Analysis Of Debtor's Prisons By Samuel Johnson

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In the prompt “Debtor’s Prisons(2)” the author Samuel Johnson very well addressed a problem that existed in the 1700’s. Putting people in prison is one thing but imprisonment until one perishes is a whole nother unnecessary level of punishment. Being in debt is a crime but not a crime in which the repression should ever be death. I believe putting someone in prison only guarantees the debt will never be repaid.
One of the first and most valid points in Samuel's argument is that once the debtor is put in jail he recieves a moment of pit and is then forgotten. Thus implying that the man is not awaiting trial, not given an exact sentence, or given a likely survival rate in jail.
Johnson’s argument states that one in every four of the prisoners

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