18 pointsby wahnfrieden4 hours ago4 comments
  • fabian2k4 hours ago
    This kind of story seems to be very common for all kinds of US prisons or detention facilities. The most prominent one right now probably the ones from ICE. Like this story about the ICE prison for children (https://www.propublica.org/article/life-inside-ice-dilley-ch...)

    > Moms told me that their kids had lost their appetites after finding worms and mold on their food, had trouble sleeping on the facility’s hard metal bunk beds in rooms shared by at least a dozen other people, and were constantly sick.

  • Torkel4 hours ago
    Of course inmates should have decent drinking water.

    But I strongly disagree with "human rights" that are defined this way - something someone has to go out and bring to you.

    A human right is something that someone cannot take away from me. Free speech is a human right. The right to life.

    A "human right to water" combined with a "human right to housing" implies that if I walk aimlessly into a desert and decide to stay there, it is my human right to have people bring we water and a place to stay. Other people not doing so is against my human rights.

    That's just... dumb.

    And, again - inmates should have clean water.

    • wahnfrieden4 hours ago
      Caged people are actively denied access to clean water that is readily available in their vicinity. They aren't in these cages due to aimless wandering in the desert - the state put them in there.
      • Torkel3 hours ago
        See, this is why I put "inmates should have decent drinking water" first in my comment, and "inmates should have clean water" as the very last words.

        It seems to me you are making the exact error in argument I react against. Stop making everything a "human right". You see, in the end, when you've made everything "human rights", the whole "human rights" concept will cease to have any meaning whatsoever and you will have lost.

        • iamnothere2 hours ago
          The ability to convey oneself to water, collect it, and drink it is a natural right. If this right is removed by state incarceration then the state needs to provide a safe substitute, unless laws provide for punishment through dehydration (which seems cruel and unusual to me).

          This isn’t cleanly mapped to typical notions of human rights, but it’s still a question of rights.

  • OutOfHere4 hours ago
    In the US, prisons are so bad that a sensible jury should almost never find anyone guilty for a crime that is not a violent crime. Prison is a meaningful reduction in one's residual life expectancy due to extremely poor medical care, gang violence, poor nutrition, bad temperature control, legal slave labor, inability to freely read books, and now toxic water.
  • techblueberry4 hours ago
    When do we become good enough at something that it becomes a basic human right? The libertarian counter-argument to this would be, this is only true if someone else doesn’t have to provide the clean drinking water. If drinking water in that part of Texas is naturally unsafe, then, someone has to volunteer to provide it, or people have to do it themselves.

    People use a similar argument in medicine, and I think the counter-counter argument to that is, I dunno the statistic is but like I think many doctors get into medicine hoping to help people that can’t help themselves. Medicine is ubiquitous enough, and public opinion probably leans that way enough to build some conception of a human right around it.

    We produce more food than we can consume, that and its relation to human flourishing mean I think providing food is a human right.

    • snarfy4 hours ago
      It's not a right. It's a responsibility.

      I think framing it from the other side makes the whole idea a lot more palatable.

      If I work hard to create clean drinking water from dirty, it is not your right to take it from me. It is my responsibility to help a fellow human being.

    • josefritzishere4 hours ago
      You can only survive without water for about 3 days. Then you rapidly start dying. Yes, it's a basic human right. If you deprive people of it willfully you are literally killing them. It's not abstract.
    • toast04 hours ago
      I don't think the libertarian argument applies to prison.

      You must provide water to prisoners; asking them to get it themselves is absurd. If the local water is unsafe, the prison should be relocated.

      • techblueberry3 hours ago
        I think it changed, a certain time ago you might not have had the technology to clean the water, and plenty of places in the world don't provide this. Whether or not it's a right is based on the values and capabilities of the civilization.
    • watwut4 hours ago
      One gotta love the libertarian arguments for death penalty for everything including minor crimes.