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you're gonna get three meals a day prepared for you and handed to you (through a slot probably). probably gonna get to watch a bunch of TV (but with limited channel selection). and there will be a pretty big selection of books you can read.
i know its a way shorter time, but i spent three weeks in county jail once. it really wasn't so bad. i made a good friend that i still hang out with to this day, learned a bunch about growing weed, played a lot of cards, and watched FX 12 hours a day. prison food is supposed to be better than jail food. i know of one prison that allows inmates to order KFC with their commissary money lol. |
thanks for being a faggot and now its gonna cost us all money to lock you up
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wow your pretty bitter bazia, alot of people get off not even guilty because they actually didnt do anything, people like you i wish were locked up once just to see how real society is not sitting on your couch.
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Some of my best friends became thoroughly-committed white supremacists in prison.
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Hey man no joke, use this time to your advantage, pick up the old geetar
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Watch out for your cornhole buddy
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Still pisses me off that I have to pay for other people making retarded decisions. Make them foot the fucking bill when they get out. |
http://thesocietypages.org/socimages...payer-dollars/
American companies that once looked to places like Mexico and China for cheap labor are bringing those jobs back to the U.S. Why? Because prison labor is much, much cheaper. Paid between 93¢ and $4.73 per day, and collecting no benefits, prisoners are a cheap labor source for about 100 companies (source). What does this have to do with you? If you have insurance, invest, use utilities, have a bank, drive a car, send a child to school, go to a dentist, call service centers, fly on planes, take prescription drugs, or use paper, you might be benefiting from prison labor. If you’ve bought products by or from Starbucks, Nintendo, Victoria’s Secret, JC Penney, Sears, Wal-Mart, K-Mart, Eddie Bauer, Wendy’s, Proctor & Gamble, Johnson & Johnson, Fruit of the Loom, Motorola, Caterpiller, Sara Lee, Quaker Oats, Mary Kay, or Microsoft, you are part of this system. When prisoners are in state and federal prisons, the U.S. taxpayer is subsidizing low wages and corporate profits, since they are paying for prisoners’ room, board, and health care. When prisoners are in private prisons, prison labor is a way to make more money off of the human beings caught in the corrections industry. In other words, prison labor is an efficient way for corporations to continue to increase their profits without sharing those gains with their employees. |
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