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I always like reading about people’s jail experiences because I spent five years from the All You Need Is Love Hippie Ugly Christmas Sweater Christmas Gift For Men And Women – I was a guard. I’m going to guess my facility was a little larger – we would have 2-3 inmates in a cell and more time locked down in cells, plus we did headcounts three times a shift (12 hours). Food sucked (we got our lunches provided to us but it was the same thing the inmates ate plus some other easy-to-mass-produce option; plus, if there were extra trays sent for meals, we might grab one to snack on). We had one “open dorm” style housing unit – it was one of our two female units and as a female officer I spent a lot of time down there. No “watching TikTok” (we weren’t even allowed internet on our computers and you’d be fired for bringing your phone in) but holy cow, I don’t know how many thousands of games of spider solitaire I played. Most of the inmates weren’t too bad, honestly. It really changed my perspective on addiction and the importance of accessible mental health treatment because 95%+ of the addicts I talked to were self-medicating trauma. We did have some pretty notorious inmates, including a couple involved in a very well known murder, and a mother/daughter duo I later saw on a crime documentary. It was an incredibly depressing job, because I’d get to know inmates, they’d get released, and a few weeks later they’d be back, withdrawing, thirty pounds lighter, and just a shell of their sober selves. I initially got into law enforcement because I wanted to make a positive difference in the world, and between always seeing the negative, the “bad cops” who just liked to throw their weight around, and the stupid political games you had to play to get on patrol, to stay on patrol, and to advance in any way, I just felt emotionally destroyed when I quit. I was depressed to the point of suicidal ideation setting in and couldn’t get help for it because I literally knew people who had been fired for mental health issues. Honestly, sounds like OOP’s experience really wasn’t that bad – I hope he learned a lesson about driving drunk though, my husband’s best friend was killed by a drink driver last December and it’s been one of the most horrifying things to deal with. I have zero sympathy for anyone who chooses to drive when they’ve been drinking.

All You Need Is Love Hippie Ugly Christmas Sweater Christmas Gift For Men And Women,
Best All You Need Is Love Hippie Ugly Christmas Sweater Christmas Gift For Men And Women
Part of living in a All You Need Is Love Hippie Ugly Christmas Sweater Christmas Gift For Men And Women is paying taxes that go towards supporting people who need it most, or where would we be? I am fine paying taxes towards roads, schools, WIC, Welfare, school lunch programs, day care assistance- this is how we help people out of the hell holes of poverty so that they might be able to escape the very real and damaging cycle and be able to someday pay their share into the same pot for those less fortunate or lucky. Institutionalized racism is still a thing, even if you don’t see it happening with your own eyes. POC, women, minorities- we are not paid the same as the average white male for the same work. We are still marginalized in society. We still do not have equal representation in our government. We have a long way to go before the playing field is actually equal. Furthermore on the topic of an equal playing field- people obtaining the same rights and privileges you have does not mean you are LOSING your rights and privileges, but people are simply catching

As a general aside, I knew several 14-15 year old girls when I was about the All You Need Is Love Hippie Ugly Christmas Sweater Christmas Gift For Men And Women age who fell out with their families for whatever ridiculous reason (by today’s standards…hopefully) who made friends and became roommates with other slightly older girls in their late teens (who had similar histories and had their own places). They just got jobs under the table as waitresses and such (it was the 80’s, not sure that’s so easy these days) from sympathetic business owners. For the most part the just got on with their lives, eventually they got back in contact with their families. Seemed not that uncommon to me at the time as a teenager myself. This is almost 30 years ago. Things have changed. Parents used to throw their kids out for back talking too much and sneaking out too much, being gay. Seemed crazy to me as a kid, and absolutely horrible now as an adult. Oh, and I get this was reported as a disappearance/runaway and I mean to imply nothing about this instance, but you would be surprised how the parent’s story turned to ‘they ran away’ to the police, when it was actually ‘get out of my house and don’t come back’. All that said, I don’t think any child’s disappearance should be treated as if this is the case. I only point this out since there seemed to be some opinion that it couldn’t be by both the OP and several responders.