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From Encino To High Power: A Life Inside California’s Prison Machine



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The story starts with a red light, a door cracked open, and a desperate roll onto Wilshire Boulevard. From there, Scott takes us inside a bullet-torn Mercedes, a judge who called it an attempted murder on him, and a first step into LA County’s High Power where reputation, paperwork, and unspoken rules shape survival. We sit with the fear, the adrenaline, and the aftermath—and then widen the lens to the machine that profits when people fail.

We walk through the architecture of California’s prison boom: mental hospitals shuttered, CCPOA flexing in Sacramento, parole violations multiplying to keep beds full, and three strikes cementing overcrowding. Scott demystifies how vendors, overtime, and whole rural economies tie their fortunes to bodies behind bars. He calls out the gap between “rehabilitation” on paper and skills that translate in the real world. Then comes his MAC-rep showdown: exposing a phone shutdown, getting tossed in the hole, starving on principle, and finally a CCPOA officer finding the missing chrono that triggers his release from CMF. It’s a rare look at how truth survives in a system designed to ignore it.

We don’t stop at gates. We follow the money to private prisons and immigration detention, where low wages meet high per-diem profits. We talk fentanyl and homelessness as social anesthesia, media that polarizes, and the way COVID revealed how easily fear can turn neighbors into monitors. Scott explains why some force is necessary in custody—and where it crosses into revenge and herd-thinking. He argues that early parenting, moral foundations, and street-real mentorship are the strongest antidotes to eighth-grade wisdom steering fourth-grade experience into a life sentence. And he makes the case for podcasts as one of the last honest forums, where lived experience can confront policy spin and demand better.

If this conversation challenged you, share it with someone who still believes “corrections” corrects. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: which part of the system do you think needs to change first?

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Published on 3 weeks, 1 day ago






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