They are made to feel that they do not have the right to make demands for the system which has and is debasing them, be reformed; in their life time.
This needs to be changes. If a society has a criminal justice and penal system which encourages more of its citizens to fall under it, make it into a profitable business for those in charge of.
Them it will soon find that it is undermining its own stability and safety. That it is compromising its own claim to being 'civilised' and 'enlightened.'
It just will not do for 'mainstream society', the perceived 'non-offending society of collective individuals.'
To continue to deceive themselves, ourselves, with the comforting, but misplaced thought, that the convicted offender is very much different from us.
Simply because we have been socially conditioned to magnify the 'bad', the 'evil' in them, even as we minimise the 'bad and evil' in us, and magnify the 'good.'
Making angels of ourselves and demons of them.
Just as how try to differentiate the difference between our 'madness', our 'insanity', and the 'madness' and 'insanity' of the 'others', the 'them', into discrete category. Instead of the continuum which it really is.
Because, there are times when the difference between individuals, between societies, are no more than that one thinks it and does it, whereas the other thinks or conceives of it, but is able to or chooses not to implement it. For 'good' or for 'evil.'
Because of this tendency for us humans to think that we are so much more virtuous and 'righteous' than those who have the misfortune to 'fall from grace' and, oftentimes, unlike us, are caught.
And that they should be punished according to the existing norm, change and progress will continue to occur mostly at the margins, and very slowly.
I suspect that it would happen much quicker, if the law makers were to take the lead and take radical action and positively change the structure and function of our criminal justice and penal systems.
Instead of deceptively appearing to being led, by a society which they have conditioned to accept the status quo.
As it our thinking about these systems and their value and purpose, will not change, while they remain the same and, logically, reinforce the skewed and anachronistic thinking and passive acceptance of them.
After all, if the philosophers and the sociologists are right, that we are products of our environments. Then how could it be any different than it is, that current structures and prevailing social systems should continue to perpetuate the rationale behind them?
If the function and objectives of the criminal justice and penal system is to change, then that can only be achieved by changing the structures, so as to align them with the stated principles, function and outcomes. Anything else is doomed to failure.
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