Kalief Browder was an African American man who was arrested for allegedly stealing a backpack. While waiting for his time to go to Trial, he was held on Rikers Island where he spent most of his time in solitary confinement. Also during his stay at Rikers Island he was constantly beaten and starved. Three years after he was released out of prison he committed suicide. In this case like most, being locked up and treated inhumane later on drove him to take away his own life. People who are sent to prison have obviously done or been accused of doing something wrong. However that doesn’t make it okay to take away their rights and make them worse than they were before they came in. That doesn't mean that they aren’t still human. Prisoners …show more content…
They should be treated better and given more opportunities than what they have. If they do not, they will end up back in prison, get released again and continue the same process over. They should be provided with real rehabilitation and real assistance to get their lives back on track. They should be taken to different living assistant programs based of the reasons they were put in prison and other problems that they have. If they are not getting real help, nothing about them has changed and they might as well have stayed in prison where they are used to that sort of lifestyle. “In Louisiana, the state’s Re-Entry Court program allows the state’s younger inmates who qualify to learn a trade — from plumbing to welding to culinary arts.” Matt …show more content…
They have broken the law in one way or another. They do not deserve a second chance. They should not be further educated or helped at all. They should just spend the rest of their lives behind bars in their cells. They are criminals and they will always be. They can not be trusted. They shouldn’t be able to be around other citizens. This is not reasonable or fair. Everyone makes mistakes and shouldn't be punished for the rest of their lives for them. If we just send every person who does something wrong to prison and just kept them there, we would have to build new prisons. “while the old saying notes that crime doesn't pay, that doesn't hold true for America's system of incarceration, which has seen spending more than triple since 1980.” Aimee Picchi. Our entire country would be filled with prisons. It would be too expensive and take up too much time. If prisoners don’t learn from their mistakes the population of people in society will increase