Musician Wanlov the Kubolor has suggested that conditions at his Ghanaian secondary school exceeded the hardships of incarceration in the United States. The artist told a morning television program that his time at Adisadel College involved such difficult circumstances that detention facilities abroad felt comparatively comfortable by contrast.
The performer described receiving spoiled meals that caused widespread illness among students and observed that institutional routines at the boarding school mirrored correctional environments. He noted that fellow inmates assumed he possessed prior experience because his secondary education had already familiarized him with restricted movement and rigid scheduling.
Wanlov acknowledged that the boarding school environment altered his behavior in ways that contradicted his upbringing, leading him to discipline younger students despite coming from a household where physical punishment remained absent.
The performer described receiving spoiled meals that caused widespread illness among students and observed that institutional routines at the boarding school mirrored correctional environments. He noted that fellow inmates assumed he possessed prior experience because his secondary education had already familiarized him with restricted movement and rigid scheduling.
Wanlov acknowledged that the boarding school environment altered his behavior in ways that contradicted his upbringing, leading him to discipline younger students despite coming from a household where physical punishment remained absent.