Well, what would be good--and I don't want you to answer this--is to take people in identical situations, ones who were incarcerated and ones who weren't, and see the results, because I know these people weren't.
But I have another question, on slide 13. Once again, given that for a thousand years our system hasn't really worked--people keep reoffending and reoffending--you want to find new ways of treating them and doing things so that maybe they won't reoffend so much.
If I read this chart right--and tell me if I'm reading it right--it suggests that with a conditional sentence with probation, we'll be working with that person to improve them for 700 days on average, whereas if they're in prison alone, we'll only be working with them for 47 days. Is that true? Am I reading the chart right?
That is a phenomenal difference of work on a prisoner to make him better, more safe, more rehabilitated than we've ever had in history.