Xequecal wrote:
Let me give you an example. The GM of my old WoW guild had a Master's Degree in biochemistry and had a job with a $65,000 annual salary. Then one weekend he went to a bar and had a lot to drink, and ended up picking a fight with some other guy. Well he was in much better shape than the other guy, and when he punched him, that guy fell down and fractured his skull on the curb. He was eventually convicted of felony battery for this attack. He did not receive any jail time, only probation. However, the felony conviction essentially ended his life. He was immediately fired, and nobody cared that he had a master's degree and 4 years experience. All they saw was the felony conviction, and he was unable to get any kind of job. Even retail stores wouldn't look at him. He eventually ended up having to take a job on an assembly line assembling Christmas ornaments for near minimum wage.
Once you have a felony conviction, you will never make more than $10-11/hour for the rest of your life unless you start your own business. You can no longer start and support a family. If you had a family, expect them to leave you for someone that can support them if they have any intelligence or choice. How can we expect felons to reform, when we do not allow them to? Crime is the only realistic means of income that is available to them when they get out. It does not matter how much work they put in or how valuable their skills are, they are not allowed back into society, ever. Why should they bother to respect your rights and your property?
While that's pretty harsh for a bar fight, what about his victim? How much did that guy's life suck after having a skull fracture?
Yes, it would be nice if we had more options for convicted felons to make a decent living, but on the other hand, when they do **** like this there's not a lot of room to argue that they've suffered some undeserved fate.