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Notes -
I find the differences in the conceptualisation of prisons quite interesting. To many, especially right-wingers and some conservatives, punishment is the point of prison, so some background level of victimization is, if anything, morally positive. To you and large parts of the progressive wing of the left, prison is a choice we hoist upon certain people, maybe even for some utilitarian benefit overall, but the fact that we do so against their will means we have some obligations towards them. To me, the point for me personally is simply just separation between us and them (as such, I consider exile the ideal punishment, it's unfortunately just not really available anymore); If they then choose to victimize each other, that is on them. Since anyone in prison is by definition a victimizer (technically only allegedly, I know), the oppressor-victim dichotomy is an absurdly bad match anyway. I actually prefer if they treat each other well, too, I just think we have relatively little obligation towards them. At least in my country, prisons are already more than nice enough, nor are prisoners lacking food or other amenities.
None of these conceptualisations is strictly speaking wrong, and they lend themselves to wildly different conclusions.
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