and ridiculous, but the intent is what s important to focus on. and his intent was not to hurt anybody. his intent was actually to help. and how many of the prosecutions have you seen over the years where because you would not refuse an order that you thought was lawful to shoot this person over here in combat when they say you should have known not to shoot and now we re going to bring you back to states to prosecute you and put you in the human warehouse, concrete tomb, a cell, because you did not disregard the order, in this case, he s actually leaving so he can tell people what s going on wrong and now they want to prosecute him. for being a whistle-blower. as you well know, a lot of people disagree with your position. this is a very controversial case. it is one we re going to follow close closely. we hope you will come back and walk through it as more details emerge. thank you. thank you. you re welcome. now, rescue teams are searching the debris after mass i landslide
the only home i know is surrounded by stone it s a sense of freedom, you know? it frees my mind. i m not thinking about brushy mountain or prison, you know? i m lonesome and blue, that s all i can say i m lonesome and blue, that s all i can say it s no cover fines, it s been a while since i had written it. every year i change the amount of years that i have been in prison. next on lockup: raw. it s like a tomb. a concrete tomb. they re considered the worst of the worst. the sky, the residues and sunlight, but it s fading away like butter on cornbread. but these inmates have found an icon to relate to. that s that s almost like something shakespeare himself
having feces or urine thrown on you. spit, blood, semen, anything you can think of has happened in this building. but for inmates in the shu, the monotony breeds a horror of its own. they told us what it was like to spend 23 hours a day in a windowless concrete cell. sometimes for years at a time. you re always trying to find a way to come up for air. the place suffocates you. you know what i m saying? it s a tone, for me, you know? it s like the tomb. it s like a tomb, a concrete tomb. what if they sent these punk ass dudes against and he would have succeeded in killing them during our first day on the shu we walked into a heated exchange about murder. the killer. so what you saying the killer? you say but it wasn t about prison violence. saying macbeth sent him. here s what i m saying. it was about shakespeare. what was really bizarre,
i m not thinking about brushy mountain or prison, you know? i m lonesome and blue, that s all i can say i m lonesome and blue, that s all i can say it s no cover fines, it s been a while since i had written it. every year i change the amount of years that i have been in prison. next on lockup: raw. it s like a tomb. a concrete tomb. they re considered the worst of the worst. the sky, the residues and sunlight, but it s fading away like butter on cornbread. but these inmates have found an icon to relate to. that s that s almost like something shakespeare himself would write.
but for inmates in the shu, the monotony breeds a horror of its own. they told us what it was like to spend 23 hours a day in a windowless concrete cell. sometimes for years at a time. you re always trying to find a way to come up for air. you know? the place suffocates you. you know what i m saying? it s a tomb for me, you know? it s like the tomb. it s like a tomb, a concrete tomb. what if they sent these punk ass dudes against and he would have succeeded in killing them during our first day on the shu we walked into a heated exchange about murder. the killer. so what you saying the killer? you say but it wasn t about prison violence. saying macbeth sent him. here s what i m saying. it was about shakespeare. what was really bizarre,