Kyle Rittenhouse - The Truth in 11 Minutes

grapedrink

Duke status
May 21, 2011
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A Beach
Yes, but you're unlikely to face a prosecutor as incompetent as Binger.
Exactly. Like every DA, they are politicians who are hell bent on winning and appeasing the public. Had he gone for manslaughter, the chances for a win would’ve been better because the bar would be lower and the jury less reluctant to put KR away for life.
 

hammies

Duke status
Apr 8, 2006
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The facts of the case were so clear that any lawyer should have been able to win the case. KR is just lucky that so much of the events of that night were captured on video making it a simple case.
The videos were very powerful evidence against a murder conviction.

IMO he still should have been convicted of something, just to send a message to all the copycats that if you show up to a riot with a gun you're gonna do some time.
 

plasticbertrand

Duke status
Jan 12, 2009
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Close enough to be a very dumb argument. If you attack people for what they're wearing expect the worst that life has to offer.
Yes! Carrying AR15 and wearing a mini skirt is exactly the same.

Killing people and being raped, exactly the same.

Throwing a plastic bag with toiletries at someone and raping someone, exactly the same.

Invalid comparisons, why do you do it?
 

Ifallalot

Duke status
Dec 17, 2008
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Yes! Carrying AR15 and wearing a mini skirt is exactly the same.

Killing people and being raped, exactly the same.

Throwing a plastic bag with toiletries at someone and raping someone, exactly the same.

Invalid comparisons, why do you do it?
BAD CUMPAIRSUN REEEEEEE

:roflmao:

Clown show

Don't you have a riot to go to?
 
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plasticbertrand

Duke status
Jan 12, 2009
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BAD CUMPAIRSUN REEEEEEE

:roflmao:

Clown show

Don't you have a riot to go to?
Succinct and coherent answer, well done.

Terrible gotcha though.

Showing up at the protests with an AR15 with intent of shooting people because they're breaking windows is exactly the same as wearing a mini skirt and minding your own business.

:roflmao:

You guys!
 

Ifallalot

Duke status
Dec 17, 2008
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That's exactly the point dummy.

How many people get that privilege?

Instead of talking about how poor the prosecution was, maybe think about that for a second.
Depends on the whims of the media and the public

Luck isn't privilege

Maybe half the country shouldn't have supported destruction of cities nationwide because tantrums
 
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Swallow Tail

Billy Hamilton status
Oct 6, 2017
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Your Mom’s House
If you look at DNC politicians’ social media it would sure appear that they are trying to do this

One thing is for sure, there is not going to be unity anytime soon
Dems are the pot calling the kettle black w this sh!t- sound like trump w the election crap. They’re all so fcking grotesque; D, R, same piles a sh!t with different color wrapping paper.
 

plasticbertrand

Duke status
Jan 12, 2009
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Depends on the whims of the media and the public

Luck isn't privilege

Maybe half the country shouldn't have supported destruction of cities nationwide because tantrums
It's nothing to do with luck.

He's a white gunturd.

Other people don't get the privilege of being that lucky.

And supporting BLM and supporting "destruction of cities" are two different things.

You just love playing with straw.
 

plasticbertrand

Duke status
Jan 12, 2009
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...but riots work to change policy.
The quote is often traced to 1968, but it was actually a frequent rhetorical turn for King, appearing years earlier than that. In 1966, for example, in a Sept. 27 interview, King was questioned by CBS’ Mike Wallace about the “increasingly vocal minority” who disagreed with his devotion to non-violence as a tactic. In that interview, King admitted there was such a minority, though he said that surveys had shown most black Americans were on his side. “And I contend that the cry of ‘black power’ is, at bottom, a reaction to the reluctance of white power to make the kind of changes necessary to make justice a reality for the Negro,” King said. “I think that we’ve got to see that a riot is the language of the unheard. And, what is it that America has failed to hear? It has failed to hear that the economic plight of the Negro poor has worsened over the last few years.”

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