-11 points
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37 points
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It is slavery, as allowed for under the US constitution: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penal_exception_clause

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-22 points

It’s not involuntary, though. They have to apply for the program, and can stop if they want.

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19 points

Just like you can quit your job any time you want?

Damn the consequences or any repercussions. Because there’s always the freedom of being destitute.

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32 points

Unless no one volunteers. Then they’re forced to do it upon threat of torture and further loss of rights, and usually more prison time added.

There is nothing voluntary about labor coerced.

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19 points

Do you think there aren’t consequences for prisoners that refuse this “voluntary” service?

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10 points

I’d like to introduce you to the concept of being “volun-told.” Basically, it’s “volunteer, or be forced. Your choice.”

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4 points

I might feel better about this program if they’re allowed to join after they get out of prison. But, because they were in prison, they are not allowed to join fire brigades. I feel that is cruel, and stupid.

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26 points

It’s literally slave labor.

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-22 points

How so?

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30 points

Prisoners have limited rights to refuse anything. They are not fairly compensated for theor work and in other states the prisons “loan” prisoners to companies to do work who pay the prisons for this work.

It’s slavery. The USA never banned slavery for prisoners. It’s literally in the 14th amendment.

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-5 points

Seems figurative, but that’s just the dictionary.

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39 points

Wrong. They are slaves under the 13th amendment of the US, which explicitly allows slavery as punishment for a crime. Some more on this:

The US currently operates a system of slave labor camps, including at least 54 prison farms involved in agricultural slave labor. Outside of agricultural slavery, Federal Prison Industries operates a multi-billion dollar industry with ~ 52 prison factories , where prisoners produce furniture, clothing, circuit boards, products for the military, computer aided design services, call center support for private companies. 1, 2, 3

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-25 points

Fire camp is a program that most prisoners actually want to get into. They get to learn useful skills, the accommodations are better, and the prisoners there don’t want to get removed from the program so they’re unlikely to be violent. I have a friend who spent 3 years in that program and he greatly preferred it to the prison he transferred from.

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55 points

Tolerable accommodations, learning skills that can be put to use on the outside, and no fear of violence should be some of the basics of a prison system. The fact that our prison system is so fucked that slavery seems like a better deal isn’t a credit to slavery, it’s evidence of a horrifically broken prison system.

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-18 points

Our prison system absolutely has some major flaws, but fire camp is what you said, tolerable conditions, the ability to learn job skills and work outside, and learn a skill. You can’t guarantee safety from violence among violent people unless they are isolated, and that’s a worse punishment than anything. What I’m saying is that your criticisms of the general prison system aren’t applicable to fire camp, because it offers the things you mentioned.

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24 points

you’re missing the point: the slaves who embrace their slavery are treated better than the slaves who resist; like slaves are supposed to do.

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37 points

Getting paid 50 cents an hour to get put in a life-threatening situation because the state doesn’t want to hire firefighters, and would rather pay its prison population a pittance.

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-20 points

Are you under the impression that these prisoners are the only people fighting the fires in California? That is not the case, if that’s your impression.

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10 points

Good people don’t make excuses to abuse human beings.

You’re a bad person.

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20 points

Apologies, yes california does employ some ppl to fight fires with the help of some slaves, my bad.

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18 points

Always a little disturbing to see these comments. Cause every single time they are made I see phrases like “most prisoners” just straight up acknowledging that it’s not all. Hand waving that away. Creepy.

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22 points

Not to mention other things like, is it actually true that most prisoners would want to get put in a life threatening situation?

And why are we not acknowledging that the US regime gives prisoners these “choices”: go outside and die for the state, work on our prison farms, get contracted out to private companies, or stare at a wall in a cell. Truly an evil empire that should not be apologized for.

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-16 points

Well how would you suggest we deal with people who harm other people? If you can’t put them in a cell, and you can’t make them work, and you can’t teach them to be wilderness firefighters and have them perform those duties, then what do you propose?

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9 points

It’s worse. If the basic prisonfood is insufficient, which is common. prisoners need to work to buy more nutritional meals. Or they can risk getting sick and dying, whichever.

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1 point
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go outside and die for the state

At least three incarcerated fireghters died between 2017 and 2020. That same article says there were 1,760 incarcerated firefighters working in July 2023. Non-incarcerated firefighters also risk death; here’s two firefighters and a pilot who died in a helicopter crash, also from 2023. Quadrupling the known death rate among incarcerated workers gets us to 170 deaths per 100,000 workers. That’s well below everything on this table besides “office and administrative support.”

We rightly clown on cops for exaggerating how dangerous their jobs are. We are doing the same thing when we characterize this program as “go out and die for the state” or (as another commenter said) compare it to gladiators.

We don’t need exaggerations to make the case for socialism, and exaggerating only hurts us. We’re seeing that in this thread, where we’re dogpiling people for agreeing that prison slavery exists in the U.S. but arguing that we are stretching that definition to the breaking point. Why are we fighting people who largely agree with us already?

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-12 points

I don’t presume to know the minds of every person. I do know that my friend was glad to get into the program, as was everyone else he told me about who was in it.

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10 points

If you’re not presuming that then why did you say most prisoners instead of just the one single one you claim to know?

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6 points

Did you ever ask your friend, if given the choice of having the same options to improve their conditions but without having to work, would they have still chosen fire camp?

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10 points
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Then why do you need slavery?

Just let prisoners apply for jobs like sane countries

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12 points

That just shows how bad the alternatives are.

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-11 points

Yes the alternatives suck. But are you aware that there’s people who volunteer to be wilderness firefighters for free? Fire camp is a good program.

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13 points

But then those prisoners aren’t allowed to be hired by professional fire crews after release.

Theu can’t apply the skills they learn.

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7 points

When was the last time you fought wildland fires for free?

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13 points
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‘The slaves that joined the gladiator arena to fight for their freedom actually WANT to be there dont you understand?, They give the gladiators valuable skills, nicer jail cells. I had a friend that spent 3 years as a gladiator and he actually preferred it to being a slave’

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9 points

And then when they get out they can’t use those skills because their criminal record prevents fire departments from hiring them.

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-1 points

Cal-fire will hire them directly out of prison if they’ve completed the program.

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7 points

Cal-fire will hire them directly out of prison

No, they wont. They will give them the right to apply their is no guaranteed job at the end of it.

Inmates makeup 30% of the fire service in Cali; what a fun way to cut salary costs, hire slaves.

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43 points

Slavery should be abolished.

This shouldn’t be a controversial beleif in 2025.

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18 points

It is for a lot of people below for some reason.

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13 points

There was a proposition to abolish it very recently in California that was rejected by the voters. Commiefornia my balls

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8 points

Fuck I was so disappointed and ashamed reading that in the election results

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10 points

Californians talking about gluten-free free-range gender neutral Yoga: 😚🕊️

Californians talking about homeless people and drug addiction:

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2 points

Third Reich actually had way more liberal drug policy than USA have now.

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1 point
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35 points

Lmfao at the absolutely classic .world responses in this thread. “Slavery is good actually”. You guys play your role too a T.

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The ones in California are probably so glad they just voted in November to keep these prisoners enslaved.

Everyone who voted for that in LA deserves their home to burn, but I feel for all the working class casualties and people who were already homeless.

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6 points

Remember, these are the people calling leftists “authoritarians”

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1 point
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