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Interview with an Ex Felon Part 1

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Uploaded by on Sep 5, 2007

A riveting interview with an ex felon.
Part 1 of 3 by Renford Reese, Ph.D

  • likes, 3 dislikes

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  • im not buying any of this weak ass shit, i did 10 years straight in the penn doc, i got out got hooked on meth, grew up on a carnival lot and was basically a class A asshole, now this cat wants pity, fuck that hes using this shit as a crutch, im now 41 years old and have gotten my G.E.D, am currently in college(vatterott)for diesel mechanics..moral of the story...it aint race, how a person was brought up, its how bad you want to change or if you just wanna keep placing blame on others

  • Your name is "lynched101"" and you feel the need to just show up and drop the expletive, "Nigga." Truly, you must embody human garbage. Sad.

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All Comments (29)

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  • This guy remind me somehow O'Reily from Oz. Maybe in prison he acted like him.

  • @licariman They want pity for their childhoods but at the same time they refuse therapy which would actually make their shitty childhoods stop bothering them so much.

  • @tellurmomthanx Congratulations on overcoming the bullshit and getting your life together. I really respect a lot, man. Some people use prison as an opportuniy to turn their lives around and other people like this guy just use it to get themselves sucked further and further into gang life. Sad, really.

  • @tellurmomthanx srt9 nigga, str8 up!

  • Read: A fucking PhD doesn't mean the guy is an expert in linguistics. You can get a PhD in the agriculture and growth of fucking BANANAS!

  • May I also say its a parents responsibility to society to raise their children properly.

  • Never a truer word said.

  • In 1966 the U.S. Department of Labor established The Federal Bonding Program to provide Fidelity Bonds that guarantee honesty for at-risk, hard-to-place job seekers. The bonds cover the first six months of employment. There is no cost to the job applicant or the employer.

  • I truly believe that parents have a lot to answer for, granted this isn't the case all the time but the majority it is. I have 3 children myself and the training starts young teach them right from wrong and make sure it's every day but also give huge amounts of love and support, my children are my life and that was the responsibility I took on when I decided to have them.

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