prisons, spicy take to some 

Imprisonment is a form of torture, no matter how 'humane' it is on paper, and should be treated as such from an ethical perspective.

And when you argue for imprisoning people as a form of 'justice', you are arguing for torture as a form of 'justice', with all of the implications that that has.

It's just a form of torture that's easy to rationalize if you don't want to confront those implications.

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state violence & aesthetic, I got really rambly and passionate which is great | re: prisons, spicy take to some 

@joepie91 Funky to think about how the state has already been at fash-violence for _ages_, and it's so normalized that you see so many inmates resigned to this system as a fact of life.

Imprisonment is such a _dull_ tool to use against a person, a machine waving its dumb stick around like that SpaceX catch tower.

It reminds me of this greater attitude we have with, laws in the name of protecting the populace getting twisted by Conway's law into an extension of the oppressive organization that imposed them.

Things that come down hard—like strict '18+' requirements that asses only your physical age and not mental faculties—seem to have this aesthetic of repression that's generally comforting to people who can't/won't look at the higher-level happenings of the oppressive structure and are only comforted by the fact that it happens to be aligned with them.

:: To be free isn't to be on the right side of violence, the 'good guys'.
To be free is to shed these systems of control, to acquire a level playing-ground, it's to prosper wise and calm so you can weather the wind and the storms.

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