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Rocky Mountains
United States
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Favorite Quote“Life Is Poetry In Motion, Great Poets Reflect Emotion...
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About me |
Author Introduction
Its both my pleasure and honor to become a part of this wonderful site that has so many wonderful creative people. I introduce myself as a world-renowned poet with poems published in various books. I was born in Springfield, Illinois and moved to Mountain Country at age three. I live in the Rocky Mountains, and love the natural setting of the high mountain country. I had always been an active writer of short stories until I met a very special girl who found the gift of poetry within me and brought it out to be shared with the world. I have just gained a writers place in the romance novel industry as my first novel has now been published and made available in May of this year.
I have two brothers, one sister and many nephews and nieces. I have always been in tune with my emotional being. Many say I am sensitive to life’s ups and downs. Each day is a new beginning and should be lived to the fullest. One should always strive to make the best of life; we are only given one life to live. I strive to reach out to the world and share my passion for poetry in hopes of enkindling warm smiles. There is nothing more inspiring than daily life; life is poetry in motion. I write on a variety of topics, so there is something for everyone to savor. I hope you enjoy my creative writing style as my poetry flows from my heart to yours.
I work in Law Enforcement and write to stay in touch with my emotional being. I have a bachelor's degree with Psychiatric Nursing being my major and Criminal Justice being my Minor. I have also worked as a successful Locksmith for many years. I will now include some of my feelings towards those that may work in the field of Law Enforcement.
Correctional Officers
What would the average citizen say if it were proposed that police officers be assigned to a neighborhood which was totally inhabited by no one but criminals and those officers would be unarmed, patrol on foot, and be heavily outnumbered? I would venture to say that the overwhelming public response would be that the officers would have to be completely crazy to accept such an assignment or make such a career choice. However, as you read this, such a scenario is being played out in all areas of our great country. Federal and state Correctional Officers, not guards, which is a person watching school crossings, or walking the hallways of many schools and hospitals, and our malls as guards. Correctional Officers work in Correctional Facilities, empowered by the federal and state to enforce its laws and the rules and regulations of the Department of Corrections, in short, Law Enforcement Officers.
Our daily beat is totally inhabited by convicted felons, who, by definition, are people who tend to break the laws, rules, and regulations of our society. Correctional Officers are outnumbered by a ratio of 100 to 1 or more in some cases during the average workday, and contrary to popular belief, we work without sidearms. Yes, our necks are on the line every minute of our work day. A correctional facility is a very misunderstood environment. The average person has little knowledge of it's workings. Society sends it's criminals to correctional facilities and as time passes, each criminal's crime fades from our memory until the collective prison population becomes a vision of hordes of bad people being warehoused away from decent people where they can cause no further harm to society. There is also a notion that prison inmates cease to be a problem when they are incarcerated.
Correctional facilities are packed full of violence perpetrated by the prison population against each other and the facility staff. Felonies are committed daily but they are called "incidents' and rarely result in public prosecution. Discipline is handled internally and, as a rule, the public is never informed of these internal crimes. In the course if maintaining order in these facilities many officers have been punched or kicked, bitten, stabbed, slashed with homemade weapons, taken hostage and even murdered in the line of duty, while being legally mandated to maintain their professional composure and refrain from any and all retaliation. In addition to these obvious dangers, correctional officers face hidden dangers in the form of AIDS, tuberculosis, hepatitis B and hepatitis C. The courts are now imposing longer sentences and the prison population is increasing far beyond the systems designed capacity. As the public demands more police on the streets, governments everywhere are handcuffing police in prisons where violence reigns supreme, jeopardizing those officers behind these prison walls. Although you will never see us on
"Cops," or "Real Stories" we are law enforcement professionals. The forgotten cop, hidden from view. ( except for the 1% or less who make the news-our counterparts know how that works when someone goes bad or something goes extremely wrong), doing thankless duty on the worlds most dangerous beat, hoping someday to receive respect and approval from the public whom we sincerely serve to protect and keep safe from these criminal's of crime.
I want to dedicate this to all who have served and have a place in your heart for the work that must be done. Thank You for reading this and understanding that we are people too and want to protect of free society from these evil people.
Penned By Mickey Pig Knuckles
I hope you may enjoy my introduction as I now close with the wonderful thought of gaining many wonderful people to come and want to become a part of this great site with such a huge variety of talents.
Your Dear Friend
Mickey Pig Knuckles
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