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pete i couldn’t read all that, but let me say that the willie horton ads were rough, but fair and accurate. because it worked, doesn’t mean it was racist.
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also pete, why wasn’t your post a classic example of whataboutism? all you did, was whataboutism?
i don’t have a problem with pointing to past examples to try to prove hypocrisy. your side calls it whataboutism when my side does it, but it’s brilliant when you do it. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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It absolutely is whataboutism though in Trump’s case that would be citing one case to justify Trumps many transgressions In this case both parties have pulled this BS for years and justified it by saying their position is the one that will save us Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Willie Horton is a great example of fear politics Bad things happen in a free country that’s one of the chances we take We have the highest % of people in prison in the world, claim to be the bastion of freedom and have the highest recidivism. Give me a rational explanation for that. As an aside, Immigrants are a insignificant point in that equation. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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an idiotliberal politician decides to give weekend passes to sociopaths who hurt people, than thatnliberal politician should have to answer for that. you disagree? it’s wrong to hold people, at least liberals, accountable? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Unless you were one of the people so judged Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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might do. your hypothetical is way off. as usual, you dodged my question. if a liberal politician advocates for policies which hurt innocent people, why is it racist fear mongering to hold him accountable? so when the gop points out what willie horton actually did, that’s playing to racial fears. but when the democrats tried to tell us that clarence thomas can’t be trusted around women, with all kinds of evidence that he didn’t do anything wrong, that’s ok. makes all kinds of sense pete. you’re blind. i could say 2+2=4, you’d immediately say i’m wrong. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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pete do you even know the facts? Horton was sentenced to life without parole for
murder. Some liberal idiot thought he was a good candidate for a weekend furlough program where released inmates promise that they’ll come back. well he didn’t, and while out, he raped somebody. that’s what happened, that’s exactly what happened. do you disagree that people who think it’s a good idea to let murderers out for the weekend on the honor system, deserve criticism? put down the kool aid, and think rationally for two seconds. just two seconds. you look at the willie horton situation, and you aren’t bothered that a murderer was able to get a weekend pass, but you’re bothered that republicans used the event to club Dukakis with? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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ideas. Creditable contributor ?? Are you ? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Wow thanks for all the points and counter points my mind has been changed so glad for all the posts thanks everyone. Said no one ever.
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Here’s what Reagan said when this happened when he was governor Under California’s program when Reagan was governor, two prisoners murdered people while out on furlough. When critics challenged the program, Reagan defended it with a vehemence that seems impossible to fathom today. “More than 20,000 already have these passes,” he said after the first murder, “and this was the only case of this kind, the only murder.” California was “leading the nation in rehabilitation,” he said. “Obviously you can't be perfect.” Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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I agree you cant be perfect, and I agree we need to be humane the way we treat prisoners. But letting brutal murderers out for a weekend on the honor system? I'm sorry, you're a lunatic if you think that's a good idea. |
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Good for her. If Trump were to say the same his constituents would erupt in applause, commending him him for not being “politically correct” and for not acting like a traditional politician, which is is why he was ultimately elected. Anyone who supports Trump and is offended by her comments is a hypocrite and most importantly, a true “snowflake.”
As a side note, Its no secret Trump has zero regard for the environment. I’ll never understand how so called “fishermen, conservationists, environmentalists, etc” can support this assclown...someone who is set on ruining the environment that we all enjoy. A truly, irresponsible, embarrassment to the Presidency if there ever was one. My first and last post in this cesspool of a forum called Politics. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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I n the mid- to late-80s, all 50 states had furlough programs. These passes allowed inmates to leave the prison for periods of time ranging from a few hours to several weeks, depending on their sentence and their behavior in prison; while in the community, they could visit family, look for work, or participate in religious activities. Almost 10 percent of state and federal prisoners received a furlough in 1987. Nationally, murderers served an average of eight years before they were paroled or commuted, so furloughs were, in the toolkit of a previous generation, an uncontroversial proposition. They offered incentives for good behavior behind bars and a good way for inmates to reacclimate to the life they would almost certainly return to outside of prison. “Use of furloughs for prisoners in the U.S. is widespread, successful and relatively problem free,” the editor of a magazine for corrections professionals told the New York Times in 1988. When we talked to him in his office at Northeastern University, where he is a professor of politics, Dukakis said furloughs were a sensible means of protecting public safety. MICHAEL DUKAKIS “One of the values of a furlough program, 0:00 Dukakis points out that one of the most liberal furlough programs at the time was the one in the federal prison system under President Reagan and Vice President Bush. And under California’s program when Reagan was governor, two Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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i will ask again, please let me know if you don’t understand the question...are you really ok with letting inmates walk out for the weekend unsupervised, when they have been convicted of murder and sentenced to life without possibility of parole. we have to draw the line somewhere about who gets furloughed, and no one has a crystal ball, so good faith mistakes will be made. i get that. but extending this privilege to people sentenced to life without parole, is asinine. can you tell us if reagan’s program did that? not all murderers are equal. very few get sentenced to life without parole, that is reserved for the worst of the worst. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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We imprison more people than any other country by quantity or percentage We have greater recidivism We’re not safer Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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dodged again. i did the research on horton, convicted of murder , sentenced to life with no parole. you think we have too many murderers locked up? we should let them go? murderers? |
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I honestly don’t care what happened “The Willie Horton ad” has been used to prevent reasonable criminal justice reform ever since it ran and has cost lives and billions Now with privatization some people are making fortunes off the system and reform or cutting recidivism is not in their interest Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Pete you dodged the question once again like Jim said
Horton had nothing to lose committing rape or any other crime while out of prison on furlough Life is life If they tack on more years it is still life Good thing he did not kill you while he was out free Get it? How is it ok? Not some know it all bull about recidivism Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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prevent brutal murderers from getting weekend passes. formthe third time, since you compared it to reagan, did he furlough murderers who were sentenced to life without parole? if not, or if you have no idea, why did you bring it up in the context of Horton? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Pete is an odd duck. He thinks he is one step ahead....a real gotcha type.!
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