To be in prison so long, it’s difficult to remember exactly what you did to get there
To be in prison so long, it’s difficult to remember exactly what you did to get there.
To be in prison so long, it’s difficult to remember exactly what you did to get there.
One morning I woke up and was plunged into psychological shock. I had forgotten I was free.
Because there is something helpless and weak and innocent – something like an infant – deep inside us all that really suffers in ways we would never permit an insect to suffer.
As long as I am nothing but a ghost of the civil dead, I can do nothing.
Paranoia is an illness I contracted in institutions. It is not the reason for my sentences to reform school and prison. It is the effect, not the cause.
You can look at the state of California, which is on a pathway to destruction because they expanded government too much, thinking that there would always be someone to pay for it.
During my time as a judge, as a justice, and as attorney general, I’ve had one overarching goal, and that is a strict interpretation and application of the laws and the Constitution. I would be Madisonian.
Americans get it. They’re ready for some opportunities to have greener communities, to have cleaner communities, and to have transportation options that perhaps they haven’t had in the past.
America is sick and tired of spending hour upon hour sitting in their automobile trying to get to work, trying to get kids to school, trying to get to a doctor’s appointment.
If I have to, I will use one challenge after another to dismantle governmental operations that I consider violations of the Constitution.