we live on a turbo prison planet. i would never murder anyone because the possible consequences are too nightmarish

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c if i feel bad, all is lost
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being locked up for life is hell

and in this police state u will get caught with a high probability

now look at this:

 
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Allegations of human rights abuses​

[edit]
Critics of CECOT have referred to it as a "black hole of human rights".[21] The BBC has indicated that CECOT does not adhere to the Red Cross' international standard that recommends that each prisoner receives at least 3.4 square meters (37 sq ft) of space in a cell; CECOT on average gives prisoners 0.6 square meters (6.5 sq ft) of space.[20] Martin Horn, a former administrator of the Rikers Island prison in the United States, stated that 40,000 prisoners is "too many to manage in one place [...] under any circumstances", referring to the prison's listed capacity.[17] There are not enough bunks for every prisoner assigned to each cell;[25] when the BBC asked García what the maximum capacity of each cell was, he replied that "where you can fit 10 people, you can fit 20".[21] Emerson College political scientist Mneesha Gellman said that people held in CECOT face "severe overcrowding" and "inadequate food".[80]

The BBC has also indicated that prisoners are deprived of rights such as outside recreation and family visitation outlined by international guidelines.[20] Juan Carlos Sánchez, a program officer of the Due Process of Law Foundation, raised concerns about the quality of food served at CECOT. He also questioned the status of due process as the prison incarcerated both convicted criminals and individuals on trial for their alleged crimes. He warns that prisoners could become "sick physically, mentally" and "come out with rage".[23] Antonio Durán, a senior judge in Zacatecoluca, said that the conditions in CECOT amount to "torture".[20] Zaira Navas, a legal advisor at the Cristosal NGO, states that it is difficult to monitor conditions inside CECOT and that conditions "might become inhumane and degrading because no-one has access to that prison".[20] Doug Specht, a human rights scholar at the University of Westminster, wrote in The SAIS Review of International Affairs that conditions in CECOT "fall significantly short of accepted norms for the humane treatment of prisoners".[81]

Amnesty International raised concerns that CECOT "could threaten human rights" ("podría amenazar DD.HH") and that the prison represented "politics of mass incarceration" ("política de encarcelamiento masivo").[82] Amnesty International further remarked that CECOT has "worsened the human rights situation in El Salvador" and set an "an alarming precedent of repressive cooperation between governments" resulting in enforced disappearance, referring to the U.S. deportations of 261 Salvadorans and Venezuelans.[83] Miguel Sarre, a former member of the United Nations Subcommittee for the Prevention of Torture, described CECOT as a "concrete and steel pit" used to "dispose of people without formally applying the death penalty", citing that the government has not confirmed that inmates have been released from CECOT.[21] Kavan Applegate, the chairman of the International Corrections and Prisons Association's design committee, remarked that CECOT is "warehousing" people. Gustavo Fondevila, a professor of law at the Center for Economic Research and Teaching, described CECOT as a "political campaign project, the typical campaign project of pure, hard penal populism".[17]

In response to criticism of alleged human rights abuses, García told CNN that "much has been said about CECOT and human rights violations, but you are seeing everything we do—medical assistance, ensuring they follow due process [...] the whole operation is based on strict respect for human rights".[23] On 12 September 2023, the Supreme Court of Justice and the Legislative Assembly approved a provision that allowed courts in Usulután and Cojutepeque—known as surveillance courts—to monitor the rights of individuals imprisoned in CECOT.[84]

In April 2025, some users on Reddit and X have promoted a theory that a "mystery mound" located within CECOT's premises on Google Earth and Google Maps satellite imagery is "a pile of bodies and a stream of blood".[85] Following the theories, images of CECOT became unsearchable on Google Earth and Google Maps. According to Google, the "listing was incorrectly removed due to an edit from a Maps user" and would be reinstated.[86] The mound was absent from imagery days later.[87] BBC journalist Shayan Sardarizadeh said that what was depicted in the image could not be easily identified and that it could simply be something such as mud of construction materials.[87]
 
being locked up for life is hell

and in this police state u will get caught with a high probability

now look at this:


brutal shit
 

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