Death Camp guards charged
The state has an absolute duty to protect every man in its custody. Instead of protecting the millions of men it holds in hell hole cages and death camps, states condone and encourage violent racist gang warfare within the walls of their death camps.
Governor Jeb Bush and the Florida legislature claims to have closed its death camps for young men and replaced them with camps more focused on education and counseling. CNN Story Call me a skeptic, but Bob wonders why such camps are needed. Prior to the middle of the feminist century our government did not maintain prisons intended for young men who are not considered old enough to get a legal job. They should be applauded for closing the death camps, but we haven't seen any significant change in the excuses for rounding up young men nor in the number of young men who's lives they destroy.
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Such camps weren't needed because young men were busy assuming responsibility, striving for adulthood, and emulating the responsible man of the house in a two-parent home. Feminism has extended childhood, instituted touchy-feely forms of comical punishment, and eliminated the important father role model. If a young man became a persistent criminal nuisance to his community, the menfolk either ran him out of town or he met a timely end.
Those camps are not death camps. Bob has a childish, overactive imagination and too much free time.
Note to Anonymous(November 28, 2006 4:56 PM)
Your claim that it was not a death camp will have credibilty when Mr. Martin Anderson comes forth to support your misandrist lie.
Until the 1950s, state prisons were hellholes. They used convict labor (especially in the South and especially for Blacks). Convicts were whipped, overworked, sometimes tortured in sweatboxes. Prisoners were at the mercy of the guards' sadistic whims.
In the 1930's, a man was sent to a Florida work camp for stowing away on a freight train (not a serious crime). The (White) man was put on a work detail in the heat of the Florida summer, clearing brush. He became sick, dizzy, and nearly dropped. The guard deemed it necessary to administer another whippin'. The man died.
Also of interest: Delaware retained the whipping post (Red Hannah) until approx. 1952, when the last flogging was administered. Wife-beaters could be sentenced to flogging. Only in the 1970s did DE officially remove the penalty of whipping from its books.
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