Hard to disagree with the headline. Our prisons are made for punishment. Everything from 2 meals a day to charging prisoner's families for basic crap like soap, basic health care, toothpaste, toilet paper, letters, phone calls, to decades of solitary confinement. And that's what's legal and on the books. Off the books is a whole new level of barbarism, not the least of which is the prison gang system, sexual assault, etc, and there's no denying that we ignore, enable, and allow that to exist. We know how to grind out bitter, desperate, and unemployable re-offenders like no other country can.<p>I welcome more public activism from countries in extradition decisions that raise awareness about our shit system. Voters in the US don't care so much about this issue, so the PR helps. We are so focused on eye for an eye that we forget the real outcomes of this set up.<p>Edit: An honest, non-sensationalist example regarding toilet paper and sanitary pads for female prisoners in New York. <i>"no access to clean underwear, feminine products, and toilet paper, forcing some of them to 'bleed through their clothes'"</i> <a href="https://www.attn.com/stories/4148/female-prisoners-toilet-paper-feminine-products" rel="nofollow">https://www.attn.com/stories/4148/female-prisoners-toilet-pa...</a> As a US citizen, I'm completely embarrassed about this kind of thing, and this example isn't the worst of it by a long shot.
>Authorities have yet to spell out precisely what damage Love is accused of doing to American computer systems aside from saying that he stole the “personal information of users.”<p>Dollars to doughnuts this is another Gary McKinnon type situation - e.g. a trivial perl script that found embarassingly weak username/password combos. They haven't told us what he did because it reveal horrifyingly weak security and shift the conversation into "how was this even allowed to happen" instead of "bad man hacked us".<p>As always, no quarter is given by embarassed people in high places.
With Brexit the UK will likely drop the human rights treaties currently enforced by Strassbourg.<p>This isn't just a US problem by the way. There have been court cases involving extradition to Belgium.