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Mental illness treatment and rehabilitation is the path forward, but it's not a one-size-fits all solution. I was more direct about this in my other comments: What do you do with people who don't want help and actively refuse to be rehabilitated?
Practically speaking:
You can't reintegrate them into society as they are.
You can't ship them off to an island in the southern hemisphere and wash your hands of them.
Morally speaking:
You can't execute them.
You can't lock them up.
You can't treat them against their will.
What now?
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The American prison industrial complex is a privatized slavery-for-profit feedback loop, yes. It's an atrocity that needs to be dismantled and replaced with a justice system with rehabilitation and reparation as its core tenets. But, the inevitable truth is that either prisons must exist in some form as the lesser of many evils, or you voluntarily choose to repeat the atrocities of our past.
I'm not arguing against treating and rehabiliting people who have made mistakes. I'm arguing that championing it as the solution to prisons is either an overly-optimistic pipedream, or a hypocritical display of indifference to the idea of involiable bodily autonomy.
You seem unable to separate rehabilitation / treatment for mental health from medical interventions and drugs.
What I'm arguing is that punishment is not justice. No person should have the right to dole out punishments to another. To think otherwise betrays a very authoritarian mindset.
I don't have a 500 page document detailing a new version of our justice system, partly because, as you correctly stated, there isn't a one size fits all solution. But I know whatever system that is should be focused on empathy and compassion, not making people pay for their misdeeds.
But even if I completely agreed with what you're saying, I would still think it's gross to cheer for anyone being sent to "an atrocity that needs to be dismantled and replaced", especially if it's for the rest of their lives.