Punk Rooster wrote:1) John Smith grows up a "troubled child", in & out of boy's homes, runs with the wrong people. Gets to jail, & catches up with a few mates, they look out for each other......
......Or is it because jail is the only place they can "kick a goal", & they also don't have to worry about mundane things like where they're next meal is coming from/paying the rent/keeping a job etc.
The scenario you describe entails 'making the best of a bad situation', a fundamentally human trait. There is still no way that people would rather be 'inside' than 'outside'.
Modern society sees prison as an eliminatory system. It suggests that nothing can be done about those who are locked in, thus they are purely and simply suppressed. Therein lies the conundrum. Apart from those who commit suicide, most prisoners eventually get out of jail. And at the very least they are 'riled up' as no sensible person could stand the thought of living with people who have been deliberately driven to anguish and hence made violent and enraged. So, not only does prison NOT protect you from criminals, it daily releases people who have been labelled and provoked. And if what society seeks is vengeance then we are absolutely mistaken to believe that prisons make us any safer.