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Alabama’s prison system is often framed as a public safety necessity—but what if it is also a revenue-generating machine?
In this episode of the Alabama Prison Reform Proposal Podcast, we examine how incarcerated people have become a source of profit through prison labor, wage garnishment, fees, and prolonged incarceration, while meaningful rehabilitation and accountability remain underfunded or ignored. Drawing on investigative reporting, public records, and lived experience, this episode exposes how financial incentives distort parole decisions, exploit prison labor, and perpetuate a cycle that benefits institutions while harming families and communities.
We discuss:
This episode is not about ideology—it is about incentives, data, and accountability. If prisons profit from people staying incarcerated, reform becomes harder, not easier. Real public safety requires transparency, rehabilitation, and systems designed to reduce harm—not monetize it.
Listen. Learn. Share. Reform is not optional—it’s overdue.
By R. L. RobinsonAlabama’s prison system is often framed as a public safety necessity—but what if it is also a revenue-generating machine?
In this episode of the Alabama Prison Reform Proposal Podcast, we examine how incarcerated people have become a source of profit through prison labor, wage garnishment, fees, and prolonged incarceration, while meaningful rehabilitation and accountability remain underfunded or ignored. Drawing on investigative reporting, public records, and lived experience, this episode exposes how financial incentives distort parole decisions, exploit prison labor, and perpetuate a cycle that benefits institutions while harming families and communities.
We discuss:
This episode is not about ideology—it is about incentives, data, and accountability. If prisons profit from people staying incarcerated, reform becomes harder, not easier. Real public safety requires transparency, rehabilitation, and systems designed to reduce harm—not monetize it.
Listen. Learn. Share. Reform is not optional—it’s overdue.