Angola for Life

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  • Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
  • There are more than 6,000 men currently imprisoned at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola-three-quarters of them are there for life, and nearly 80 percent are African American. It's the end of the line for many convicted criminals in Louisiana, which has the highest incarceration rate of any state in the U.S. In this Atlantic original documentary, national correspondent Jeffrey Goldberg goes inside Angola to speak with inmates and with warden Burl Cain, who has managed the prison for two decades. Cain and his colleagues grapple with the crucial question: What does rehabilitation look like when you're locked away for life?
    Read Goldberg's recent reflection on the filmmaking process (theatln.tc/1MmKfuG), as well as his in-depth report on crime in Louisiana, "A Matter of Black Lives," from The Atlantic's September issue (theatln.tc/1HE39rg).
    Authors: Jeffrey Goldberg, Sam Price-Waldman, Kasia Cieplak-Mayr von Baldegg
    Watch more videos: www.theatlantic.com/video
    Subscribe to The Atlantic on RUclips: bit.ly/1pE29OW
    Twitter: / theatlanticvid
    Facebook: / theatlantic
    Google+: plus.google.com/+TheAtlantic
    Subscribe to The Atlantic on RUclips: bit.ly/subAtlanticYT
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @TheAtlantic
    @TheAtlantic  Год назад +5

    The Atlantic Festival 2022 is here! Join the event on RUclips: ruclips.net/user/AtlanticLIVEvideo

    • @chrisnigro1968
      @chrisnigro1968 Год назад +1

      There is allot of guys with huwhite privilege there 😆

  • @ccharlie05
    @ccharlie05 5 лет назад +673

    So basically Angola is the longest running plantation in American history.

  • @lockdownpublications3169
    @lockdownpublications3169 4 года назад +244

    I served 27 years in prison, in Georgia, on a sentence of life plus 30 years for felony murder and trafficking cocaine. While I was incarcerated my son got a life sentence in Louisiana and he's at Angola. In Louisiana a life sentence means exactly that, which is unfair to me. I know how much I changed while in prison and I'm thankful for a second chance. With that chance I've become a 15X published author and a successful publisher. Without a second chance all of these men can't ever atone.

    • @bryanbridges2987
      @bryanbridges2987 4 года назад +69

      I'm sorry, but I think murderers should stay for life. The person they murdered can never come back, they can never write another book or have another son.
      But I'm glad your life was turned around. I pray your son's turns around too, if he hasn't already.

    • @boobyhill6921
      @boobyhill6921 2 года назад +21

      Do you ever think about the person you killed? Was it justified? What age did you realize you need to change your life? Just a couple of questions from a young guy.

    • @smartroomz
      @smartroomz 2 года назад +2

      Wow

    • @notlikelionking2979
      @notlikelionking2979 2 года назад +22

      @@boobyhill6921 felony murder does not always mean you killed someone.

    • @Rosemary-oe3zy
      @Rosemary-oe3zy 2 года назад +4

      God's plan always works for good. Sometimes it doesn't seem right and hell sometimes We lose loved ones. But man can only kill the body, the soul belongs to God . Keep the faith.

  • @bayoustormryder3823
    @bayoustormryder3823 5 лет назад +67

    That place ain't no joke. I went there my senior year for a field trip. And the prisoners that were there to speak with us. Keep saying over and over again while we was there. To stay in your books and stay out of the prison system.

  • @Ray_Davis15
    @Ray_Davis15 5 лет назад +127

    This was the one place that my dad took me to when I was lil, to visit someone, that made me build up a mindset that I never wanted to be in ANY jail system.

    • @gotacallfromvishal
      @gotacallfromvishal 5 лет назад +6

      cause you had a good dad! rare sight, i never had one

    • @littletraveller5428
      @littletraveller5428 4 года назад

      That’s nice for you but it should be there by default. You’re not supposed to go to to jail.

    • @strat23egy50
      @strat23egy50 3 года назад +4

      These people that run the jail systems are EVIL no man should ever be locked up that long over some bullshit.

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel 2 года назад +2

      @@strat23egy50 people who kill should be locked up.

    • @cathy1944
      @cathy1944 2 года назад +3

      He cared for you so much and wanted you to stay on a good path. To keep away from bad people. Your dad was a great man.

  • @conrob74roberts69
    @conrob74roberts69 5 лет назад +234

    Young people this is reality. As tough as you are this will become reality. Nothing here is a goal. Take witness. do not become witness or victim. Choose positive actions to make a better future.

    • @bayoustormryder3823
      @bayoustormryder3823 5 лет назад +5

      Young people ain't gonna to listen. Until they ended up in prison

    • @bayoustormryder3823
      @bayoustormryder3823 5 лет назад +4

      @@kewanw16 or being pimped out for Newport's and Ramen Noodles

    • @juanitaisles4595
      @juanitaisles4595 5 лет назад +1

      You no the saying What goes on in Vegas and come home on probation well that is the for The State of Mississippi

    • @impossiblemission4ce
      @impossiblemission4ce 5 лет назад +4

      You seem to be justifying this kind of modern day slavery.

    • @bryanbridges2987
      @bryanbridges2987 4 года назад +1

      @@impossiblemission4ce Maybe because it isn't slavery. It's just a normal prison.

  • @yamon598
    @yamon598 5 лет назад +66

    "Who did you kill?"......"My wife." Whelp, that escalated quickly. Shit!

    • @drelocs2878
      @drelocs2878 2 года назад +8

      Riiiiight I was like well okay…..😳

    • @Savage22223
      @Savage22223 Год назад +2

      @@drelocs2878 like wtf

    • @Thejohnkaye
      @Thejohnkaye 10 месяцев назад +7

      I'm like what! I thought he just worked there

    • @JessicaZagroski
      @JessicaZagroski 2 месяца назад +1

      i gasped

    • @carolkd4018
      @carolkd4018 2 месяца назад +2

      And he qualified: "my FIRST wife". Seems he may have a second. I guess we can presume her life will never be endangered by him.

  • @littletraveller5428
    @littletraveller5428 4 года назад +175

    When someone after 30 years still says he didn’t do it, he’s probably telling the truth

    • @whodat417
      @whodat417 4 года назад +27

      Lol that's not how it works

    • @whodat417
      @whodat417 4 года назад +18

      @VictorHN that's not what I'm saying. Only idiot racists bring race into everything. What I'm saying is just because a person says they are innocent for thirty years dosent make then innocent. I had a lifer as a celly once and he had me convinced he didnt kill his wife her boyfriend and he was set up only to find out later he killed her on camera.

    • @skunkhome
      @skunkhome 4 года назад +4

      There are no guilty men behind bars.

    • @skunkhome
      @skunkhome 4 года назад

      Lei Katze, I don’t know where you are writing from but you need to try living in some real stink hole places. The poorest in this country including those in prison are better off than 90% of the world.

    • @axelgamingandvlogging290
      @axelgamingandvlogging290 4 года назад +6

      @VictorHN Do you even know what a white nationalist is?? A nationalist is someone who puts their country first, has patriotism....what is wrong with being a nationalist??? And what is wrong with being white??

  • @chelseamiranda6651
    @chelseamiranda6651 8 месяцев назад +16

    When I was a teenager I got in trouble a lot. I eventually ended up in an alternative school and on probation. The alternative school took us on a field trip to angola. At that time Angola only housed criminals serving life sentences. So everyone there,at that time,was never getting out. They’ve obviously changed that now. It was a very interesting experience. One thing that stands out is the “hole” there is a small building in the middle of the field. It’s just a one room building. Very small and it was where they would put an inmate when they got in trouble. One door and one small window. No glass in the window and no air conditioning. Whatever food that was being served to the inmates that day would be put in a blender and served that way to whoever was out in that building. The whole meal blended. If there was dessert with dinner than that would be blended together with the meal too. It seemed like it would be torture. Being in this concrete building in the middle of the field with the hot Louisiana sun beaming down and being served slop for breakfast lunch and dinner. There had to be some kind of human rights violations going on. They probably don’t do it anymore. That was one thing that always stuck out to me from that visit.

    • @wesleyalan9179
      @wesleyalan9179 5 месяцев назад +1

      I'm in my 40s now, following the straight n narrow...but, I too as a teen was a wild one also, had some good times,had some bad times, but never went to prison. Been to jail a time or two on small offenses, but nothing horrible.
      Thank you for sharing that experience with us about your field trip to Angola...I wished we would've done that in highschool. That place interests me a lot. Thanks again❤

  • @candyDREAMER
    @candyDREAMER 2 года назад +51

    I'm shook that this prison is called Angola. The fact that this former plantation, history of prison slave labor, is nicknamed after the first country African slaves were stolen from. It's as if the system is mocking emancipation, "Oh you want to go back to Africa, I got your Africa. Welcome to Angola. Get back to work."

    • @Natures_Son
      @Natures_Son 2 месяца назад +4

      I completely agree with you.

  • @freddyfrug3940
    @freddyfrug3940 4 года назад +124

    Despite the tough sentencing laws, the murder rate in Louisiana has been higher than any other state for the last 30 consecutive years.

    • @boogitybear2283
      @boogitybear2283 2 года назад +13

      Gee ya wonder why? The Demographics explains it. I know most of the inmates are from New Orleans.

    • @voiceofreason2674
      @voiceofreason2674 2 года назад

      Not thirty years consecutive we had a couple stretches where we were not first place. Also that’s not what this is about, the man presenting this video shoe horned that in himself and then said the Warden called it absurd even tho he didn’t say that.

    • @msc2u1
      @msc2u1 2 года назад +19

      So, these harsh laws aren't working.

    • @ruso3122
      @ruso3122 2 года назад +28

      Tough sentencing laws ain’t gonna deter crime. You expect the effect to stop the cause ? . Ppl still think they not gonna get caught . Also remember a lot of ppl are in prison because they couldn’t afford a proper lawyer and they got screwed

    • @voiceofreason2674
      @voiceofreason2674 2 года назад +2

      @@ruso3122 “if you cannot afford a lawyer one will be provided to you” you do get a lawyer from the public defender and they’re usually really good older/retired lawyers. But they don’t get paid that much

  • @LeshondraHeron
    @LeshondraHeron 6 лет назад +231

    They are criminals but you can’t tell me watching this doesn’t make you uncomfortable. A moment in time is not definition of character

    • @catherinehermansen4376
      @catherinehermansen4376 5 лет назад +2

      ❤❤❤

    • @streetbizzmixtapes
      @streetbizzmixtapes 5 лет назад +27

      In Louisiana you can get sentenced to hard labor for having a few marijuana possession, it's legal some places... The on slave mentality here

    • @wendellvictorian774
      @wendellvictorian774 5 лет назад

      Leshondra The H is silent .... extremely TRUE

    • @catherinehermansen4376
      @catherinehermansen4376 5 лет назад +7

      @@streetbizzmixtapes Napoleonic law, makes me sick. I got arrested for a crime I didn't commit. No thanks to them they had to nolle prosse. Fucked up state to say the least.

    • @fernandofernandez2286
      @fernandofernandez2286 5 лет назад +9

      Leshondra tell that to the families of the victims.

  • @kaytraefromhushmouth5943
    @kaytraefromhushmouth5943 5 лет назад +39

    "Pulled ova, no seat belt on the shoulder,
    led to long stay in Angola" -ZRO

    • @SylentONE
      @SylentONE 4 года назад +3

      My favorite rapper/singer

  • @texas3284
    @texas3284 5 лет назад +208

    I did 10 years(2000-2010)on a unit in texas where the average sentence was 40years. I lost count of how many dudes I met that will never see the light of day. Sadly, these dudes are the only ones that seem to get it. Guys that get shorter time never seem to realize that their lifestyle is Bull$hit......until its too late! I wish more people would take these old timers advice and take advantage at a 2nd chance they will never get!

    • @johnbrowne2145
      @johnbrowne2145 5 лет назад +12

      Real talk! I did a long bid myself. It’s sad and comical at that the same time how the young guys seem to not make the connection between their life style and the end result.

    • @migzh203
      @migzh203 5 лет назад +3

      Thats the thing man them lifers im from ct the north but man u gotta tread lightly never talk about going home be really careful huh i know when i did a level 4 part of the bid boy i had my cellie kind of schooled me cause i went back 4 viol of parole so my level went⬆️ so i was a level 4 my cellie told me dont talk bout the 🌎cause they will snap n go crazy boy but actually some of the hard time dudes seem to have more respect than the level 2 or 3 dudes idk n being in a cell seemsxlike my time went faster idk dorms 🤔 there dirty besides the fact of cookd up in the cell 22 hours work out as long as a like minded or descent cellie can work out etc.my bad bout novel fam.

    • @gotacallfromvishal
      @gotacallfromvishal 5 лет назад +2

      this is a string of 3 messages that are genuine and real and so unlike youtube comments in general.

    • @berrihill2750
      @berrihill2750 4 года назад +2

      I did 3 years. I didn't need anyone's advice I will never get caught up again.. But one thing for show is that that 3 year bid cost me a lifetime of hinder

    • @six0tizzio964
      @six0tizzio964 4 года назад

      What prison was u in?

  • @uhclem
    @uhclem 6 лет назад +95

    Any y'all reading this who have Netflix need to watch the movie "13th".

    • @dontategray6494
      @dontategray6494 5 лет назад +7

      The Federal Farmer realist movie ever made

    • @kadariusjones7072
      @kadariusjones7072 5 лет назад +2

      The Federal Farmer just watched that in my social problems class. It was really good.

    • @odetobaltimore
      @odetobaltimore 5 лет назад +3

      Scary documentary

    • @LeonR97
      @LeonR97 5 лет назад +5

      The Federal Farmer thank you for bringing this documentary to my attention 🙏🏾.

    • @noco7243
      @noco7243 4 года назад +1

      No. It's gay.

  • @manu707070
    @manu707070 5 лет назад +56

    Every sinner have a future and every saint have a past.

  • @jarofclay8900
    @jarofclay8900 4 года назад +65

    Visited Angola a few years back and met these guys. Completely changed my opinion on capital punishment. Who many of these men were are not who they are now.

  • @angeleyes9399
    @angeleyes9399 5 лет назад +172

    Slavery never left Louisiana

    • @theworkethic
      @theworkethic 5 лет назад +10

      They can sit in a cell or work.

    • @melinatedchildofthesun4484
      @melinatedchildofthesun4484 5 лет назад +16

      Shiiiiiiit......Slavery never left America Period!!

    • @juanitaisles4595
      @juanitaisles4595 5 лет назад +1

      So true my Parents was Born in Mississippi.. and I still have family that lives there and two of cousin work on Death Row at Angola and some of story they told us it is crazy ..There is a movie on Netflix watch it when you get a chance..

    • @tyronejackson7334
      @tyronejackson7334 5 лет назад +3

      Slavery never left Amerkkka

    • @rickjackson5935
      @rickjackson5935 5 лет назад

      @@melinatedchildofthesun4484 ye

  • @sampq3708
    @sampq3708 5 лет назад +37

    Big homie TREY da OG coming home after 30 yrs another 17 days n counting, last 27 yrs in Angola now make the most of next 30 yrs on outside.
    #17daysncounting

    • @officetechtyping
      @officetechtyping 5 лет назад

      Did he get out?? Doing fine I hope.

    • @sampq3708
      @sampq3708 5 лет назад +8

      Me
      Yeah my cousin is out thanks 4 asking about him, I thought he would be himself when he came out but there are some days where he would shut everybody out n sit quietly n not talk to anybody I feel like I can’t do anything to help him, all his friends have moved on they have family n kids n working, it makes him depressed I know it will take time for him to be normal again but this thing called instutionalized keeps our family worried some days he goes without talking to anybody n that’s when we feel he will do something stupid I hope it doesn’t come to this, next week he will be working in our garages n hopefully it will give him some stability n structure.

    • @officetechtyping
      @officetechtyping 5 лет назад +2

      @@sampq3708 wow. Hopefully the job makes him feel better about things. I can imagine after all those years he has to feel weird and alone. Just love him hard. Man, I hope he stay free.

    • @officetechtyping
      @officetechtyping 5 лет назад +1

      @@sampq3708 the whole idea of locking people up that long is just gross.

    • @freeandblessed8500
      @freeandblessed8500 5 лет назад

      @@sampq3708 I hope he goes to a psychologist. No I'm not saying your cousin is mentally ill. The whole purpose of a psychologist is to help him with his mind. See he's free outside, but in his mind he may not be. Some individuals don't go through mental hardships when they're locked up for so long, but some people do.
      We don't know what he experienced in that place. Church is a great place also, him getting that spiritual connection will certainly help keep him free.

  • @darryllett4902
    @darryllett4902 5 лет назад +24

    In the gulf coast all prison's are like this you don't grow nothing you don't eat nothing

    • @gotacallfromvishal
      @gotacallfromvishal 5 лет назад +2

      your comment confuses me because they are growing stuff and they do eat it? and inmates at fountain, jester, and lsp/angola has good nice fresh food compared to the rejected reheated cisco shit up north. that the one nice perk of serfdom, you gotta be fed and the better the food the more productive you be.

    • @rillo806
      @rillo806 4 года назад +3

      Darryl Lett tell em bout the gunline boss..

  • @tinalevier2645
    @tinalevier2645 6 лет назад +59

    I overturn those words they never gonna go home 🏡..My uncle will b back his mom is 90 still alive 🙏🏽🙏🏽#Free Patrick Levier .We Love u 4Life

  • @julie.1081
    @julie.1081 4 года назад +14

    For the life of me, I can't tell if the reporter is saying what Angola & Warden Cain has done is good or bad. When he got there, it was the bloodiest, most violent prison in the US. He also doesn't mention that the prisoners grow most of there own food or that Cain speaks at many parole hearings for prisoners. Yes, it's still a max prison but it's a hell of a better place than it was. Or compared to many other prisons.

    • @adabsurdum3314
      @adabsurdum3314 Год назад +1

      Lies, Cain is as corrupt as all hell

    • @alexandrac9363
      @alexandrac9363 Год назад

      @@adabsurdum3314 I'd be interested in hearing more...

    • @russellbeaty7538
      @russellbeaty7538 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@adabsurdum3314bullshit

    • @dankodde6721
      @dankodde6721 2 месяца назад

      ​@@adabsurdum3314He is corrupt. Put 3 people in solitary for killing a guard . Had no evidence against them . Also his illegal financial dealings. Criminal himself.

  • @highlands3769
    @highlands3769 5 лет назад +53

    For those who have not heard of the story of the 'Angola 3', Google it. Shocking. Those of us outside of America looking in, seeing how children are sent to Supermax prisons, children are thrown into institutions like Rikers and held indefinitely in solitary confinement , mostly black men are sent down for life to work on modern day plantations (Angola was a former plantation and named after the country from which most of the slaves were captured). The American justice/prison system is an utter disgrace.
    “It is said that no one truly knows a nation until one has been inside its jails. A nation should not be judged by how it treats its highest citizens, but its lowest ones.”

    • @jackiemarshall3711
      @jackiemarshall3711 2 года назад +3

      Amen to that. I don't have a problem with making every abled bodied person work in prison because the tax payers should not have to support them. Plus it gives the ones that have never worked a chance to see how working to support themselves feels. Every prison should be a farm with everything this one has. Angola is probably self sufficient in by selling the horses and maybe even some of the vegetables gives them money to buy everything they need that can't be made there like personals and snacks and shoes unless they put a shoe factory on the grounds which would not be a bad idea. And these things give them marketable experience so they can return to life outside the prison.

    • @adabsurdum3314
      @adabsurdum3314 Год назад +2

      I read woodfoxes book. What a sick joke. These shows are propaganda

    • @jackiemarshall3711
      @jackiemarshall3711 Год назад +1

      Amen to that. However I don't think that it's a problem for inmates to grow there own food because it shouldn't be the responsibility of the state ie: tax payers to be responsible for them but it should not be treated like a plantation nor should anyone be treated badly or like a slave. They should all be assigned a job unless they can't physically/ mentally work. I believe that society should not be a money society it should be we take care of each other barter system no matter what our skill sets are. Because now we have the 1% that think they are better than others because they are rich and should be treated better, everyone should be treated the same. The rich get richer while the rest of us barely make or don't make it at all. Homelessness should be possible, there shouldn't be landlords just like the Amish/Mennonites the community gets together and builds homes for others. Most times if someone has their own they take care of it but this must be taught from toddlerhood.

    • @jenniferhagan6695
      @jenniferhagan6695 Год назад

      Agreed

    • @jenniferhagan6695
      @jenniferhagan6695 Год назад +1

      By the way, the ills of society Are the burden of all. We sink or swim TOGETHER. The sooner everyone realizes that the better.

  • @TA-to7kt
    @TA-to7kt 8 лет назад +144

    Many of the guys in Angola with life sentences should have their sentences commuted to time already served. They're truly changed men and are no longer a threat to society.

    • @AnimalAlmighty
      @AnimalAlmighty 8 лет назад

      Yes

    • @jonathanfanfan6681
      @jonathanfanfan6681 8 лет назад +2

      the system is run by pedaphiles, murderers, thieves, & scoundrels

    • @kanesmith8271
      @kanesmith8271 7 лет назад +1

      not falling for that

    • @TA-to7kt
      @TA-to7kt 7 лет назад +5

      Kane Smith You don't have to 'fall for that.' It's fact.

    • @benmartz3405
      @benmartz3405 7 лет назад

      +Kane Smith you look like James Holmes with that hair.

  • @kendraswanson7352
    @kendraswanson7352 5 лет назад +150

    There's like a 99.9 percent chance they are working where their forefathers worked

    • @CM-oy2kd
      @CM-oy2kd 4 года назад +4

      Kendra Swanson can you believe that. Crazy

    • @JakobSeidl
      @JakobSeidl 4 года назад +5

      Kendra Swanson that’s not true. Do you have any idea how many plantations there were in Louisiana? Thousands. In every different parish. It’s actually unlikely their ancestors worked that land unless the inmates are from the surrounding area of the prison.

    • @jacobleblanc2849
      @jacobleblanc2849 2 года назад

      That just doesn’t make sense. More than .1 percent of them are white. you have no clue what you are talking about why comment some ignorant shit anyway

    • @jakeackermann9059
      @jakeackermann9059 2 года назад +1

      @jacob leblanc, that's not how statistics work bud. The prison could be 10 percent black (it's actually 80 percent) and there would still be a high chance that they had ancestors that worked on plantations such as Angola.

    • @jacobleblanc2849
      @jacobleblanc2849 2 года назад +1

      @@jakeackermann9059 yea i misread

  • @Mona-ue5uk
    @Mona-ue5uk 5 лет назад +43

    The man is riding a mule! What year is this? The plantation has never left Louisiana! The US allows this process.
    What is wrong with America and the salvation & control of black bodies. Give help AFTER they commit a crime. Mind blogging!!!

    • @loso2751
      @loso2751 3 года назад

      Channel you’ve got to admit it’s eerily similar to slavery

    • @carsonalexander5675
      @carsonalexander5675 3 года назад +1

      Funny how all prisoners are not black and everyone there deserves to be there

    • @00700556
      @00700556 Месяц назад

      @@carsonalexander5675Not for that damn long

  • @dexterkarl9264
    @dexterkarl9264 5 лет назад +29

    Seeing these Inmates in the Automotive shop without an officer with all those weapons.... The warden is doing a GREAT JOB 💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽

    • @wendellvictorian774
      @wendellvictorian774 5 лет назад +2

      Dexter Karl they’ve been domesticated dummy the political campaign of the penal system is reforming inmates into productive citizens in society not for society but now it’s blatantly thrown out the window for any hope of that opportunity & justified to take those same reformed individuals & use they’re past downfall, that has been repented of as well as the recompense overpaid for, as a just means of enslaving them

    • @wendellvictorian774
      @wendellvictorian774 5 лет назад

      they’ve been domesticated dummy the political campaign of the penal system is reforming inmates into productive citizens in society not for society but now it’s blatantly thrown out the window for any hope of that opportunity & justified to take those same reformed individuals & use they’re past downfall, that has been repented of as well as the recompense overpaid for, as a just means of enslaving them

  • @caseyc408
    @caseyc408 8 лет назад +83

    They may be criminals but they are still people. You can't reform everyone I know that, but some you can like these people here and that's a good thing. Bravo.

    • @karawills7152
      @karawills7152 8 лет назад +6

      i know my dady on there im 12 years old

    • @dreadedbelle
      @dreadedbelle 8 лет назад +2

      +Casey C I agree, my fiance' is in Angola right now as we speak, and it is AMAZING how far he has come in the 13 years he has been in. Completely different man.

    • @dreadedbelle
      @dreadedbelle 8 лет назад +4

      +David Frigault Oh I know. Louisiana a lone has one of the highest incarceration rates, we throw everyone in prison! It's a shame. They give drug addicts life but slap a pedophile on the wrist. 😑🙄

    • @tinafortson8060
      @tinafortson8060 6 лет назад +3

      +Caitlyn Mitchell 13 years and u still there or u moving on

    • @beautifulh7010
      @beautifulh7010 5 лет назад +1

      Casey C Warden Cain was one of the best. He is true to his word. I have been visiting the prison for 33 years. My father is their. He have been Class A trustee for 30 years.

  • @tyerekholman7619
    @tyerekholman7619 5 лет назад +11

    When quavo said “all these damn chains modern slavey but this ain’t 1800 so they pay me” i know these inmates felt that

  • @Katsuper19
    @Katsuper19 3 года назад +15

    I remember going here in like 8th grade. Scared the shit out of me.

    • @PiusTheSedevacantist
      @PiusTheSedevacantist Год назад

      Isn’t that the point? If you actually receive serious punishment for crimes, you won’t commit them.

  • @Pathfinder-Doc
    @Pathfinder-Doc 5 лет назад +12

    This prison is is about rehabilitation and discipline. Tell me, what other prisons has this many rehab programs.

    • @kennethscott1603
      @kennethscott1603 5 лет назад +4

      It is slavery

    • @einarvargtass1047
      @einarvargtass1047 4 года назад +1

      @Tamera Nicholson Because they killed someone you fool

    • @purromemes7395
      @purromemes7395 2 года назад +1

      @@kennethscott1603 who cares. Slavery is a fact of human life. Get used to it

  • @TeezoTarantino
    @TeezoTarantino 3 года назад +5

    This video should be shown in schools to show them that its a better way than just Jail/prison

  • @robison87
    @robison87 4 года назад +9

    I would rather work outside than languish in a tiny cell.

  • @horror7927
    @horror7927 6 лет назад +36

    Some of these guys serving life sentences should be given a second chance depending on the individual. They could be out in the free world doing counseling to misguided youth who might even prevent one of them from committing murder

  • @counterstrike1110
    @counterstrike1110 6 лет назад +61

    THIS is great journalism, really excellent video

  • @scottnewton9619
    @scottnewton9619 2 года назад +6

    It is hard watching inmates who have served vast amounts of time and who really do seem to be rehabilitated, just rotting in jail and not being allowed to volunteer/ work back in the community. Burl Cain should institute a "scared straight" program for young Louisiana offenders who are at real risk of ending up in Angola & this program should be a 2 week (not 2 hours) "Boot Camp" run by Trustees that show young criminals what being locked up for life really entails.

    • @elizabethmontero3361
      @elizabethmontero3361 Год назад

      Your such a bleeding heart
      Let hurt your family you'll change your mind

    • @pgppe9488
      @pgppe9488 8 месяцев назад

      You can tell someone has been rehabilitated by seeing a 5 second snippet.

  • @Weliketohavefunhere
    @Weliketohavefunhere 8 лет назад +5

    Very interesting, thanks for sharing

  • @mwbright
    @mwbright 5 лет назад +39

    It wasn't a plantation. It was a slave 'breeding' facility, like they breed horses. When the children were old enough, like six years old, they were put on the block, and if someone wanted to buy them, they'd be taken from their mothers.
    Sentences in Louisiana are the harshest in America.

    • @queenannesrevenge1437
      @queenannesrevenge1437 2 года назад +4

      The casual true horror of your comment is disturbing.

    • @mwbright
      @mwbright 2 года назад +4

      @@queenannesrevenge1437 Disturbing to say the least. It is a horror, both then and now.

    • @mwbright
      @mwbright 2 года назад +1

      @Paul Smith If they weren't buying six year olds, they wouldn't have advertised for them, with prices listed. I assume it was like for cattle. Look at the parents, or rather the "Sire" and "Dam," and you could have a pretty good expectation. And by the way, the largest slave market in the US, which was in Charleston, and which is five or six stories tall (I can't remember), belonged to the Bush family. You know, George and George W. They also advertised for children. Google it.

    • @purromemes7395
      @purromemes7395 2 года назад +1

      Slavery is a fact of life. My aunt was kidnapped by North Africans and forced into chattel slavery, she is white. Sometimes things happen and there is nothing you can do

    • @mwbright
      @mwbright 2 года назад

      @@purromemes7395 There's plenty they could do today. Doing away with locking up black people in a former slave plantation, and giving them Life Without Parole for crimes committed in their teens that would get them a year or two in any other state might be a good start. That fucking place is disgusting.

  • @deandreray3500
    @deandreray3500 Год назад +4

    I have a cousin who served 13 years in the state of Tennessee on a second degree murder charge he would have had a mandatory life sentence without parole in Louisiana that’s crazy!!

  • @larrymetzger1298
    @larrymetzger1298 7 месяцев назад

    I was involved with jail ministry at the local county jail. I am 72 now but up until 35 when I stopped running from Jesus I was out of control. I never did time. I give Jesus the credit for that but HE was setting me up for voluntary jail ministry. I would still be involved but covid stopped the volunteers. My goal was to show them that with Jesus you can change your lifestyle and have a future to look forward to. My goal for those looking at prison time was to get them rooted in the word and to look for the other Christians when they got to their new facility. I would love to visit Angola some day.

  • @AnimalAlmighty
    @AnimalAlmighty 8 лет назад +41

    Damn hes still the warden i remeber him being the warden back in 1998

    • @gotacallfromvishal
      @gotacallfromvishal 5 лет назад +2

      i guess in louisiana they don't got sweet pensions like they do at CDC lmfao

    • @datrealboy95
      @datrealboy95 4 года назад +3

      No he isn’t the Warden anymore

  • @danielortman2534
    @danielortman2534 5 лет назад +19

    Formally a prison known for its high rates of violence, the over all quality of life as well as inmate safety has drastically improved since this warden took over and started giving people something to do with their hands and minds. Flip side of the coin.

  • @seansartor
    @seansartor 5 лет назад +23

    “Correct Deviant Behavior” Parents need to PREVENT deviant behavior

  • @AngryLeo007
    @AngryLeo007 5 лет назад +4

    I trained there to become a corrections officer a week after the filming of the Monster Ball movie.. I never forget that place..

  • @LuciusAugustusRex
    @LuciusAugustusRex 8 лет назад +1

    All of your videos on your website is down, you guys should put them all on RUclips

  • @KenoxProductions
    @KenoxProductions Год назад +28

    Everyone praising this warden, how he's helping them. It's all a front for literal slavery. While it may be helpful to the prisoners in some capacity, it just further deepens and reinforces the rascim in America. It also doesn't matter if they get rehabed, they're in for life anyway. If they're rehabed, why not let them go then? Oh right, free labour, sounds an awful lot like something that was happening about 200 years ago.

  • @peterwarrick179
    @peterwarrick179 4 года назад +8

    2 cents a hour damn when I was upstate they was paying 17cents and the dudes who ran laundry made $400 a month

  • @TheFatPunisher
    @TheFatPunisher 6 лет назад +20

    when they said the warden was an "unlikely character"
    I was expecting him to be wearing a white suit with a top hat and cane.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan4047 Месяц назад

    Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent photography job enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. Along with guest speakers adding more description to the presentation.😉.

  • @SomeGuyWhoPlaysGames333
    @SomeGuyWhoPlaysGames333 8 лет назад +90

    Louisiana and Mississippi besides city centers are all stuck in the 1800's.

    • @virgilgrissom7753
      @virgilgrissom7753 7 лет назад +11

      And I wouldn't change it for the world. So much individual freedom without big government up my ass. I have my land, guns and god which is why is all my ancestors wanted when they left europe.

    • @SomeGuyWhoPlaysGames333
      @SomeGuyWhoPlaysGames333 7 лет назад

      +Virgil Grissom I meant in ways besides those things.

    • @ThePoacherz
      @ThePoacherz 7 лет назад +9

      GameAddict51 and we need to send you back to Europe, so that other folks can have guns, and not have you up everybody's asses,!

    • @kristina6865
      @kristina6865 6 лет назад +1

      How about you educate yourself before you make claims like that. Have you ever been? Have you seen these places first hand in the 21st century? Don't speak without knowing.

    • @pamelaworley4122
      @pamelaworley4122 6 лет назад +8

      What most people dont realize that Angola was a plantation that got turned into a prison. They didnt want to free the male slaves so alot of them were put in on trumped up charges.

  • @bayouboudreaux4551
    @bayouboudreaux4551 Год назад +4

    More prisons need to implement the work program at Angola. The 2 inmates that were working in the field said nothing negative. In fact, one said "I love it." I grew up in Louisiana going to the Angola Rodeo, and you had the ability to interact with the inmates who would sell the goods (furniture, paintings, leather purses, leather shoes, jewelry, etc.) made in the work program. All the inmates were very appreciative of the skills they learned there and acknowledged working was much better than being stuck in their cells. The prison "slavery" is a fabrication.

    • @thesacredibis6723
      @thesacredibis6723 Год назад +2

      A white warden over 6500 black inmates who are descendants of Angola, Africa while pushing religion is a form of modern day slavery. Many inmates serving sentences for crimes not committed is not freedom but slavery. Furthermore, a life sentence without parole is slavery to the prison industrial complex for profit system. Louisiana has the strictest sentencing laws to keep the plantation fully occupied with modern day slaves and investors satisfied.

    • @courtjester8055
      @courtjester8055 Год назад +1

      Merriam Webster defines slavery as "the state of a person who is held in forced servitude," so yeah this is still slavery. There were plenty of slaves who said they liked it pre civil war, but when it's all you can do and there's no other option, the brain finds ways to rationalize harsh treatment. It won't ever not be slavery unless they are paid what their labor is worth, their skills are made useful for entry into the greater labor market, and most importantly they have a chance at freedom if they turn around. Rehabilitation should always be top priority.

    • @zeyadsaeed9580
      @zeyadsaeed9580 Год назад +2

      Bro is literally advocating for more prison slavery while in his cushy room (not that it matters if he was an ex-convict)

    • @zeyadsaeed9580
      @zeyadsaeed9580 Год назад

      ​@@courtjester8055 I see talks about rehabilitation but why is there no mention of socialized medical mental care?

    • @MyStupidYoutubeHandle
      @MyStupidYoutubeHandle 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@zeyadsaeed9580you’re freaking out in a ton of comments, you realize not all these guys in prison even want to be rehabilitated right ? You do realize there are horrible people in there right ? There’s also a shit ton of jobs in the prison, not just work outside. Because the bloody mess before there was work offered was better right ? Please. You want these guys to just sit here and do nothing ?? They’d go crazy.

  • @captainmorgan2307
    @captainmorgan2307 2 года назад +1

    I live less than 200 miles from Angola and have been to it many times. One of my cousins is serving a life sentence there.
    Lousiana has the highest rate of recidivism (people returning to prison) in the world.

  • @JorgeValdesPhD
    @JorgeValdesPhD 3 года назад +5

    Building this chapel was the greatest honor God allowed me. The altar was painted by Miguel VElez who killed Barry Seals. I have been going to Angola for 21 plus years, and thank God when Warden Cain allowed me and a dear friend the honor to build this chapel, it provides a place were inmates can visit and find meaning for their lives.

  • @AndrewBarsky
    @AndrewBarsky 2 года назад +21

    I think these guys are making the best of an awful situation. The warden is giving these guys a chance to have a somewhat normal life despite being locked up.

  • @Kymv8382
    @Kymv8382 2 года назад +6

    Inmates: commits murder and gets punished for it.
    People on the internet: 😮

  • @patu8010
    @patu8010 3 года назад +2

    The sort of disconnect is kinda wild. All those people serving a life sentence, and it's irrelevant if they would ever hurt anyone again. But on the other hand, inside the prison it's clearly acknowledged that they are decent trustworthy people

  • @thewags4720
    @thewags4720 Год назад +5

    Been to Angola now for 7 years I go as a volunteer teaching people about the millwright craft and those guys I’m teaching are some the most reliable and respectful people I have ever met I’ll level with y’all I’m in favor of the death penalty because I believe there are certain crimes you can’t come back from (pedophilia) but the men I teach and train are people I wish I had on my crew on the outside, thankfully one of the men was given a second shot at life by getting the opportunity for parole and he now works for the state but I know that he isnt the only one in there who should leave

    • @thesacredibis6723
      @thesacredibis6723 Год назад +1

      What is moral about capital punishment?

    • @zeyadsaeed9580
      @zeyadsaeed9580 Год назад

      ​@@thesacredibis6723 pettiness. Nothing moral about it.

    • @marguerilla
      @marguerilla 10 месяцев назад

      @@thesacredibis6723it is a degradation of human life if you allow one man to kill multiple others in my opinion and allow them to continue to exist as a violent threat to others if they are at risk of reoffending. many people do not care to get better. the religion in this case of this prison i really do believe is a major innovation and positive influence on these men. christianity gives hope to a hopeless situation and does not create a situation where violent men are locked in a chicken coop with nothing to lose.

    • @jeffpienta4532
      @jeffpienta4532 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@zeyadsaeed9580that's very subjective.

  • @shakesisdeadya-cunts6675
    @shakesisdeadya-cunts6675 3 года назад +5

    Imagine that, give a man a purpose and he will change his life.

  • @IvyLeagu
    @IvyLeagu 3 года назад +3

    The Warden has an awesome 💡 idea.. I pray for his continue success

  • @pamelaworley4122
    @pamelaworley4122 6 лет назад +34

    Ive noticed that there arent many people from out of state there. I remember watching a documentary about Angola. It was so sad to see mothers crying sons dying and just the hopelessness of the situation. I realize they have committed horrible crimes. Some probably belong there. But u have some who dont.

    • @gotacallfromvishal
      @gotacallfromvishal 5 лет назад +1

      well duh there are things called inmate compacts and people do better in corrections when family close by

    • @pgppe9488
      @pgppe9488 8 месяцев назад

      Maybe the parents should have done more to produce good citizens before they were released on the world.

  • @paulines581
    @paulines581 4 года назад +2

    What about what they grow? What is the output? Where does it go? Is it for profit or rehabilitation and how do you motivate those who don't want to work to a deadline if it is a business? Is there a rotation or does it depend on length of sentence? Who is selected or who volunteers and why?

    • @brotherLee340
      @brotherLee340 3 года назад +2

      I think the majority of it goes to feed the inmates. In sure some of it is pure business. But alot of things they do are strictly helping run the prison.

    • @marcoroberts9462
      @marcoroberts9462 Год назад

      @@brotherLee340 it’s cotton. do the inmates eat cotton?

  • @sinisterstanzas
    @sinisterstanzas 3 года назад +4

    Kinda weird that this tries to positively spin Angola as "fixed"

  • @luhsmokey3344
    @luhsmokey3344 5 лет назад +6

    Lil boosie brought me here 🙌

  • @natudavis8092
    @natudavis8092 5 лет назад +8

    Watch the Netflix documentary "13th"....
    This is enraging...

    • @brotherLee340
      @brotherLee340 3 года назад +1

      It's partially enraging. But it's still partially they fault. Can't just kill people.

    • @thetaphi2347
      @thetaphi2347 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, I'm gonna have to say killing is bad fam.

  • @kevincorcoran7629
    @kevincorcoran7629 5 лет назад +2

    I know more than one person who has had choice of serving their shorter sentence at parish prison or Angola and have chosen Angola because of work programs, rodeos etc....problem in Louisiana is stopping crime not prisons...we have worst state for schools etc especially in cities ( New Orleans, Baton Rouge and Shreveport) Don’t know the stats but basically if u can’t afford private or charter schools within these city limits then u are in a bind

  • @db1820
    @db1820 5 лет назад +6

    Warden looking like something straight out of Berserk

  • @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347
    @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347 4 года назад +6

    I was in Angola in the 70's, the Cubans came in, rescued us, took us to Havana, set us free, been here since. I miss Angola.

  • @flashh6919
    @flashh6919 5 лет назад +9

    Bro my entire life has been a lie. This can’t be real I’m dead

  • @kathyborthwick6738
    @kathyborthwick6738 5 лет назад +1

    Work is always key!

  • @jimmystone7858
    @jimmystone7858 7 лет назад +9

    to all them youngsters ain't no pistol in there,

  • @hanpua1056
    @hanpua1056 5 лет назад +7

    Didn’t the famous led belly do time there ? I think parchment prison down Mississippi held other blues legends like booker white .My mama grew in Shreveport, Louisiana is one of the strictest laws in the land with heavy sentences.

    • @omnirath
      @omnirath Год назад

      Robert Pete Williams served a sentence there, he was pretty much freed because of his music too

  • @cedricbutler4348
    @cedricbutler4348 5 месяцев назад +1

    Gd video… I got a chance to meet Burel Cain thru My Dad named WEEMAN KAUFMAN HE WAS THERE 36 years … he died their he got saved before his passing we brought him home to Rest in Peace …

  • @massoxibarradas4170
    @massoxibarradas4170 8 лет назад +156

    modern slavery

    • @TA-to7kt
      @TA-to7kt 8 лет назад +12

      +massoxi barradas Beats the hell out of being stuck in a cell for 23 hours a day and the inmates are obviously benefitting from the program. There's a lot more to do than guys working in the fields.

    • @t.n.3819
      @t.n.3819 8 лет назад +5

      +TJ Anderson You act as if those are the only two options. Could it be that maybe they are both unethical?

    • @TA-to7kt
      @TA-to7kt 8 лет назад +1

      Tyler Nichols What would YOU suggest?

    • @helloyall4355
      @helloyall4355 7 лет назад +9

      Guess the inmate "dit'n do nuffin'" enough with the slavery bs. these folks aren't slaves, they're inmates/convicts who were handed a sentence by their peers for something they were convicted of. All inmates say they're 'innocent' bs. I'd rather have them locked up- making license plates, working a garden, cleaning floors or whatever they do than on the outside committing felonies. Get over yourself and enough of your bs talk.

    • @TA-to7kt
      @TA-to7kt 7 лет назад +3

      Terri Owens Some 'peers.' A bunch of fuckwits. Most of the inmates at Angola are so old, they couldn't commit a crime even if they wanted to. And most of the 'lifers' committed crimes that didn't even involve taking someone's life. And yet the prison is packed to capacity. Even the warden at Angola acknowledges how fucked up the system is.

  • @straighttalk3709
    @straighttalk3709 4 года назад +24

    I learned to look at these men with compassion. They are just the victims of this world's fucked up system, and they were trapped in a vicious cycle of poverty and ignorance. Locking them away is not the answer. Any sentence longer than 20 year is a ridiculous sentence.

    • @Spike-qt7tx
      @Spike-qt7tx 2 года назад +5

      read ny times today. A man killed a third women after serving time for two others

    • @Diabolical05
      @Diabolical05 2 года назад

      Your a dumbsss.. I hope you never get in a position of any authority.

    • @pgppe9488
      @pgppe9488 8 месяцев назад

      How is a person a victim when they chose to rape, murder, carjack etc?

  • @robertafierro5592
    @robertafierro5592 Месяц назад

    Im from.up.North. NYC to be exact. Angola. I couldnt imagine the heat. I was visiting NOLA in 1986. I was blown right out of the water by.the heat! I couldnt imagine working manual.labor in August down there..imagine being a LIFER !?

  • @ronnie100393
    @ronnie100393 22 дня назад

    I once visited Angola for a rodeo back a few years ago. When I left there and even now I was amazed of the talented people who are locked up. If only those people could have taken there talent and put it to work and what they could have been. It’s sad but just to see these people and their life now. If I could do anything I think every young person in Lousisiana should have to experience Angola before they can graduate. Also the first time a minor gets into trouble they should be forced to see Angola. This would show them that the path they are on is a DEAD END! GOD BLESS THERE SOULS!!!!!!

  • @sabrinadunn8159
    @sabrinadunn8159 Год назад +3

    I was a Sergeant at Louisiana State Penitentiary (Angola). Fascinating article.. But, Cain has been gone for a while. What are your excuses now for the inhumane treatment of the offenders and THE STAFF. 😢😢

    • @m1cah
      @m1cah 11 месяцев назад +1

      It’s a horrible system these people are slaves

    •  9 месяцев назад +1

      There are no excuses. This country was built on this kind of system. It's not broken, it's the way it was created.

  • @thefuture930
    @thefuture930 4 года назад +3

    They seem like much more disciplined prisoners than in other states

  • @asylumbuilder2881
    @asylumbuilder2881 3 года назад +3

    Wow Louisiana has harsh sentencing laws hopefully people who think about committing a crime watch this video first so they can see what happens when you commit a crime always think twice before you commit a crime especially in the Louisiana

  • @kevinbarnes4427
    @kevinbarnes4427 5 лет назад

    " brother Tyler hold on your not alone" Gil Scott Heron.

  • @2tasty220
    @2tasty220 4 года назад +16

    2 cent a hour 18 cent for 8 hours ...I will not ask for a raise tomorrow on my job 😂

  • @nolachino504
    @nolachino504 8 лет назад +54

    Free Cee!!

  • @pgppe9488
    @pgppe9488 8 месяцев назад

    A murderer doesn’t deserve to ever walk free again. We should be focused on teaching people how to make better choices before going to prison. Teach them at an early age to don’t lie, don’t steal, don’t commit crimes.

  • @emorywright6597
    @emorywright6597 4 года назад

    Have any of you personally done anything to help curve this cycle .at home or publicly?

  • @convictowens9970
    @convictowens9970 3 года назад +3

    Some make as little as two cents an hour and yet don't wanna be used as slaves for a very very corrupt system that is bent to not even give them another chance at a better life what a real shame and a joke and that Warden is exactly the prime example of exactly what I am reffering to

    • @pgppe9488
      @pgppe9488 8 месяцев назад

      Maybe the pennies per hour is what’s left after paying for their own housing, food, clothing etc. How much of your check do you have left each month after providing for your necessities?

  • @cootishere
    @cootishere 2 года назад +3

    This man (the warden) has the ingredients of a meal he had with a man he put to death on his shelf as a souvenir...wtf

  • @ernestthomas5281
    @ernestthomas5281 5 лет назад

    Reform the places where the inmates came from and where they were raised that lead them to prison in the first place. Seem like having a job was all it took to change some of them .Start creating jobs in the city's where incarnation is highest and it might break the link in the chain that goes on generation after generation and save lives and create role models in the process.

  • @chrishulk1
    @chrishulk1 5 лет назад +1

    Haha, I've never seen a more looking warden in my life. He screams warden hey and it's funny as fuck.

  • @bobbytoler8629
    @bobbytoler8629 3 года назад +9

    I've worked there and the majority of the prisoners there look forward to working to get outside.

  • @davidneville4589
    @davidneville4589 4 года назад +5

    Slavery never ended, it just evolved. 14th amendment

  • @19MichaelDixon
    @19MichaelDixon 10 месяцев назад +1

    One of the weirdest things about the LA justice system is that you dont need a unanimous verdict to be found guilty.

    • @lauraashlyn
      @lauraashlyn 9 месяцев назад

      This changed with the SCOTUS case Ramos v. Louisiana in 2020

  • @joellemitchell7379
    @joellemitchell7379 4 года назад +1

    boosie was here in 2010 it change him he not the same person i dont no what happen

  • @Deezhan
    @Deezhan 3 года назад +21

    Here in Norway you get up to 6 years for 2nd degree murder, and between 8 to 21 years for 1st degree murder. And nobody is forcing you to work on a plantation during that time. Personally, I believe it's wrong. I believe 1st degree murder should result in death penalty.

  • @Orf
    @Orf 8 лет назад +64

    5:53 Using religion as control.

    • @user-mc5wc5jm4f
      @user-mc5wc5jm4f 5 лет назад +1

      And?

    • @kathyborthwick6738
      @kathyborthwick6738 5 лет назад +1

      Matt Orfalea yep and not the way Creator intended- evil use of a Sacred thing✨🕊✨

    • @chrismurray1365
      @chrismurray1365 5 лет назад

      And it's sad that he you call it out but a lot blacks don't.

    • @paullemay2409
      @paullemay2409 5 лет назад +2

      Matt Orfalea I. This case I’ll take them forcing religion, or would you rather have chaos?

    • @ccharlie05
      @ccharlie05 5 лет назад +2

      Yup the Ultimate form of mental slavery.

  • @winwithgrn
    @winwithgrn 5 лет назад

    3:03 That's "Hop and Bob" From the movie Life... Wow

  • @kevincorcoran7629
    @kevincorcoran7629 5 лет назад

    Plus it’s impossible to even think about escape...there’s no where to go

  • @marskriegsgott9979
    @marskriegsgott9979 4 года назад +3

    Its like a time travel to the old days

  • @intelligenthoodlumpodcast7627
    @intelligenthoodlumpodcast7627 5 лет назад +25

    I always wondered how white people got us so called "Negro" to worship a white jesus and bow I have a pretty good picture of it.

    • @MacioRodriguez
      @MacioRodriguez 5 лет назад +4

      Facts

    • @MacioRodriguez
      @MacioRodriguez 5 лет назад

      Where you from bru

    • @bryanbridges2987
      @bryanbridges2987 4 года назад +2

      So black folks can't choose Jesus of their own accord? Nice. I'm sure this isn't about something in your personal life.

    • @Silenciobob
      @Silenciobob 4 года назад +2

      Who cares what colour he is in a painting. Should bow and pray to what you believe in and stop making things about colour. Always focusing on ‘white people’ instead of yourself and you’ll never grow

  • @lilmike1549
    @lilmike1549 4 года назад +2

    Soulja slim was locked up here

  • @Orf
    @Orf 8 лет назад

    4:57 Healthy people. Who have heart that's healed. Who have a soul. They want to give back and that's what they do everyday.