Live as hard as you possibly can

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Live as hard as you possibly can

Well, my name is Ray. I live in scenic Boone, North Carolina. It's a fantastic town with fantastic people and culture. I travel, I eat, I blog, I do Kung Fu, I meet people. Please, don't be shy.

Things I like: Italian food, martial arts, shenanigans, adventures, getting out of my comfort zone, meeting new people, trying new things, seeing new sights, traveling to foreign nations and lands, the feeling of being able to trust someone.

I wonder if it's bad that the last one is the most rare...

Things I dislike: closed-mindedness, unfounded arguments, bias, non-fresh mangoes, small dogs that bark uncontrollably, feeling alone.

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  • Five Facts That Put America to Shame

    (4.) We give prison sentences for smoking marijuana, but not for billion-dollar fraud

    About half of our world-leading prison population is in jail for non-violent drug offenses. Americans have also been arrested for handing out free food in a park. Mothers in Ohio and Connecticut were jailed for enrolling their kids in out-of-district schools. As of 2003 in California there were 344 individuals serving sentences of 25 years or more for shoplifting as a third offense, in many cases after two non-violent offenses.

    How does the market deal with this steady tide of petty crime? It strives for more. The new trend of private prisons is dependent on maintaining a sizable prison population to guarantee profits, with no incentive for rehabilitation.

    As the number of inmates has surged, the people who devastated countless American lives “get out of jail free.” The savings and loan fraud cost the nation between $300 billion and $500 billion, about 100 times more than the total cost of burglaries in 2010. The financial system bailout has already cost the country $3 trillion. Goldman Sachs packaged bad debt, sold it under a different name, persuaded ratings services to label it AAA, and then bet against their own financial creation by selling it short. Other firms accused of fraud and insider trading were Morgan Stanley, Bear Stearns, Bank of America, Countrywide Financial, and Wells Fargo. The New York Times reported in 2008 that the Justice Department had postponed the bribery or fraud prosecutions of over 50 corporations, choosing instead to enter into agreements involving fines and ‘monitoring’ periods.

    Posted on May 17, 2012 via AZspot with 202 notes

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