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David

👤 Person
6912 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Oh, oh, oh, yeah. You just kept... So, okay, so there's that. I've always wondered that about what you thought about the time. And then here's another thing that I have a beef with everybody on that channel. Well, not everybody on the channel, but a lot of the people on that channel. This is what really drives me nuts.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

People think for some reason that the government or the state or the federal government has some sort of responsibility to rehabilitate people. Why do they think, huh? They're not even trying. Why should they try? Try convincing a bunch of people that pay them bills. Imagine spending all that millions of dollars on prisons and people in prison saying that you owe them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

People think for some reason that the government or the state or the federal government has some sort of responsibility to rehabilitate people. Why do they think, huh? They're not even trying. Why should they try? Try convincing a bunch of people that pay them bills. Imagine spending all that millions of dollars on prisons and people in prison saying that you owe them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

People think for some reason that the government or the state or the federal government has some sort of responsibility to rehabilitate people. Why do they think, huh? They're not even trying. Why should they try? Try convincing a bunch of people that pay them bills. Imagine spending all that millions of dollars on prisons and people in prison saying that you owe them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Some sort of rehabilitation. Well, it's just not the case. The government, the people in the United States don't owe people in prison any kind of rehabilitation. First of all, they were never rehabilitated to begin with. That's the problem. That's why they're in prison. Well, everybody else got habilitated, habituated to their environment. They didn't. The government doesn't owe them people.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Some sort of rehabilitation. Well, it's just not the case. The government, the people in the United States don't owe people in prison any kind of rehabilitation. First of all, they were never rehabilitated to begin with. That's the problem. That's why they're in prison. Well, everybody else got habilitated, habituated to their environment. They didn't. The government doesn't owe them people.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Some sort of rehabilitation. Well, it's just not the case. The government, the people in the United States don't owe people in prison any kind of rehabilitation. First of all, they were never rehabilitated to begin with. That's the problem. That's why they're in prison. Well, everybody else got habilitated, habituated to their environment. They didn't. The government doesn't owe them people.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

I'm not saying it's not maybe economically a good idea to try to keep their recidivism down to a minimum. But first of all, that's ridiculous. It doesn't happen. It's not going to happen. You can't. That's so ridiculous. What kind of program are you going to put people through that's going to lower that? It's never happened.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

I'm not saying it's not maybe economically a good idea to try to keep their recidivism down to a minimum. But first of all, that's ridiculous. It doesn't happen. It's not going to happen. You can't. That's so ridiculous. What kind of program are you going to put people through that's going to lower that? It's never happened.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

I'm not saying it's not maybe economically a good idea to try to keep their recidivism down to a minimum. But first of all, that's ridiculous. It doesn't happen. It's not going to happen. You can't. That's so ridiculous. What kind of program are you going to put people through that's going to lower that? It's never happened.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They've tried this throughout history in prison and with prison reform and stuff.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They've tried this throughout history in prison and with prison reform and stuff.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They've tried this throughout history in prison and with prison reform and stuff.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Well, I'm not. I don't have them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Well, I'm not. I don't have them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Well, I'm not. I don't have them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They're dumping the money in that. Here's why they're dumping the money in that program is because it sounds good. They don't have to have any kind of statistic that says anything. What they think is they got a bunch of liberal politicians who are going to pay for it because they believe in rehabilitation. That has nothing to do with the statistics or whether or not the statistics are real.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They're dumping the money in that. Here's why they're dumping the money in that program is because it sounds good. They don't have to have any kind of statistic that says anything. What they think is they got a bunch of liberal politicians who are going to pay for it because they believe in rehabilitation. That has nothing to do with the statistics or whether or not the statistics are real.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They're dumping the money in that. Here's why they're dumping the money in that program is because it sounds good. They don't have to have any kind of statistic that says anything. What they think is they got a bunch of liberal politicians who are going to pay for it because they believe in rehabilitation. That has nothing to do with the statistics or whether or not the statistics are real.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They're probably not real. I would dare anybody to dig up stats that says that there's a program in prison that really reduces the amount of people that come back. I mean, I've never seen anything like that.