mrswdk wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Are there statistics showing the number of years, on average, someone is incarcerated in the various countries?
By the way mrs. - you still haven't taken me up on my offer to fight about this... I'd still rather live in the US.
Dunno. Do your own damn Googling.
And okay. How about: America or North Korea?
America
Dukasaur wrote:rishaed wrote:Duk I'm not saying that the U.S. Numbers are artificially high. What im saying is most likely China's numbers are artificially LOW. 164 for China is insanely low considering all of the human rights violations that have been observed.
Also:laogai.org wrote:Although the Chinese government classifies the number of inmates in its prison and administrative detention facilities as a state secret, the Laogai Research Foundation estimates that the Laogai System is currently comprised of over one thousand detention facilities in which millions of individuals are imprisoned. Since its inception, we estimate that over fifty million people have been incarcerated in the Laogai System.
IF we assume that the number is roughly the same over the past 65yrs. The number in this is just under 10million. Probably between 7-8 million. (7.69 ish)
That assumes that the number is the same which i highly doubt b/c of Mao's popularity during his reign. And the amount of death caused by some of his policies. So i'll estimate that while the number is probably closer to 10 million, 7.7-8 mill is a safe bet.
The only thing is that China has over 1 billion people.. This could cause the number to seem artificially low ( the only thing that might drive down the number).
However the number estimated in the wikipedia link is about "prison population of 2,300,000" which resulted in a number of 164. I think that china, while it may not be as high as the US is probably closer to the 400-500 range.
I won't dispute your numbers because you've obviously studied the issue and I haven't. I certainly have no doubt that China falsifies its statistics and whatever the real numbers are, they are higher than reported. Yet, even the numbers you cite give you a final result in the 400-500 range, which is considerably lower than the (relatively undisputed) 650 given for the U.S.
Even if the numbers were the same, that would still be a horrific condemnation of U.S. policy. China is a repressive dictatorship. For a country like the U.S. which masquerades as the world's bastion of freedom, to even be flirting with numbers in the same range as China's is an embarrassment. It turns out that the alleged land of the free is actually the home of a great many unfree people.
Even if China's numbers were a little higher, I would still consider that an indictment of U.S. policies. Slapping yourself on the back for being a little less repressive than a dictatorship like China is sort of like bragging that you have a better health care system than Liberia, or a better highway network than Uzbekistan.
Yeah, so look guys - the question you're asking is "would you rather live in the United States or [insert country] because more people go to jail in the United States than in [insert country]."
So I guess my question is - what's your point? Do you think you can get to that in this thread? Are you saying China > than United States? Does whether or not you are more likely to go to prison (statistically speaking*) factor that much into your decision to live in China versus the United States?
* Note, I use "statistically speaking" because I'm fairly certain I would not go to prison for anything in China, just like I'm also not going to prison for anything in the United States.