts. You can't get out until the debts are repaid ... You steal $5,000,000 from your shareholders, you have to make $5,000,000 and repay them.
That's equivalent to a life sentence. Divide $5 million by $5.15 an hour, 80 hours a week, 52 weeks a year, and then what happens when the con dies or becomes permanently disabled, having paid only roughly $1 million after 40-odd years?
And if somebody is found guilty of a malum prohibitum such as possession of pot or writing a sequel to a book whose author died 69 years ago, who would receive the payment of damages?
People commit suicide for a variety of reasons. Most often, that life simply isn't appealing any more.
If life isn't appealing anymore, that's probably called "clinical depression". What else could it be?
I'm sure you can all invent miraculous ways to prevent crime and straighten out the nations criminals, but try walking a mile in someone else's shoes before you make these suggestions. I spent about a year traveling between prisons and spending most of my time in a prison boot-camp system, and would find it hard pressed to implement various ideas some of you speak of. While I can agree that video games are not really needed in the prison (we had none, nor individual TVs for that matter), forcing someone to spend their waking life reading is a poor option. There were enough frustration problems there already.
Robort knows all.
Prison is a place to rot. ( the concept of 'rehabilitation' failed )
Lock them in a small room and toss away the key. They shouldnt ever be re-introduced into society.
Short term jail, we can have discussions about, but prison.. nah it should be for the real problems and be forever.
I could care less what they 'become'. Other then dead, as they dont cost me any more money to feed and house.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
of any country in the planet. Think of the loss to our economy!
-Clio
Karma: Bad (mostly from not giving a fuck)
Blog: http://clintjcl.wordpress.com
Crime goes up 2% in all other states, Other States follow untill most preferred state to commit crime in is Alaska, where you may freeze your ass off, but may still be eligible to feel the warm glow of Mario.
...is to put convicted felons to work supporting law-abiding citizens. As a reward for obeying the law, the honest folk can enjoy nice long vacations in a new kind of Club Fed, where they'll have safety, food, clothing, shelter, solitude if they want it, and freedom to learn, to play video games, or to do nothing at all.
"Blunt, a Republican who took office two weeks ago, called video games 'a luxury that inmates should not be allowed to enjoy.'" Remember kids -- shoot somebody and it's no more Tetris!
I don't think it's right to take away all privleges from prisons. Yes, while they may be in there for committing crime(s), it's not right to remove all rights from them once placed behind bars.
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If he doesn't like being called a Republican, he shouldn't have joined the Republican party.
If he is ashamed of his party affiliation, there are many to choose from.
What we call folk wisdom is often no more than a kind of expedient stupidity.-Edward Abbey
Down here in Louisiana, we've got a prison called Angola. It's pretty much in the middle of nowhere, and covers a very large area. Inmates there grow their own food (both plant and animal), are currently bulding additions to the prison (an Olympic pool and 9-hole golf course, both for wardens), and have the opportunity to get an education. (GED or degree in General Studies or Philosophy) For all this hard work they are paid 4 cents an hour, two of which are taken for savings.
The wardens and their families live on the grounds in what is essentilly a zero-crime neighborhood.
Cost of keeping inmates for one year: $2300
Oh, and while there are T.V's, there are no ideo games. And the cooking (also done by inmates) is excellent.
Excellent reference - I wish I had Mod points for you. But I don't so thus I reply in hopes that others see and listen.
.
-shpoffo
This whole concept of "adult time-out" is stupid. Turning 18 doesn't(shouldn't) change "getting grounded" from lasting a few days or hours to lasting months to years to decades.
a) Being 18 eliminates "getting grounded" all together. Offenses that would get a child grounded go unpunished in adults because adults have peers, not parents (in formal authority).
b) The acts that adults get jailed for months or years for doing (drugs, assault, theft, destruction, murder, etc.) are not acts that mere grounding could ever have addressed.
c) The use of the word "time-out" to describe a punishment is less than a few decades old. Jail is a millenia-old concept. Jail is not some defective form of "time-out". Judge jail on its own merits or demerits, but don't saddle it with new-age parenting baggage.
"We reject as false the choice between our safety and our ideals." --The American President (20.1.2009)
How could they afford kickbacks to (corrupt) profs. if the books were cheap?