house you live in, how much money you got. that s kind of irrelevant in prison because it s a pecking order society. it s the strong, you know, and that s how you survive. before i met him, all i had was this image of this gruff, ripped guy who could take on the whole team of officers, and upon meeting him i was shocked to find out that he s actually kind of a calm and collected guy who is not this monster that you see on these cell extraction videos. i didn t even know how to turn the computer on until recently. what was most interesting was he was just learning how to use a computer and he was told by everybody that he was somewhat famous thanks to the internet and these cell extractions. it s kind of fascinating to be able to talk to some of these people that i meet online and stuff. to help me to adjust back into society. they re not convicts. they re not in a pecking order state of mind. he was kind of excited by the fact that there were so many posts, so many people res
corzine is testifying, but this is one of those issues that slipped below the radar and it shouldn t. this administration refuses to acknowledge and identify the threat from homegrown radical islam. i mean this is fairly outrageous that they would describe fort hood as workplace violence. this is political correctness runamuck. this is what the administration has been doing for a long, longtime. i give my chairman of the homeland security committee, peter king, a lot of credit, because he held this first hearing, boy, six, seven, eight months ago, and he caught a lot of gruff for it, and he went right at, and we re not afraid to go at political correctness. martha: i think the department of defense would say maybe this is being misinterpreted, in terms of the way they say this. they are saying how the department is dealing with the threat of violent islamist
really is, because everybody is wearing the same clothes, everything is uniform. it don t matter about what type of car you drive, what type of house you live in, how much money you got. that s kind of irrelevant in prison because it s a pecking order society. it s the strong, you know, and that s how you survive. before i met him, all i had was this image of this gruff, ripped guy who could take on the whole team of officers, and upon meeting him i was shocked to find out that he s actually kind of a calm and collected guy who is not this monster that you see on these cell extraction videos. i didn t even know how to turn the computer on until recently. what was most interesting was he was just learning how to use a computer and he was told by everybody that he was somewhat famous thanks to the internet and these cell extractions. it s kind of fascinating to
roy, who had served his time at a different prison than ray, had been out for four months at the time of our visit. but after nearly 20 years of incarceration, much of it in solitary confinement, he was still struggling with the transition to the free world. you go from a pecking order type mentality into an economic society, and it s tough, it really is, because everybody is wearing the same clothes, everything is uniform. it don t matter about what type of car you drive, what type of house you live in, how much money you got. that s kind of irrelevant in prison because it s a pecking order society. it s the strong, you know, and that s how you survive. before i met him, all i had was this image of this gruff, ripped guy who could take on the whole team of officers, and upon meeting him i was shocked to find out that he s actually kind of a calm and collected guy who is not this monster that you see on these cell extraction videos.
how it is being out of prison. roy, who had served his time at a different prison than ray, had been out for four months at the time of our visit. but after nearly 20 years of incarceration, much of it in solitary confinement, he was still struggling with the transition to the free world. you go from a pecking order type mentality into an economic society, and it s tough, it really is, because everybody is wearing the same clothes, everything is uniform. it don t matter about what type of car you drive, what type of house you live in, how much money you got. that s kind of irrelevant in prison because it s a pecking order society. it s the strong, you know, and that s how you survive. before i met him, all i had was this image of this gruff, ripped guy who could take on the whole team of officers, and upon meeting him i was shocked to find out that he s actually kind of a calm and collected guy who is not this monster that you see on these cell extraction videos.