And holding them also poses epidemiological risk to the whole, not about the health of the prisoners incarcerating them poses risks to us all!
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Replying to @netfire4 @brent1776 and
And two innocent people are dead right now because of your position...... so unless you are willing to sacrifice innocent people your position is massively flawed
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Replying to @honestarguemen1 @brent1776 and
Yes there are lives saved by reducing our mass incarcerated population. As our
@SF_DPH instructed Chesa isn't safe to hold any more.pic.twitter.com/Rl54pPfdmf
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Replying to @netfire4 @honestarguemen1 and
Try to spin/justify/excuse
@chesaboudin all you want. He let a murderer out of jail...and then he killed two people. Violent repeat offenders commit most crimes. Keep them in jail. STOP appeasing the apologists and protect the law abiding citizens.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @WilliamRemo24 @honestarguemen1 and
Given our historic mass incarceration and over criminalization, "law abiding citizens" is no longer a valid or coherent category, the average american commits three felonies a day and is inherently illegal.
#DefundThePolice to make our streets safe because#BlackLivesMatter
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Replying to @netfire4 @honestarguemen1 and
Keep telling yourself that. Your desperation for approval and validation is nauseating.
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Replying to @WilliamRemo24 @honestarguemen1 and
Our societies desperation for its punishment fetish is nauseating. Jail was never supposed to punish it's incarcerated victims, it's always at least claimed to rehabilitate them. It sounds like you're more desperate for punishment that societal good, I see epidemiological risk.
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Replying to @netfire4 @honestarguemen1 and
Explain/justify/defend the violent criminal at issue here. The one that went on to kill two more people. Thanks.
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Replying to @WilliamRemo24 @honestarguemen1 and
This bad and intoxicated driver is getting protrayed as if he deliberately ran two people over. This isn't someone that has a history of assault, or of rape or any violent crime. He didn't operate the vehicle well he was intoxicated, he needed intervention, incarceration isn't.
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Replying to @netfire4 @WilliamRemo24 and
But it's a deterrent. If there is no potential for punishment then more. people will commit these crimes. Why has resisting arrest become so common? Probably because there are no consequences.
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