I got to use my jail bag today!

I live near Bathurst jail. I used to live across the corner from it, but now we've moved about 10 minutes away.

While we lived across the corner I'd often see people released from the jail and start the 50 minute walk down to the station as they were just dumped back into society with less and less assistance or support in place. I'd often pop out the front door and ask of they wanted a lift, a number of times they'd say yes and I'd drive them down to the station (and once to Lithgow because he missed the train). People who do their time at Bathurst have been shipped in from all over the state, and are expected to just be able to get home again.

They also all carry their belongings in a clear plastic baggie the jail has given them, and everyone here knows if someone is carrying that bag they've just been released.. and a lot of people treat them like shit.

I started keeping a reusable shopping bag in my car to give them instead of using the clear baggie. Then I started stocking the bag with some essentials (masks, soap, socks, deodorant, snacks, drink, water, crossword book, pen, etc), so they might have a bit of comfort on their journey home.

Today I drove past the jail after dropping my housemate to work, and there was a guy standing at the bus stop with a clear baggie, so I asked if he wanted a lift to the station and gave him my jail bag.

He's excited to get home and see his dog after 16 months.

#AbolishPolice #Abolition #AbolishPrisons #anarchism #CommunityNotCops #FuckThePolice #Criminology #CriminalJustice

@aby You are a great person. Thanks for this story and your acts of kindness.

@aby Thank you

What a wonderful piece of solidarity and care

@aby Thank you for all you have and doubtlessly will continue to do.
That is so wholesome. ❤️
@aby aww that is a rockin’ good story!
I’m inspired!
Good on you for your humanity.
This is what the solution looks like 🙏🏼
@aby
Whether you know it or not, you are a Saint. 🙏
@aby you seem like a kind human .. the best kind !
@aby I was only in Long Bay Jail for a relatively short period for non payment of fines, but I remember being released and catching the bus back to the city alone, and then the train home with my prison bag. Thank you for your good deeds. There is so much wrong with Our judicial and prison system. I glimpsed some of it from my short stay. Your small act of kindness and empathy is so important.

@takvera @aby

One soundtrack option:

Malabar Mansion (long Bay) song 1987-1988 Mac Silva / Black Lace
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnRcIdg9wEo

Background
https://kooriweb.org/foley/essays/tracker/tracker28.html

Malabar Mansion by Mac Silva

YouTube

@aby

Good onya! 👏 ❤️

@aby I love this so much because: treating people as people 💕💚✨
@aby that is beautiful 😍
@aby
Thank you for your humanitarian efforts. I'm remind of Michael Moore's documentary "Where to invade next" where he visits a Norwegian prison. It exposed how miserably the US jail system is failing not only prisoners but also society. Dumping prisoners on the street like that is just another example - as bad as dumping hospital patients without insurance onto skid row. But that's what you get when prisons and hospitals are for profit because more crime and more sickness equals more profit.
@enmodo - I live in Australia, and all prisons need to be shut down.

@aby
Sorry you have it as bad as we do! I saw Bathurst and assumed England, then saw State and assumed America. Seems like the only fair assumption is that most prisons suck.

For those who are curious, here's the part of the Michael Moore documentary I was referring to... https://youtu.be/0IepJqxRCZY?si=Q38zPBsvTZAuXl6-

Norwegian Prison - Michael Moore

YouTube

@enmodo @aby

Don't get me started on Japanese prisons and the Japanese legal system more generally.

ACAB, and all prisons being horrible is part and parcel of that same concept.

@aby I'm guessing you are not inherently against the concept of prison, just current prisons and prison systems in most "developed" nations.

Or maybe I'm wrong. I know there are those who believe if we just do society right criminals and presumably the need for prisons will just disappear. I'm personally not convinced, you'll always a percentage of the population who will slice through society like a hot knife through butter.

@enmodo - have you read much work written about prison abolition?
@aby no.
@enmodo - then what has you convinced?

@aby well I've only ever heard those arguments anecdotally and they weren't convincing.

What is the solution for the 1% or so of the general population who are clinically psychopathic? Should just be put in a "really secure" hospital?

And I'm not being factitious, it's a serious question. Happy to be directed to your favorite abolitionist writings that cover that.

@enmodo - how about you go and google and start reading instead of giving me a homework assignment.

You've decided you're "convinced" without actually having spent any time looking at the issue on your own. I have zero faith you're interested in approaching this honestly and my time is better spent elsewhere.

If you delete some of that audacity you'll find you have much more room for learning.

@aby no, I actually said I was "personally not convinced". I was just thinking you might have a favorite source that had been convincing to you, or examples of successful large scale trials you'd point me to instead of the undoubtedly biased selection of links I might get if I just Googled prison abolition.

@enmodo - personally not convinced means that the opposing idea has convinced you. You don't feel neutral about abolition, you stated it won't work. You can't be neutral on a moving train - and by not agreeing with abolition you're agreeing that locking humans in cages away from people who love and support them is something we should be doing.

If I'm "convinced" of something it's because I've put actual work in to unpick what I believe and see what the truth is. You haven't been "convinced" of anything if you haven't bothered learning more about it. That's just laziness.

The fact that you're putting time into arguing about why you're entitled to my efforts instead of going away on your own to read more tells me all I need to know.

@aby @3TomatoesShort Congrats for being able to help someone today, and thank you for doing so.

May that newly-released person get home to find their dog and the rest of their family equally as happy to have them back again. 💖

@aby Wonderful. Depressing to know that the discharge situation is just as dire outside the UK. I used to work on a scheme where we arranged accommodation for the newly released person, met them at the prison gate, and took them to their new place. So many are discharged here with nowhere to go (and yes, with the stigmatising clear plastic bag)
@aby this is really important - thank you. Apart from anything else, is you turn up at the station with one of those clear bags, you're an obvious target for drug dealers

@aby

Thank you. So much about our prison systems show just how untrue the claim is about "rehabilitation."

You can't just dump people out on the street, literally, and expect them to avoid the temptation of re-offending because... uh... survival. The system is retaliatory--not rehabilitatory.

@aby

You are a good person, Aby. Every kind deed is returned many fold.

Thanks

@aby @futzle that is such a good, kind idea
@aby bless you 🙏🏽🫶
@aby I say this as an atheist. You are an angel.

@aby

This gives me hope.

Thank you, thank you.

@aby Damn. But there are still people@that make me love humanity. Thank you.
@aby thank you for that 💜

@aby

Great work. Onya!

Why TF aren't former inmates given an opaque bag in the first place? Just another kicking for free?

@thefathippy - I'm sure the jail would say something about security (staff need to carry belongings into work in clear tote bags), but I'm not sure why they can't be given a normal bag at the gate.