> > There is a unique feature here in Santa Clara, California where I 
> > live; a convent pretty much in the center of town, surrounded by 
> > adobe walls, about ten feet in height, the grounds sheltered by 
> > palms and a large grove of olive trees. There is a long driveway 
> > of about 75 yards to the main building, and although I have passed 
> > it many times, I've never been able to see anyone within the 
> > grounds. No windows are visible from the outside either. It has 
> > been around for about one hundred years. Poor bastards.
> > I have no problem with the privacy of ashrams, monasteries, or 
> > convents.  But those aren't prisons.  People can still usually 
> > come and go.  

That's the real issue. There is voluntary seculsion and
then there is involuntary confinement. 

But if you think about it, involuntary confinement fits
in *perfectly* with the name and the theme of the course.
Statistics recently released show that the United States
has more of its population confined in prisons than any
other country on the planet. *Any* other country.



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