English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

that Charles Manson is in prison for the rest of his life. He only told those people to kill other people. He never killed anyone. If I told you to jump off a bridge, and you did would it. Wouldnt be my fault.

2006-09-19 04:35:13 · 10 answers · asked by mike j 1 in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

10 answers

Sure and let's make Hittler a large monument for the great man he was. He didn't kill anybody, he just ordered them to do it. And hey, let's give Bin Laden the Nobel Peace Prize, I mean he only order the 911 attacks. Try telling your sobbing stories to the victim's family buddy.

2006-09-19 04:42:20 · answer #1 · answered by This, That & such 5 · 0 0

He's been up for Parole , but he tells them he wants to stay in Jail. So at this point staying in Jail is his Choice. An i must say it's a good one !! .. Who is gonna Hire Manson if he ever left Prision ??

2006-09-19 11:38:28 · answer #2 · answered by lilredhead 6 · 0 0

It's called brainwashing. Yes, I think it was wrong. He may not have killed those people, but he used people to get what he wanted. Those people are worse and they do belong in jail.

2006-09-19 11:45:44 · answer #3 · answered by Pamela N 4 · 0 0

You don't seem to having a thorough grasp of the influence power! Maybe your....friend is serving as a good example for others!!!! He'd have been sentensed to death, you know! Which one do you like best for him? Ask Sharon!

Ciao....John-John.

2006-09-19 11:41:36 · answer #4 · answered by John-John 7 · 0 0

so true ,though just like if a person gets a hit man oh they are both still liable,he was a leader that brain washed the people just like Hitler

2006-09-19 11:39:11 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

yes, i can see your points there. But I think he didn't tell ppl to kill other ppl but he's affecting their minds... come to think of it, will you kill another ppl if I told you to? without reward?? if I were you, if I'm not an assassin, I wouldn't kill anyone..

2006-09-19 11:46:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

OMG what have you been smoking, or perhaps eating funny mushrooms?
Charles Manson was born to a promiscuous sixteen-year-old girl named Kathleen Maddox on November 12, 1934 in Cincinnati. His presumed father was a "Colonel Scott" of Ashland Kentucky, whom Manson never met. When Manson was five, his mother received a five-year sentence for armed robbery, and Manson moved in with his aunt and uncle in West Virginia. His mother reclaimed him in 1942 when she was paroled, but within five years her heavy drinking led to Manson's being placed in a caretaking school in Indiana. School officials described young Manson as moody and suffering a persecution complex--but "likable" during those periods he was feeling happy.
At age 13, Manson began his life of crime, robbing a grocery store and a casino. For most of the next decade, Manson was shuffled from one institution to another, usually committing a series of crimes during his brief periods of freedom. By age 16, Manson had been labeled "aggressively antisocial." A prison psychiatrist described Manson at age 18 as suffering "psychic trauma," but still "an extremely sensitive boy who has not yet given up in terms of securing some love and affection from the world."

Released on parole in 1958, Manson took to pimping. In June 1960, Manson was arrested on a Mann Act charge. The Mann Act charges were dropped, but Manson was given a ten-year sentence for violating the parole terms relating to an earlier federal conviction for forging a Treasury check. Prison records from the early 1960s show Manson as having interests in Scientology, drama, softball, croquet, and--especially
--the guitar. By the mid-1960s, Manson became obsessed with the music of the Beatles. When Manson's release date came on March 21, 1967, Manson begged authorities to let him stay in prison, but he was told they had no power to allow him to do so.

Manson, age 32, headed for San Francisco and there gave birth to what would soon be called "The Family." Manson became the unquestioned head of the Family. He dominated lives, even to the point of telling Family members who they must have sex with. To some members of the Family, Manson represented a "Christ-like" figure. He encouraged such talk, sometimes asking a Family member, "Don't you know who I am?"

Combining ideas taken from the Beatles White Album and the Bible's Book of Revelation, Manson developed a bizarre prophecy that blacks would soon rise up against the white establishment and then turn to him--having survived the coming "Helter Skelter in an underground pleasure dome beneath Death Valley--to lead the newly constituted nation. In August 1969, in the hopes of giving Helter Skelter a push, Manson sent a team of Family members on their murderous missions to the Tate and LaBianca homes.

Convicted and sentenced to death largely on the evidence of Family member Linda Kasabian, Manson saw his death sentence commuted to life in prison following a 1976 California Supreme Court decision declaring the state's death penalty law unconstitutional.

In his own testimony at trial, Manson described himself as a chameleon-like character: "Charlie never projects himself....People see in Charlie their own reflection....Linda Kasabian testified against me because she saw me as the father she never liked....I do what love tells me."

Since his conviction, Manson has been denied parole ten times, most recently in 2002. He is given almost no hope of ever being released. He currently resides in a maximum security section of a state penitentiary in Concoran, California.

2006-09-19 11:38:57 · answer #7 · answered by missourim43 6 · 0 0

I think it's wrong they didn't terminate him a long time ago.

2006-09-19 11:37:09 · answer #8 · answered by Robert 5 · 0 0

No I dont think it is wrong.

2006-09-19 12:15:23 · answer #9 · answered by HEY HOW ARE YA 3 · 0 0

society is better off with out him....we have enough trouble as it is...

2006-09-19 11:37:07 · answer #10 · answered by krnsspott 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers