I don't talk trash, I state facts. And Yes there are many places worse than cedu, no doubt. Cook County Jail in Chicago was one of them, I know because I've been there too. For the Anon who called me a wimp, Well I guess that's very easy to do over the computer when you're safe at home a thousand miles away from me, now isn't it?
You Big Pussy!
As for the BCA Anon, dude your a little bitch, period. I find it very funny that you have the nerve to say that I'm acting like a douche, if I recall, all of this "bickering" started when you interrupted my discussion with Shanlea, and then you called me a "whiner", a "loser", and then you said that I should be sent to someplace called CYA where they would "toss me around like a frisbee". You are the douche here! And now you say that you want to stop bickering, and that you would like to share and compare experiences with me? Sorry pal, but you blew any chance of ever having even a remotely civil conversation with me.
If any of you Anons are truly interested in learning about me, instead of just talking shit, I would recommend that you read my previous posts under the fornits topic entitled "I Want Your Stories" by MikeHunt. (I would post the thread here, except that I haven't learned how to do that yet). There I decribed in great detail the hell that I went through to get away from Cedu.
For the friendly Anon, I'm glad that you Agree with my reasons for splitting Cedu-Rs. To answer your question about whether or not my peers felt the same way as me, honestly I'm not sure. I believe that most of them felt as I did (perhaps not as strongly), thats why we all kept splitting. I was not exagerrating when I said earlier that someone split cedu-rs every other day while I was there. But many people did stay willingly and graduated the program.
I could never understand why some students so willingly sacrificed their fundamental, god given, basic rights and freedoms. There were a lot of kids at Cedu-Rs back then who were sentenced by the courts to graduate from there, I'm not talking about them.
I'm talking about the other kids, who weren't on court orders, but actually desired to stay and graduate from that shit hole! some of these kids were already 18 and could leave anytime they wanted.
It's just mind boggling to me that anyone would willingly accept the complete denial of their most basic human rights to freedom of speech, freedom of self expression, freedom of religion (only jews were allowed to practice openly at Cedu-Rs back then), the right to a proper education, the right to privacy, the right to proper medical treatment, the right to disagree, etc... the list goes on and on. Having my most basic rights and freedoms denied to me, was a huge slap in the face, and I could never accept that on any level. Perhaps in my case, it has to do with the fact that I was born in a communist country. Even though i was very young when we came (3 yrs), I knew the absolute hell that my parents went through so we could come here, just so that we could have the same freedoms and opportunities that so many Americans take for granted. And there was absolutely no way that I was going to let Cedu or anyone else take that away from me.