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The Range
Law & Order
Governors Pardon
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<blockquote data-quote="Frederick" data-source="post: 2947011" data-attributes="member: 17825"><p>Indeed, i've heard stories of guys getting reported by their wives for late child support payments, getting a felony, losing their job as a result and not being able to find a new one very easily because of that. Felony convictions can also make it hard to find housing.</p><p></p><p>I believe everyone should have a second chance -- After a period of time, working hard and doing things the right way, i think we as a society should be willing to forgive(pardon) people. If you wrote a hot check at 18, or your 20s, and go 20 or 30 years without incident, working hard and playing by the rules and being an honest individual, i don't see why we can't forgive that. If you're 30 and make a legal mistake and end up with a felony, but 30-40 years later when your an old man and you played things right, i think that's fine, too.</p><p></p><p>It really depends on what you did, and the circumstances. White collar crimes aren't the same as violent crimes, imo.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Frederick, post: 2947011, member: 17825"] Indeed, i've heard stories of guys getting reported by their wives for late child support payments, getting a felony, losing their job as a result and not being able to find a new one very easily because of that. Felony convictions can also make it hard to find housing. I believe everyone should have a second chance -- After a period of time, working hard and doing things the right way, i think we as a society should be willing to forgive(pardon) people. If you wrote a hot check at 18, or your 20s, and go 20 or 30 years without incident, working hard and playing by the rules and being an honest individual, i don't see why we can't forgive that. If you're 30 and make a legal mistake and end up with a felony, but 30-40 years later when your an old man and you played things right, i think that's fine, too. It really depends on what you did, and the circumstances. White collar crimes aren't the same as violent crimes, imo. [/QUOTE]
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