stagpanther
New member
We live in the golden age of making up whatever hooey we want to fit our agenda.
Nobody has made a claim to the contrary.I watched the cross-examination of McGinnis while it was taking place and do not recall those exact words being used by Binger, "shooting him in the back."
What you are calling the "Branca quote" was not a quote at all. Branca explicitly called it a "reasonable paraphrase".I'm calling BS on the Branca quote...
linked article said:The actual exchange is in the video, so you can watch it for yourself, but a reasonable paraphrase would go something like this:
Binger: So Rittenhouse shot Rosenbaum, in the back, as he was falling, correct?
Did you read what I posted? Because it doesn't seem like you did.Sorry John, but if it walks like a lie and talks like a lie--it's probably a lie
We live in the golden age of making up whatever hooey we want to fit our agenda.
A paraphrase that is explicitly acknowledged as being a paraphrase is a paraphrase, not a lie.stagpanther said:Sorry John, but if it walks like a lie and talks like a lie--it's probably a lie.
If (and that is apparently subject to considerable debate) he was not asked to be there by the owners of that car lot, what if he was asked to be there by someone else? The fact that the owners of one particular car lot didn't specifically call up Kyle Rittenhouse and ask him -- personally -- to watch their car lot isn't evidence that he was not wanted there.Metal god said:If it’s established that he was never asked to be there by the owners of the car lots and he did in fact inject himself where he was not wanted . Could that in itself be considered reckless ?
If it’s established that he was never asked to be there by the owners of the car lots and he did in fact inject himself where he was not wanted . Could that in itself be considered reckless ?
Metal god said:To the reckless question , I was asking a legit question so thanks for the feedback . I don’t know all the definitions to recklessness . I don’t know if it can be used in the way I may be suggesting . That’s why I would need to see the charges and the jury instructions as they pertain to each individual charge .
I guess my overall question is can your actions be considered reckless if you interject yourself into a situation you were not asked to be in . 44 makes a good point about stopping the car in the middle of the road to help even though you were not asked to be there . In that example which I think is a good one to discuss maybe . The selfless heroic person is not only putting himself in harms way but everybody else on the road . I believe that’s what makes it reckless it’s not that The person stopping the car to help is in harms way that makes it reckless it’s that all the subsequent things that can happen because of his reckless action that makes it reckless ???
How much more reckless does it become when your actions came after you knew that law enforcement was already on the scene?
How much more reckless does it become when your actions came after you knew that law enforcement was already on the scene?
Mainah said:How much more reckless does it become when your actions came after you knew that law enforcement was already on the scene?