• @[email protected]
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    36 months ago

    Wow, sounds like he shouldn’t have been there at all! What monster forcibly brought this 17 year old kid into that situation?

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      He probably shouldn’t have bought the gun, but saying something is someone’s fault because they “shouldn’t have been” somewhere they have a legal right to be is cringe.

      • @[email protected]
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        06 months ago

        I have a legal right to go swimming in shark infested waters.

        Probably not a great idea though, right?

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          Right, but you wouldn’t be put on trial for endangering the sharks lol

          Look, there are good arguments to be made of Rittenhouse’s guilt, you’re just not making them.

          Part of me feels like the standard neoliberal talking points on the matter were engineered by conservatives to reduce the credibility of their conclusion.

            • @[email protected]
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              6 months ago

              Wrongdoing, I guess?

              There are two components, really: legal guilt and moral guilt. Legally, he definitely purchased and transported a firearm illegally, and then shot three people with said illegally-purchased firearm. Morally, you generally don’t bring a rifle somewhere unless you expect you may have to use it, and you don’t bring a rifle to a riot unless you expect you may have to use it against rioters.

              In the best case, he grossly underestimated the probability that he would have to use it, which turned the small net benefit of his presence as a “medic” into a major detriment in that two people are now dead. He also failed to recognize that possessing, brandishing, and using a firearm at a riot would directly lead to being attacked (in 2 of the 3 shootings, IIRC). It should have been obvious that an angry crowd wouldn’t have all the facts, yet would know that the person who just fired an AR-15 is dangerous and attempt to subdue them.

              In the worst case, he went there specifically because of the possibility he would get to shoot people, rather than in spite of the possibility. The fact that he went without his parents’ permission—which hopefully wouldn’t have been granted—, as well as that he brought an illegally-obtained firearm, lends credence to this argument. IIRC, the prosecutors were unable to produce evidence that this was his intention, but the possibility can never truly be ruled out, and his publicity and associations following the trial suggest hey may have possessed malicious intent. After all, for someone who supposedly didn’t want to see BLM protestors dead, he sure works for/with a lot of people who basically do.

              • @[email protected]
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                26 months ago

                Don’t overcomplicate it. I’m not trying to systematically determine some deep truth here.

                17 year olds should not grab guns and go to dangerous riots. Simple as.

                • @[email protected]
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                  06 months ago

                  Don’t overcomplicate it. I’m not trying to systematically determine some deep truth here.

                  You probably should be, if you care about it so much.

                  17 year olds should not grab guns and go to dangerous riots. Simple as.

                  Yes, and reducing that argument to

                  17 year olds should not go to dangerous riots. Simple as.

                  Is still not wrong, per se, but totally eliminates any mention of his illegal activity.