Here is another piece of libtard lunacy from the US; only men should go to prison because … well … I don’t know:

“This month marks ten years since the death of Pauline Campbell. Pauline became a formidable campaigner exposing the harm inflicted on women within the prison system. This followed the death of her 18-year-old daughter in Styal prison in 2003. It was campaigning by Pauline Campbell, bereaved families and Inquest around the sharp rise in deaths across the women’s estate, and in particular deaths at Styal in the early 2000s, that persuaded the then Labour government to commission Baroness Jean Corston to conduct an independent review of women in the criminal justice system. Corston’s ground-breaking report, published in March 2007, offered a blueprint for change. The review recommended the dismantling of the women’s prison estate, the introduction of small custodial units and an expansion of gender-specific support in the community, through a network of women’s centres. It was expected that the use of imprisonment for women could be reduced to an ‘absolute minimum’ and was hoped that women’s imprisonment could be almost entirely phased out.

At the time there was great optimism that positive change was imminent. Eleven years after Corston, and ten years after Pauline Campbell’s death, and the situation has never felt so desperate. The casework team at Inquest continue to support families whose daughters, sisters, mothers, aunts and grandmothers have died. Ninety-four women have died in women’s prisons since March 2007. Of these, 38 were self-inflicted, 48 were non-self-inflicted and eight await classification. 32 were by hanging. Inquest’s latest report, Still Dying on the Inside shares the stories of some of the women who have died in prison and calls for urgent action to save lives. Our research identifies serious safety failures inside prisons around self-harm and suicide management and inadequate healthcare provision. The report also highlights the lack of action on recommendations arising from post-death investigations and inquests.
https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/women-in-prison_uk_5b03f0c9e4b07309e05bf7f8?guccounter=2

     Now wait a moment! These women are not innocent little snowflakes, but have committed crimes, some as horrific as those committed by men; not so much rape, but plenty of grisly murders. Why should society go soft on this, just to meet some gender agenda, to make academic feminists happy? And, after all, this would be a discriminatory measure, contrary to the equalitarian faith of the ruling regime.
  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_differences_in_crime 
  http://www.vocativ.com/usa/justice-usa/crimes-women-commit-most-often/index.html