I don't know why that is so surprising. Many of the black, white-hating politicians have white boyfriends and husbands. Many of the feminists who say that they "hate men" melted for Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard because they were thirsty.
I can't read the article, because it's an archive, but I don't see why they should not convict him - no more than the Imp would vote to acquit a man who murdered a woman for no reason. You can persuade yourself that the victim was "fake" as he did with Sarah Everhard when you're far from the matter, but not when you're up close.
I considered it. He might say that convicting would lead to "women having more of an excuse to murder boys" or something like that. But more likely than not, I think he'd vote to convict.
His main problem is that he's totally detached from the real world, and there's nothing like being on a jury (I assume, I'm a Eurofag) to change that and force you to confront the facts.
I don't know why that is so surprising. Many of the black, white-hating politicians have white boyfriends and husbands. Many of the feminists who say that they "hate men" melted for Johnny Depp vs. Amber Heard because they were thirsty.
I can't read the article, because it's an archive, but I don't see why they should not convict him - no more than the Imp would vote to acquit a man who murdered a woman for no reason. You can persuade yourself that the victim was "fake" as he did with Sarah Everhard when you're far from the matter, but not when you're up close.
I feel like imp might find a way to justify that in his mind.
I considered it. He might say that convicting would lead to "women having more of an excuse to murder boys" or something like that. But more likely than not, I think he'd vote to convict.
His main problem is that he's totally detached from the real world, and there's nothing like being on a jury (I assume, I'm a Eurofag) to change that and force you to confront the facts.
I have served on a jury before, and it does indeed force you to confront the facts and also the specificity of law.