I have to point 2 things out. 1) you speak in the present tense and 2) we've paid our debt to society. Don't these facts account for anything?
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Replying to @F0Q_CDCR @CaliforniaRifle and
I don't like labels! This "con" language really? Please. Don't judge everyone with a broad brush. People can change, redemption is possible.
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Replying to @SpeedyVeez @F0Q_CDCR and
Yes. But not the norm. Past conduct is the most reliable predictor of future behavior. But yes, sometimes people go through fundamental reformation. Some find Jesus or something else to cause fundamental change. But then the burden of proof is on them. Nobody owes them anything.
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Replying to @CaliforniaRifle @SpeedyVeez and
I'm curious to know something. What's the worst thing you've ever done? I bet it was bad, because we've all done something. Are you still that same person? No. Why not? Because 1) people guided you and 2) you changed.
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Replying to @F0Q_CDCR @SpeedyVeez and
Frankly, as a sentient adult, nothing that amounted to a crime. Ever. And, fundamentally the same person. Just matured, and learned more about life and existence over time.
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Replying to @CaliforniaRifle @SpeedyVeez and
As a sentient adult implies you did stuff as a youth. Should I judge you by thst, then? Or how you treat me? Personally, I'd much rather judge you by your actions now.
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Replying to @F0Q_CDCR @SpeedyVeez and
When a child plays in a construction site (without doing any harm), or climbs over a neighbors fence to retrieve a ball, it doesn’t understand that’s “trespassing”. Here, the intent counts. A normal child doesn’t do things with bad intent, but it may do things that adults [...]
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Replying to @CaliforniaRifle @F0Q_CDCR and
[...] made illegal unknown to the child. Intent is key. Criminals almost always start out as children doing things they know are bad. The difference to normal children is they do them intentionally, purposefully, for personal gain, try to avoid discovery, and deny they did it.
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Replying to @CaliforniaRifle @F0Q_CDCR and
And your last sentence shows you still don’t know your place. You’re being judged, but nobody will trust your own judgment as reliable or remotely valuable. You don’t understand that, which is why you’d be unhappy living outside, where your opinions must compete with billions.
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Replying to @CaliforniaRifle @SpeedyVeez and
Know my place? Really? There's only 1 response to that. I look forward to the day in which I purchase the company you work for and call you into my office to show you exactly where my place is in life.
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So you still harbor ill will toward others, feel that you were wronged and need vindication, and that you “deserve” respect and better from others for whom you have never done one thing to make their lives better. That’s why you’d fail outside: you want, but offer nothing.
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