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[parent] [thread] 4 comments
1. chris_+(OP)[view] [source] 2017-08-02 19:49:50
I'm sorry to hear of the issues you had getting employment. Must have been awful getting a job, hell when I left my last company with few references it was hard enough... I can only imagine how tough it must have been getting out of jail!
replies(1): >>newsre+r4
2. newsre+r4[view] [source] 2017-08-02 20:25:40
>>chris_+(OP)
It was very tough getting my first job. I been with my current employer for more than 10 years, and will probably retire from here. Many people don't believe that people change. I know for sure that people change -- unfortunately not always for the better.
replies(2): >>Clubbe+cr >>RonanT+3t
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3. Clubbe+cr[view] [source] [discussion] 2017-08-02 23:38:55
>>newsre+r4
From what I understand, it has a lot to do with age. People just outgrow being wild. The prison system is full of 60 year olds who committed crimes in their teens and 20s who are no longer a threat, yet they remain.

I'd say once a man hits 40 or so, they have better shit to do with their lives.

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4. RonanT+3t[view] [source] [discussion] 2017-08-02 23:55:16
>>newsre+r4
Would you say that people who have been through what you have, generally change for the better? Or for worse?

I think sites like 70MillionJobs are dedicated to the proposition that they change for the better. Do you agree?

I firmly believe people change. Sorry, I know they do. And regardless of the nature of the change, it is fair to say that 10 years on, most people are not who they were before. Beyond about that mark, any prison sentence is nothing more than vengeance.

replies(1): >>newsre+wE1
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5. newsre+wE1[view] [source] [discussion] 2017-08-03 15:20:09
>>RonanT+3t
I witnessed both: people changing for the better, and people changing for the worse. I had a hard time convincing family and friends that my old self was dead. While in prison it was easy to spot those that were genuine. Those that were looking to change their ways and behavior would stick together. I saw good people (people that weren’t career criminals like me) become involved with gang activity while in prison. The peer pressure inside goes against improving yourself. Being a square in prison is much, much harder than being a bad-ass.
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