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View Full Version : After 28 years in prison, man emerges into a terrifying alien world of cellphones and



Serpo
26th September 2011, 06:32 PM
http://fastcache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/8/2011/09/_jpeg_image__628x418_pixels_.jpg culture (http://io9.com/culture/)
By Charlie Jane Anders (http://io9.com/people/charliejane/) Sep 26, 2011 1:09 PM
24,904 http://cache.io9.com/assets/base.v10/img/icons/rightbar.flame.png 141http://cache.io9.com/assets/base.v10/img/icons/rightbar.comment.png









Randall Lee Church didn't believe his fellow inmates when they warned him about culture shock after he got out of prison — he thought they were just jealous. But then Church, who'd been locked up since 1983, emerged into a world that made no sense.
When Church got out of prison, he tells the Houston Chronicle (http://www.chron.com/news/local_news/article/Convict-couldn-t-handle-being-free-2187648.php), "I didn't know how to use computers or cell phones or the Internet... It was so overwhelming. I was constantly embarrassed by simple things I didn't know."
As the Chronicle says, "Prices were higher and scanned with bar codes. Video games were more realistic. People were always on their cell phones. Cars had childproof locks."
If you want to understand just how much the world has changed in the past few decades, imagine being Randall Lee Church, who went to prison at age 18, at a time when almost nobody had a mobile phone and the internet was in its infancy. Of course, it wasn't just culture shock that faced Church — like most newly released prisoners, he also had few job skills and no support system to help him find a job and affordable housing. It's hard to reenter society in any case, but it's much harder during an apocalyptically bad economy.
In the end, faced with a world that made no sense to him, Church burned down an abandoned house, in order to get sent back to prison. [Chron (http://www.chron.com/news/local_news/article/Convict-couldn-t-handle-being-free-2187648.php)]

Twisted Titan
26th September 2011, 06:54 PM
he should have went for the gusto and bumped off a zionist overlord.

iOWNme
26th September 2011, 07:38 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kotNxb2YApk&feature=related

joboo
26th September 2011, 09:40 PM
Sign of economic times. Easier for him to be in jail.

No way the guy is getting a job. Jail offers food, shelter, and work.

Job interview was as simple as lighting a fire.

MNeagle
26th September 2011, 09:48 PM
And medical. A few others have done crime just for the medical benefits recently.

Shami-Amourae
26th September 2011, 09:52 PM
That's very true. The prices of video games have been approximately $50 since the 1980s.

Hatha Sunahara
26th September 2011, 11:11 PM
Do prisons have tattoo parlors? Or do the vast majority who are covered with tattoos get them before they rendezvous with the Penal System?

Criminals are useful to TPTB. They can be used to torture 'political' prisoners. If you're a political prisoner, your punishment isn't the jail alone, it's the criminals in it as well.

I once read a psychology study that claimed that violent criminals run out of steam at around age 35, or 40 at the latest. That explains the arson. Arson is an easy crime. Jail is Home Sweet Home. Nice safe place.

Hatha

Gaillo
26th September 2011, 11:16 PM
Hatha,
From what I've heard, tattooing is a prison mini-industry and social "scene". They apparently use sewing needles or pins and pen ink, without the tattoo gun... OUCH! :o

ximmy
26th September 2011, 11:19 PM
poor guy...