Jailed for $280: The return of debtors' prisons
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505144_162-57417654/jailed-for-$280-the-return-of-debtors-prisons/
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505144_162-57417654/jailed-for-$280-the-return-of-debtors-prisons/
Quote from gwb-trading:
Jailed for $280: The return of debtors' prisons
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505144_162-57417654/jailed-for-$280-the-return-of-debtors-prisons/
Quote from logic_man:
A better solution would be to force the person to work off the debt by doing some light admin work, e.g. stuffing envelopes or something simple. That would reduce the costs to the taxpayers of putting the person up in a jail.
Quote from trefoil:
No, a better solution would be to eliminate any possibility that a person who owes a debt could be hauled off to prison. What you're proposing is getting a person to work for free to pay off a debt. You may not know this, but that was one of the ways, back in the old days, that a person became a slave. Working for someone else for no compensation other, of course, than what it takes to keep you alive to do the actual work is, you know, that very thing.
Just because the creditor took a chance and lost on that chance doesn't make him entitled to imprison someone and make him work to pay off that debt. I would have thought we all knew this. Apparently not.
Quote from trefoil:
No, a better solution would be to eliminate any possibility that a person who owes a debt could be hauled off to prison. What you're proposing is getting a person to work for free to pay off a debt. You may not know this, but that was one of the ways, back in the old days, that a person became a slave. Working for someone else for no compensation other, of course, than what it takes to keep you alive to do the actual work is, you know, that very thing.
Just because the creditor took a chance and lost on that chance doesn't make him entitled to imprison someone and make him work to pay off that debt. I would have thought we all knew this. Apparently not.
Quote from peilthetraveler:
So then in your opinion, if someone goes out and gets a bunch of loans, maxes out his credit card and refinances his house to pull all the cash out and then moves to the bahamas to retire...he shouldnt be pursued because the banks, credit cards and mortgage lenders that LOANED him money "took a chance"?
Or how about this...lets say there is a company and you buy a bond from them for $50k at 8% interest and the company decides they are not going to pay it because the CEO needs a bonus this year. Should you just be out $50k because YOU took a chance?
Quote from clacy:
How many start ups do you think there would be if one had to go to prison or work off debts?..... Not many
Quote from logic_man:
They're not "working for free", they're "working to pay back what they owe".
Last I checked, the history books didn't mention that slaves had borrowed any money from the masters for whom they toiled and thus hadn't incurred any obligations to their masters. This woman did. So, unless you have some super-secret history book which states otherwise, your moralistic diatribe comparing her situation to slavery is completely irrelevant.
I've noticed lately that a lot of people "know" things I don't know. That the things they "know" happen to be completely false doesn't seem to stop them from claiming to "know" them. Odd, but I put up with it because it seems to be endemic to the times and I don't get paid to correct every mistaken notion that crops up in some fool's head.