The Kenosha Killer Kid may get off

 Another asinine, fact twisting, lying posting by kevin.

David adds so much to every discussion with his thoughtful, polite postings.

 kevin adds nothing truthful to any discussion with his lying, fact twisting, filth laden postings - there are 4+ years of his past postings on the Advisor forums to verify what I have said.

He should have raised his weapon, backed away, and told his "attackers" to not come any closer.

 

Kind of hard to do when he is laying on his back & somebody is standing over him ready to club him with a skateboard, or while lying on his back someone is pointing a gun at him.

Edited on Nov 29, 2021 12:16pm

  According to PJ --"He should have raised his weapon, backed away, and told his "attackers" to not come any closer.--- That begs the question, if Rittenhouse had of done the idiotic things that PJ alludes to, what should of Ritenhouse have done if the mauraders did not "back away" and continued with their attack?  

Edited on Nov 29, 2021 9:18am
Originally posted by: Tom

He should have raised his weapon, backed away, and told his "attackers" to not come any closer.

 

Kind of hard to do when he is laying on his back & somebody is standing over him ready to club him with a skateboard, or wile lying on his back someone is pointing a gun at him.


He ran away, for God's sake.

The doctrine, which, incredibly, seems to have worked at the Killer Kid's trial, is that if you're standing there holding a gun, your life is automatically in danger because people will try to take your gun away and kill you with it. Therefore, if you're holding a gun, you have the sacred right to blow away anyone you consider to be threatening.

 

Unbelievable.

 The actual doctorine is "self defense", as ascribed by law. The mere facts that Rittenhouse was attacked by maurading thugs escapes kevin, who, if he were so encountered, would rather have allowed the thugs to beat him to death than defend himself. Truly believable.

Look up "doctorine" in the dictionary and get back to us, David dear. And don't forget to get in the last word.

I did, here is the definition (found on Google) --  "What is the doctrine belief? Doctrine (from Latin: doctrina, meaning "teaching, instruction") is a codification of beliefs or a body of teachings or instructions, taught principles or positions, as the essence of teachings in a given branch of knowledge or in a belief system"

Edited on Nov 30, 2021 12:19pm
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