this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2024
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[–] schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business 39 points 2 months ago (7 children)

Unlike incarcerated residents with jobs in the kitchen or woodshop who earn just a few hundred dollars a month, remote workers make fair-market wages, allowing them to pay victim restitution fees and legal costs, provide child support, and contribute to Social Security and other retirement funds.

Interesting if that's really true, given how prison labor being slavery is pretty much how it works otherwise.

I'd love to know how fair-market the wages are, becuase I somehow suspect that:

  1. They're way lower than someone not in prison would get paid and
  2. The benefits don't exist (no PTO, no insurance, no 401k, etc.) and
  3. The coercive incentives of being able to report your employee to their guards would drive all sorts of abuses

This reads to me as a feel-good whitewashing piece so fragile white liberals can point to it and go 'See? Prison labor isn't that bad!', but perhaps I'm wrong.

[–] bloup@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Maybe somebody should make the argument that random businesses benefiting from prison labor is not only unethical for the prisoner, but also for the people that they owe restitution to.

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