Quite obviously nobody can stop him from violating his parole, but nobody here can promise him that he's going to be sent to prison based on a theoretical parole violation, or that if sentenced to prison he'll max out his sentence rather than being released back on parole.

Prison is expensive. Georgia pays about $20,000 per year per prison inmate (cheap by national standards). He is free to discuss his wish to go to prison with his parole officer, but he should not expect that the state is going to be eager to pick up the tab. You know what? Parole isn't supposed to be fun.