When prison officials find inmates with homemade weapons, why don't they give MUCH stiffer penalties?
Q. 30, 60, 90 days in adseg. Why not tack on an automatic one year... 2 years? Or why don't more prisons give them a horribly boring diet--or "The Loaf" for 6 months? Why are we so damned soft on crime within prisons? And so much time is spent checking mail coming to inmates. They find drugs, weapons, and misc. prohibited items. If this happens once, why not cut off mail privileges for that inmate for one year? If you assault an inmate, how about automatically doubling their sentence--or some other significant extension? Why don't we get tough already? It's ridiculous. Thanks for your answer shdwkat2... but it's exactly this liberal attitude that keeps us so soft on crime. "How about if it was YOUR brother?" Gimme a break. If my brother… [cont.]
Asked by ErikkW - Sat Aug 16 05:11:07 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. well it's pretty obvious you never been to prison!prisoners have their own code of conduct,their own political system, and their own punishments.gangs, and weapons are a neccesity. skinners(people committing sexual offences) automatically have their pinky fingers cutoff, the second they reach general population. rapists are often raped with a broken jagged broom handle. cop killers are frequently beaten, raped, and occasionally murdered by guards but rewarded by other inmates. prison reform will never take place,it's better to follow the status quo. you think prison is so damn easy, try spending a week there. i bet you won't last.
Answered by Spirit - Sat Aug 16 05:21:00 2008
Q. 30, 60, 90 days in adseg. Why not tack on an automatic one year... 2 years? Or why don't more prisons give them a horribly boring diet--or "The Loaf" for 6 months? Why are we so damned soft on crime within prisons? And so much time is spent checking mail coming to inmates. They find drugs, weapons, and misc. prohibited items. If this happens once, why not cut off mail privileges for that inmate for one year? If you assault an inmate, how about automatically doubling their sentence--or some other significant extension? Why don't we get tough already? It's ridiculous. Thanks for your answer shdwkat2... but it's exactly this liberal attitude that keeps us so soft on crime. "How about if it was YOUR brother?" Gimme a break. If my brother… [cont.]
Asked by ErikkW - Sat Aug 16 05:11:07 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. well it's pretty obvious you never been to prison!prisoners have their own code of conduct,their own political system, and their own punishments.gangs, and weapons are a neccesity. skinners(people committing sexual offences) automatically have their pinky fingers cutoff, the second they reach general population. rapists are often raped with a broken jagged broom handle. cop killers are frequently beaten, raped, and occasionally murdered by guards but rewarded by other inmates. prison reform will never take place,it's better to follow the status quo. you think prison is so damn easy, try spending a week there. i bet you won't last.
Answered by Spirit - Sat Aug 16 05:21:00 2008
A movie i watched a long time ago and cant remember the name or the actors?
Q. Hi All, I watched a movie a looong time ago, it was about this poor brother and sister, and one day the guy gets caught stealing a loaf of bread or something and is sent to prison and in their he is in solitary confinement for most of his time (about 10years or so) and when he is let out he has dinner with his now married sister, whilst having dinner every little sound irritates him (because of the sensory depravation he suffered in their) and all the loud noises drive him into a fit of rage and and ends up beating the sisters husband to death. i dont think this was a mainstream movie, and i have searched IMDB.com and all the main movie websites. Any help would be greatly appreciated, Thanks people
Asked by shuayb_a84 - Thu Mar 5 10:00:33 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Murder in the first. Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman.
Answered by unknown - Thu Mar 5 10:05:37 2009
Q. Hi All, I watched a movie a looong time ago, it was about this poor brother and sister, and one day the guy gets caught stealing a loaf of bread or something and is sent to prison and in their he is in solitary confinement for most of his time (about 10years or so) and when he is let out he has dinner with his now married sister, whilst having dinner every little sound irritates him (because of the sensory depravation he suffered in their) and all the loud noises drive him into a fit of rage and and ends up beating the sisters husband to death. i dont think this was a mainstream movie, and i have searched IMDB.com and all the main movie websites. Any help would be greatly appreciated, Thanks people
Asked by shuayb_a84 - Thu Mar 5 10:00:33 2009 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Murder in the first. Kevin Bacon and Gary Oldman.
Answered by unknown - Thu Mar 5 10:05:37 2009
When it comes to law and justice in the USA why does this happen?
Q. A friend of mine steals a loaf of bread (Cost $1.98 cents) and goes to prison of three to eight years. Now, In new york bernard Madoff won the latest round in his fight with prosecutors over his bail package Wednesday as a judge ruled he can remain free, ( Even though he cheated people out of 50 billion dollars) brushing aside arguments by the government that the money manager needs to be in jail because he cannot be trusted. He remands free. Friend was caught once before stealing a candy bar that cost 75 cents. Friend had no job, no money for a lawyer. How come poor goes to prison over a couple of dollars and a person who cheated people out of billions goes free. (Out on Bail)
Asked by Erudite. 20 Jan 09. History! - Wed Jan 14 16:06:18 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. you answered your own question. Madoff has billions of dollars, judges and other government officials want part of that money. If madoff goes to jail and the IRS takes the money then NO ONE gets it. If he stays free, every one gets paid. The lawyers, the judges, the congress people. Every involved in his perceedings see's him as one fat pay check. Then when the well runs dry and there is no more money they throw him in jail. Everyone has a price and Madoff can and will throw around millions of dollars like its spare change if it can keep him out of jail. Which will most likeley be the place where one of his ex-investors will smuggle in a carton of cigerattes to have him shanked in the shower.
Answered by willmiller82 - Wed Jan 14 16:37:21 2009
Q. A friend of mine steals a loaf of bread (Cost $1.98 cents) and goes to prison of three to eight years. Now, In new york bernard Madoff won the latest round in his fight with prosecutors over his bail package Wednesday as a judge ruled he can remain free, ( Even though he cheated people out of 50 billion dollars) brushing aside arguments by the government that the money manager needs to be in jail because he cannot be trusted. He remands free. Friend was caught once before stealing a candy bar that cost 75 cents. Friend had no job, no money for a lawyer. How come poor goes to prison over a couple of dollars and a person who cheated people out of billions goes free. (Out on Bail)
Asked by Erudite. 20 Jan 09. History! - Wed Jan 14 16:06:18 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. you answered your own question. Madoff has billions of dollars, judges and other government officials want part of that money. If madoff goes to jail and the IRS takes the money then NO ONE gets it. If he stays free, every one gets paid. The lawyers, the judges, the congress people. Every involved in his perceedings see's him as one fat pay check. Then when the well runs dry and there is no more money they throw him in jail. Everyone has a price and Madoff can and will throw around millions of dollars like its spare change if it can keep him out of jail. Which will most likeley be the place where one of his ex-investors will smuggle in a carton of cigerattes to have him shanked in the shower.
Answered by willmiller82 - Wed Jan 14 16:37:21 2009
few economic questions....?
Q. 1. A comic book company pays an annual licensing fee of $10,000 for the rights to an artist's character. Which would have the bigger effect on the readers of that character's comic: an increase in printing costs or an increase in the artist's licensing fee? Explain. 2. Explain why a rent increase at Tony's Pizza Parlor would not cause Tony to raise his prices, but a rent increase at Tony's competitors may cause him to raise prices. 3.A person argues that if the prison sentences for all crimes were doubled, this would worsen the problem of overcrowded prisons, all other things being equal. Use the concept of demand to explain why this argument is incorrect. 4. Suppose there are only two goods (bread and wine) and only two countries (Engla [cont.]
Asked by big jow - Sun Feb 22 17:02:44 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This is your professor Ivan J Fernandez. Please, finish the exam and submit it before the deadline. The asnwers to these questions are in your textbook, and in my Power-point presentation.
Answered by ivanjfernandez - Tue Feb 24 08:32:16 2009
Q. 1. A comic book company pays an annual licensing fee of $10,000 for the rights to an artist's character. Which would have the bigger effect on the readers of that character's comic: an increase in printing costs or an increase in the artist's licensing fee? Explain. 2. Explain why a rent increase at Tony's Pizza Parlor would not cause Tony to raise his prices, but a rent increase at Tony's competitors may cause him to raise prices. 3.A person argues that if the prison sentences for all crimes were doubled, this would worsen the problem of overcrowded prisons, all other things being equal. Use the concept of demand to explain why this argument is incorrect. 4. Suppose there are only two goods (bread and wine) and only two countries (Engla [cont.]
Asked by big jow - Sun Feb 22 17:02:44 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. This is your professor Ivan J Fernandez. Please, finish the exam and submit it before the deadline. The asnwers to these questions are in your textbook, and in my Power-point presentation.
Answered by ivanjfernandez - Tue Feb 24 08:32:16 2009
CAn you read my essay and help me edit it?? its on Les Miserables..?
Q. In the book Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, the main character, Jean Valjean, changes his identity many times to protect him self. He has three main identities: Jean Valjean, Father and Monsieur Madeleine, and Monsieur Fauchelevent. Each time his identity changes, he tries to live a more honest life. Jean Valjean was a man who stolen a loaf of bread for his sisters family, and as a result would have to live the rest of his life labeled a convict. After being treated poorly and not being able to find a place to stay the night, Valjean has to spend the night on a bench. A woman tells him to try to Bishops house. The Bishop accepts Valjean into his house. He gives him a warm mean and a nice bed, but even the Bishop s generosity did not stop… [cont.]
Asked by Kayla R - Sun Nov 4 11:05:03 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Victor Hugo's 'Les Miserables' portrays the main character, Jean Valjean, as having three main identitys. These three identitys: Jean Valjean, Father and Monsieur Madeleine, and Monsieur Fauchelevent each in turn are used throughout the story to protect himself from his past crimes. Every time his identity changes, he uses it as a fresh start to try to live a more honest life. In the book, Jean Valjean stole a loaf of bread to feed his sisters family , and as a result he was caught and was made to live the rest of his life labeled a convict. After being treated poorly and not being able to find a place to stay the night, Valjean has to spend the night on a bench where a woman tells him to try to Bishops house as a place to stay. The Bishop… [cont.]
Answered by lottie - Sun Nov 4 11:26:57 2007
Q. In the book Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, the main character, Jean Valjean, changes his identity many times to protect him self. He has three main identities: Jean Valjean, Father and Monsieur Madeleine, and Monsieur Fauchelevent. Each time his identity changes, he tries to live a more honest life. Jean Valjean was a man who stolen a loaf of bread for his sisters family, and as a result would have to live the rest of his life labeled a convict. After being treated poorly and not being able to find a place to stay the night, Valjean has to spend the night on a bench. A woman tells him to try to Bishops house. The Bishop accepts Valjean into his house. He gives him a warm mean and a nice bed, but even the Bishop s generosity did not stop… [cont.]
Asked by Kayla R - Sun Nov 4 11:05:03 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Victor Hugo's 'Les Miserables' portrays the main character, Jean Valjean, as having three main identitys. These three identitys: Jean Valjean, Father and Monsieur Madeleine, and Monsieur Fauchelevent each in turn are used throughout the story to protect himself from his past crimes. Every time his identity changes, he uses it as a fresh start to try to live a more honest life. In the book, Jean Valjean stole a loaf of bread to feed his sisters family , and as a result he was caught and was made to live the rest of his life labeled a convict. After being treated poorly and not being able to find a place to stay the night, Valjean has to spend the night on a bench where a woman tells him to try to Bishops house as a place to stay. The Bishop… [cont.]
Answered by lottie - Sun Nov 4 11:26:57 2007
I need help defining these psychology terms?
Q. 262. social loafing 263. social trap 264. somatoform disorders: major kinds 265. sematosensory cortex: location and used for what sense 266. stages of learning (acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, etc.) 267. standard deviation 268. Stanley Milgram s experiment with obedience 269. Stanley Schachter s Two Factor Theory 270. stereotype 271. stimulus generalization 272. stranger anxiety 273. systematic desensitization: a.k.a. a kind of counter conditioning 274. Tay-Sachs disease 275. testable hypothesis 276. thalamus (& what sense doesn t get routed through here) 277. Thorndike Law of Effect 278. thyroid gland 279. token economy 280. Tourette s Syndrome 281. tragedy of the commons 282. transduction 283. Turner s syndrome (X with… [cont.]
Asked by trustworthy - Fri May 22 11:42:19 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. How to Operate Your Textbook 1. Turn to index 2. Look up term/phrase 3. Note page number 4. Turn to page number 5. Locate term/phrase "I have no textbook" alternative / How to Operate Google 1. Power up computer 2. Connect to internet 3. Load browser of choice (e.g., IE, Firefox, Opera, Safari) 4. Browse to 5. Input word/phrase 6. Press "enter" on your keyboard 7. Click on websites 8. Locate word/phrase Voila!
Answered by michele - Fri May 22 11:48:34 2009
Q. 262. social loafing 263. social trap 264. somatoform disorders: major kinds 265. sematosensory cortex: location and used for what sense 266. stages of learning (acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, etc.) 267. standard deviation 268. Stanley Milgram s experiment with obedience 269. Stanley Schachter s Two Factor Theory 270. stereotype 271. stimulus generalization 272. stranger anxiety 273. systematic desensitization: a.k.a. a kind of counter conditioning 274. Tay-Sachs disease 275. testable hypothesis 276. thalamus (& what sense doesn t get routed through here) 277. Thorndike Law of Effect 278. thyroid gland 279. token economy 280. Tourette s Syndrome 281. tragedy of the commons 282. transduction 283. Turner s syndrome (X with… [cont.]
Asked by trustworthy - Fri May 22 11:42:19 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. How to Operate Your Textbook 1. Turn to index 2. Look up term/phrase 3. Note page number 4. Turn to page number 5. Locate term/phrase "I have no textbook" alternative / How to Operate Google 1. Power up computer 2. Connect to internet 3. Load browser of choice (e.g., IE, Firefox, Opera, Safari) 4. Browse to 5. Input word/phrase 6. Press "enter" on your keyboard 7. Click on websites 8. Locate word/phrase Voila!
Answered by michele - Fri May 22 11:48:34 2009
Is it just a coincidence that.....?
Q. ...the government of the U.K. has lost the ability to recieve emails at a time when most of us hate everything about them??? Also, how would i go about persuading all of Britain that the current way of running a country is wrong for us??? I would like to propose that we have a set of representatives for each and every walk of life - a working class rep, a middle class rep, a professional rep and so on and so forth - instead of greedy fat cat business men who know nothing about struggling to find 1 to buy a loaf of bread for the kids tea or having our pants pulled down by the people we're supposed to 'trust' to guide us through life's problems. Judges too - WHO'S side are they on??? They're called 'judges' for a reason. They're supposed to… [cont.]
Asked by Matt E - Tue Oct 21 15:21:37 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Ranting much? Yes, everyone's agreed British society is debauched. When I was younger (pre-97) I felt privileged, honoured to be British. Now British, Britain symbolises everything I detest about the UK, in fact I'd rather be recognised as a citizen of the UK, than I would British, British has been sullied.
Answered by Nom de guerre - Tue Oct 21 16:00:29 2008
Q. ...the government of the U.K. has lost the ability to recieve emails at a time when most of us hate everything about them??? Also, how would i go about persuading all of Britain that the current way of running a country is wrong for us??? I would like to propose that we have a set of representatives for each and every walk of life - a working class rep, a middle class rep, a professional rep and so on and so forth - instead of greedy fat cat business men who know nothing about struggling to find 1 to buy a loaf of bread for the kids tea or having our pants pulled down by the people we're supposed to 'trust' to guide us through life's problems. Judges too - WHO'S side are they on??? They're called 'judges' for a reason. They're supposed to… [cont.]
Asked by Matt E - Tue Oct 21 15:21:37 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Ranting much? Yes, everyone's agreed British society is debauched. When I was younger (pre-97) I felt privileged, honoured to be British. Now British, Britain symbolises everything I detest about the UK, in fact I'd rather be recognised as a citizen of the UK, than I would British, British has been sullied.
Answered by Nom de guerre - Tue Oct 21 16:00:29 2008
I this sentance to light? Forty lashes for five loaves of bread.?
Q. "a Saudi court has ordered a 75-year-old widow to be sentenced to 40 lashes and four months in prison, to be followed by deportation for "mingling with two young men who were not her close relatives" Al-Watan identified one man as Fahd al-Anzi, the nephew of Sawadi's late husband, and the other as his friend and business partner Hadiyan bin Zein. It said they were arrested by the religious police after delivering the bread
Asked by Croxx - Thu Mar 12 08:09:05 2009 - - 14 Answers - 2 Comments
A. It's barbaric and if they do carry this out it will surely kill her, beyond comprehension and inhumane is the mindset that instills these ridiculous laws. I know that there is a human rights group taking up the case and appealing. I know who should be whipped the sadistic ''people for want of a better word'', that bring in these type of laws.
Answered by unknown - Thu Mar 12 08:40:19 2009
Q. "a Saudi court has ordered a 75-year-old widow to be sentenced to 40 lashes and four months in prison, to be followed by deportation for "mingling with two young men who were not her close relatives" Al-Watan identified one man as Fahd al-Anzi, the nephew of Sawadi's late husband, and the other as his friend and business partner Hadiyan bin Zein. It said they were arrested by the religious police after delivering the bread
Asked by Croxx - Thu Mar 12 08:09:05 2009 - - 14 Answers - 2 Comments
A. It's barbaric and if they do carry this out it will surely kill her, beyond comprehension and inhumane is the mindset that instills these ridiculous laws. I know that there is a human rights group taking up the case and appealing. I know who should be whipped the sadistic ''people for want of a better word'', that bring in these type of laws.
Answered by unknown - Thu Mar 12 08:40:19 2009
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'Prison loaf'
Sat Oct 17 19:23:02 2009 [ refresh local cache ]
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vegrice 740479 jpg
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[source page]
trust ground beef or eggs raw so I didn t want to feed that uncooked I do think they need some carbohydrates and I wanted to feed them a better quality and stuff they can digest better Thus began the Prison Loaf You probably don t want to know why I call it that but that is what it s called around here Ground beef that s 3 kilos at the top cooking brown rice or oats
300px x 400px | 33.00kB
[source page]
trust ground beef or eggs raw so I didn t want to feed that uncooked I do think they need some carbohydrates and I wanted to feed them a better quality and stuff they can digest better Thus began the Prison Loaf You probably don t want to know why I call it that but that is what it s called around here Ground beef that s 3 kilos at the top cooking brown rice or oats
assorted loaf : INGLORIOUS BASTARDS
pickleloaf
Sat, 05 Sep 2009 03:21:01 GM
skip to main | skip to sidebar. assorted . loaf. ... Set in Europe during WWII, a group of American soldiers are in the process of being shipped off to military . prison. for a variety of infractions, ranging from desertion to murder. ...
pickleloaf
Sat, 05 Sep 2009 03:21:01 GM
skip to main | skip to sidebar. assorted . loaf. ... Set in Europe during WWII, a group of American soldiers are in the process of being shipped off to military . prison. for a variety of infractions, ranging from desertion to murder. ...
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