unless the crime has to do with dishonesty, what does it have to do with working in a bank? is someone who was arrested for selling marijuana more at risk for stealing or mismanaging money? show me a study. just an example, but seriously, this does play into class-ism, the wealthy can afford better lawyers and have more connections to make things 'disappear', or at least to get them sealed/expunged after a conviction, a process that is drawn out and best done with the aid of a lawyer (good luck getting a public defender for that).
Ditto on that, I have a curve 8330. Not a very new smartphone by any measures, but it does what i need and i like the interface enough. GPS locked down by vzw, even though its just a sattelite receiver chip, they want $9 a month to use it, and you have to use their ridiculous vzw navigator program or bb maps. No google maps gps (it will only use cell tower triangulation). Android phones are supposed to be about open functionality, lets just hope verizon doesn't muck it up with their brand of squeeze-em-dry tactics.
its not inmates with cellphones coming in at intake, and its probably unlikely that anyone other than a CORRECTIONS OFFICER gets a phone in for someone. the real issue is corruption here. i doubt a CO would smuggle a gun in for you at any cost, but a cell phone... well everyone has a price i guess. i think south carolinas first move should be to investigate how so many cell phones get inside in the first place.
the flaw in your logic is that them "screwing up as they please" DOES cost our economy, you think uninsured old people with no money aren't a huge drain on the system?
nope, can you tell us?
unless the crime has to do with dishonesty, what does it have to do with working in a bank? is someone who was arrested for selling marijuana more at risk for stealing or mismanaging money? show me a study. just an example, but seriously, this does play into class-ism, the wealthy can afford better lawyers and have more connections to make things 'disappear', or at least to get them sealed/expunged after a conviction, a process that is drawn out and best done with the aid of a lawyer (good luck getting a public defender for that).
honestly i think its a good mix of left, right, and outright crazies.
mod parent up, i just got coke up my nose (cola)!!
Ditto on that, I have a curve 8330. Not a very new smartphone by any measures, but it does what i need and i like the interface enough. GPS locked down by vzw, even though its just a sattelite receiver chip, they want $9 a month to use it, and you have to use their ridiculous vzw navigator program or bb maps. No google maps gps (it will only use cell tower triangulation). Android phones are supposed to be about open functionality, lets just hope verizon doesn't muck it up with their brand of squeeze-em-dry tactics.
Or maybe they just don't like the interface?
its not inmates with cellphones coming in at intake, and its probably unlikely that anyone other than a CORRECTIONS OFFICER gets a phone in for someone. the real issue is corruption here. i doubt a CO would smuggle a gun in for you at any cost, but a cell phone... well everyone has a price i guess. i think south carolinas first move should be to investigate how so many cell phones get inside in the first place.
the flaw in your logic is that them "screwing up as they please" DOES cost our economy, you think uninsured old people with no money aren't a huge drain on the system?