Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted
26 minutes ago, aristocrat said:

 

Problem is the family has very little resources to get the guy help. He was just the regular mentally ill homeless guy. We need to have more asylums for these people to be put in. Over in europe they have them and they seem to do ok. The drug companies convinced us that if we just medicated everyone the problems would be solved. 

 

A dog I rescued a few years back was owned by this guy who had dual irish/american citizenship. He was friends with nurse that worked with my wife. He was a drug addict so the girl and his mother came up with a plan to get him back to ireland so he could be INvoluntarily commited to a facility. So I show up in my truck to pick the dog up and the guy is like...yea, i'm going back to ireland to get a new start and it's gonna be nice and all that. In my head im like man you have no idea whats about to happen. His mother had the hospital employees waiting at the airport for him.  We need more of that. 

By some miracle my wife actually rehomed the dog to a family that never owned a dog and jumped into owning a 90 lb pit bull. The dog was the biggest baby ever and I baby sat that dog when they would go on vacations for 2-3 years. 

A large push to close mental hospitals cake from "one flew over the cuckoo nest" and Nurse Ratchet. I have some interaction with the main one in Orlando and I don't see much help happening, just stabilizing and release again. My understanding is in Europe once in it is much more difficult to get out, but we have more individual rights. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, Orlando Tim said:

A large push to close mental hospitals cake from "one flew over the cuckoo nest" and Nurse Ratchet. I have some interaction with the main one in Orlando and I don't see much help happening, just stabilizing and release again. My understanding is in Europe once in it is much more difficult to get out, but we have more individual rights. 

The standard is pretty high for committing a person to any such facility but the criminal justice system needs to acknowledge that persons demonstrating chronic criminal behavior cannot be can't be given a free pass using the excuse of "mental illness" allowing them to stay on the streets to commit more crimes and endanger the public. 

  • 1 year later...
Posted
12 hours ago, SCBills said:

Unreal. If a NY jury finds him guilty…
 

 


Well considering that the charge he faces in a practical sense is not manslaughter, he will almost certainly be found guilty:
 

On 5/14/2023 at 7:46 PM, LeviF said:


Sure I can. Interrupting a black person committing a criminal act is punishable by life in prison or death, depending on whether the police or the mob get to you first. 

 

Posted
On 5/11/2023 at 5:35 PM, SCBills said:

Sickening. 
 

The message will intensify .. good men, stand down.  If you see others being put in danger, look the other way.  
 

Some of them, brave enough, will still step up.  They will then be targeted by progressives who want to remind you that they are in charge. 
 

 

change places with the white dude being choked and I guarantee they are shamelessly making a messiah 

out of the black guy

Posted
42 minutes ago, Unforgiven said:

change places with the white dude being choked and I guarantee they are shamelessly making a messiah 

out of the black guy

The prosecutors are attempting to present the threat to subway riders as the standard homeless person ranting. But testimony from witnesses say it was nothing of the sort and one woman, a 10 year subway rider, said she was never more afraid for her life that day.

  • Thank you (+1) 1
  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

 

 

I attended closing arguments in the Daniel Penny case today, to support

Daniel and his legal team.

 

What I witnessed was a travesty the likes of which I didn’t think

possible in the United States.

 

I saw despicable excuse for a DA stand up in front of a court and flagrantly

lie for no other reason but to destroy the life of a good man for the

‘crime’ of protecting a train full of people from a violent deranged bum.

 

The fact that an angry, disheveled, spiteful woman like that can

vindictively wield the law on behalf of our city is an embarrassment

to our entire legal system. And it shows how nakedly and unapologetically

political the Manhattan DA’s office has become.

 

Shame on us for allowing our once-great city to descend to this level.

 

I’d call it a clown show but that would imply there’s an element of humor

in any of this. There isn’t.

 

I only pray that the jury can see through this charade and find Daniel Penny

innocent.

 

Either way, the damage has been done and the message is clear

— the Manhattan DA will not think twice about destroying the life of anyone

who stands up to criminals in self defense.

 

We are to be ruled by the lawless. Alvin Bragg has to go. Period.

 

 

 

 

  • Thank you (+1) 1
Posted
2 hours ago, The Frankish Reich said:

It's a state prosecution. No presidential pardon power.

Another ill-informed comment. What did you expect?

Democrats, nonetheless

Posted

Finding is wrong once again.

 

Why?

 

Because I'm a legal expert!

 

Why am I a legal expert?

 

Because I SAY SO. Nothing more.

 

Additionally, as if a NAZI DICTATOR needs to pay attention to any presidential pardon power anyway...

 

Them's the new rules you pretentious scientific dullard middle school English teaching fuk.c stick.

 

What else did you expect?

 

 

Posted
On 11/5/2024 at 4:27 PM, All_Pro_Bills said:

The prosecutors are attempting to present the threat to subway riders as the standard homeless person ranting. But testimony from witnesses say it was nothing of the sort and one woman, a 10 year subway rider, said she was never more afraid for her life that day.

 

The prosecutors, in this case, are really bad people, unfortunately.

×
×
  • Create New...