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yuku ftl
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Originally Posted by DJprestige21
As long as people are still breaking the law there will always be people going to prison.
About as much time as you spend failing to realize it.Originally Posted by General Johnson
Originally Posted by DJprestige21
As long as people are still breaking the law there will always be people going to prison.
You spend a lot of time on that breakthrough up there?
You have to know how hard it is for a regular person with a felony (esp a violent crime) to get a job after they get out of prison. I know in CA, you have to say on your job application if you've been convicted of a felony. Most people with businesses that I've talked to say that they won't even give an interview to someone that checks the felony box. When you can't get a job, you gotta do what you gotta do to survive. Then it's usually just a matter of time before you get caught slippin' again.Originally Posted by Ricardo Malta
Let's be real though. There's a good portion of _'s locked up for doing dumb ##*! or makng their 3rd go round for reverting back to the same ##*! that got them locked up the first two times. Alot of that responsiblity is on the individual. We know the system is %$%*%# up. Regardless, you know right from wrong. If you don't wanna go to prison do the right thing.
I saw too many dudes leave then come right back during my bid and I only did 6 months.
Originally Posted by JoseBronx
I blame gucci man and little wane
Originally Posted by mytmouse76
The school-to-prison pipeline is one of the most important civil rights challenges facing our nation today.
• The school-to-prison pipeline refers to the national trend of criminalizing, rather than educating, our nation’s children.
• The pipeline encompasses the growing use of zero-tolerance discipline, school-based arrests, disciplinary alternative schools, and secured detention to marginalize our most at-risk youth and deny them access to education.
Zero-tolerance disciplinary policies are often the first step in a child’s journey through the pipeline.
• Zero-tolerance policies impose severe discipline on students without regard to individual circumstances. Under these policies, children have been expelled for giving Midol to a classmate, bringing household goods (including a kitchen knife) to school to donate to Goodwill, and bring¬ing scissors to class for an art project.
• Even the American Bar Association has condemned zero-tolerance policies as inherently unjust: “zero tolerance has become a one-size-fits-all solution to all the problems that schools confront. It has redefined students as criminals, with unfortunate consequences…Unfortunately, most current [zero-tolerance] policies eliminate the common sense that comes with discretion and, at great cost to society and to children and families, do little to improve school safety.