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Which One Goes To Prison

What should I do when I'm about to go to prison, maybe for a long time, and my parents are old?

It blows my mind how so many people on Quora just have an opinion they have to share without a damn clue.Listen... I've been to prison. I know what you are about to go through.Here's what I would do:1.) Ask the court to be located near your parents so it doesn't put a hardship on them to visit you. You're going to need them more than they are going to need you. It will be good for both of you that you get to see each other as often as possible.2.) Accept this fact: Your parents and possibly 3 others in your life will be there for you. Forget the rest. Spend as much time with your parents and the top 3 as possible before your surrender.3.) Accept this fact: Your life as you know it now is over. Prison will be the buffer between your current life and the new life you are going to start building.4.) Accept this fact: You will begin building your new life the day after you surrender. The first day you will cry and it's going to hurt.I don't care what you did to get yourself in this situation, we all make mistakes.Draw close to the people that truly love you and more importantly, draw close to GOD.You will get through this. How you get through it is up to you.Key advice once you're incarcerated:1.) Don't go to prison thinking you can still have your outside life—you can't.2.) As fast as possible, establish a routine. It will make your time fly.3.) Stay away from the gambling, drugs, alcohol, gangs, etc. Keep to yourself.4.) Not everyone in prison is guilty of what they were charged for, but believe me, we are all guilty of something. Don't trust anyone.5.) Spend time in the law library and help others with things like their GEDs/Reading/Etc. You will earn amazing loyalties that may protect you when you least expect it.6.) Don't count the days, hours, seconds, microseconds, picoseconds—it will drive you crazy.7.) You will make some friends. Just don't put your faith into them too easily.8.) Write to one person in your life every day. Stay positive.9.) Start building your plan for your new life once you're released. Execute what you can and schedule the rest.10.) Take good care of yourself physically, get plenty of exercise and watch what you eat.I don't have to write "Pray everyday" because believe me, you will do that one on your own.Good luck and if you have more questions, ask me and I'll be delighted to answer.

Can one ask to go to prison for no reason?

No, and a bit yes.Thankfully for you, me and everybody else, we aren’t living in XV/XVI century, where kings could throw in prison anybody. The occidental justice system is based on England’s criminal laws, where you’re basically innocent until proven otherwise. Therefore, you can’t be threw in prison for no reason.But, I know an exception. In Quebec, Canada, in october of 1970, a terrorist group captured two politicians. In answer to this, the Canada’s prime minister of the time, Pierre Elliot Trudeau (the dad of the actual Canada’s prime minister), put the Loi sur les mesures de guerre in action: police could enter in houses and put people in cells without other reason than being suspected to be affiliated with the terrorist group.Edit: My bad, I misread the question…Shortly, you can ask to go to prison, since often there are free services in prison that aren’t available for homeless people, but nothing is saying you will be able to go in. You can’t go in prison if you did nothing wrong.Sadly, there are poor people doing crimes, just hoping to go there (not judging or anything, this is the truth, but it’s not that common in Canada, since there are way less prisons here than in USA), and they can have free food, free medical services, etc… And, anyway, they are knowing how to “survive” in prison, since they were used to it in streets.

Which episode does Luffy go to prison in One Piece?

"I heard that everything that happens before Luffy goes to prison is almost irrelevant"

I highly disagree with that statement.

If you start at that point, you would essentially be skipping a good third of the story, including how Luffy meets his crewmates and what they've been through up until then. It's like if you started with Naruto Shippuden and skipped Naruto; you'll be asking yourself stuff like "why are they there, who are these people" and so on, when the story has already established those characters early on.

Especially in a story like One Piece, where there are many small details in the beginning which don't seem important, but end up having a major impact on the story later on. You would basically missing out on all of that, which would kinda defeat the purpose from watching it in the first place.

Would you rather go to War or Prison?

Would you rather go to War or Prison?
Why?

Lets say World War 3 started and your 18 years or older and you have been drafted into the Army.
If you Don't go to war,then you have to go to Prison.Which one would you rather go to?

When someone goes to jail or prison, what happens to their house, bills, and property?

For those who are fortunate enough to be able to just report at the mandated date, you can get your affairs in order.Those less fortunate usually lose everything, barring having family members and friends trustworthy enough to take care of them.And unless you have a way to pay your bills and debts. Don't worry, they'll still be there for when you get out. Along with your credit ruined.One of the many obstacles released prisoners face is cleaning up the mess they left behind. Most people who have never been incarcerated for a long time have absolutely no idea how severe the total damage to one's life even a year spent in prison can be.Our society suffers from the illusion that once the sentence is complete, you've done your time and paid your debt to society. It's just an illusion.

Where do Hermaphrodites go to prison?

Human beings are not truly hermaphrodites b/c they cannot produce both egg and sperm just to let you know. A transgendered individual probably would go to the prison where he or she fits in best. If they look like a male they'll go to a male prison and if a female to a female prison.

A hermaphrodite is a creature that can produce both egg and sperm. They are found in non-human species.

What happens when a prison guard goes to jail?

You know, it's interesting. At the bottom of the ladder in the prison population are “chimos,” those convicted of sexual misconduct with minors. I have heard that police officers don’t fare well, but interestingly, I’ve heard that “cop killers” don’t get much more respect than chimos.I’ve spent a lot of my career talking and interacting with both inmates and guards, and there isn’t the animosity one would think. By and large, each recognizes that the other (more so the prisoner than the guard) is stuck there, and each recognizes that if he depends on brute force or intimidation, the day will come when he’s outnumbered and gets his ass kicked, so, unless one of them is pathologically violent and enjoys combat (and some in each group do), they go along to get along.There might be more animosity toward police officers, since an officer’s contact with an arrestee is typically more confrontational. But again, I think to a lesser extent the same principle applies. I would think that a police officer in an anti-gang unit might have a particularly rough time, particularly if he is perceived to be racist.Frequently they will transfer former police officers, especially high profile ones with notorious crimes (we had a sheriff’s deputy who killed his wife, and was a jackass to boot) who was sent out of state.But inmates have told me they needed their “papers” (their Judgment and Sentence paperwork before going to “the joint”) because other inmates would demand to see their paperwork, and if they couldn’t present it they would be suspected of sex offenses.Not surprisingly, those convicted of white collar crimes, or of crimes involving some imagination, ingenuity, or “balls” commanded the most respect, since they were often in a position to help their friends “game” the system.Generally property criminals received no special notice as far as I could tell. Same for drug offenders.Violent offenses were a different matter, and it depended upon victims, crimes, or other circumstances.“Rapos” weren’t much better regarded than “chimos.”All else being equal, older guys who show respect and most importantly, keep their mouths shut, mind their own business and show an appropriate well-timed (and not misdirected) sense of humor do well. And the more educated, the better.

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