While there is probably a lot more going on than the story is portraying, I think you might be projecting your own bad experiences onto hers because of very generalized similarities.
Mostly because it was the suspect who was expelled, not the victim (and only this news clip has that info, so I only half believe it). And considering all we have on her is that she is an impulsive and violent person (based on her actions), she sounds closer to just a regular black teen than any autist I've ever met.
Mostly because it was the suspect who was expelled, not the victim
Depends how you see it. The "suspect" claims the stabbing was done out of self defense. They called Kyle Rittenhouse the suspect, did they not?
The link I shared in the linked comment is to show that it isn't just my bad experience. There are a LOT of fucking kids who share my experience. Who are going through it right now. It's a goddamn shame the only way they get seen as abused is if they off themselves in spectacular fashion. Normal kids don't shank people over nuggies. Normal kids don't get expelled. This wasn't a normal kid, this was a kid that fell through the cracks and never got help.
Its not really a "how you see it" problem. Suspect is the one getting charged, regardless of justification or their claims, while victim is the one who was "victimized," whether they are actually victims or the instigators. Rittenhouse was the suspect, because he was the one being prosecuted even if he had fully valid self defense claims.
The link I shared in the linked comment is to show that it isn't just my bad experience.
I wasn't saying it didn't happen. My brother was an autist who struggled his entire life through school, I got to see it happen and raise him mostly myself. I said you saw vague similarities to your own problem and jumped the gun building a narrative.
Normal kids don't shank people over nuggies. Normal kids don't get expelled
These weren't normal kids. These were Black Teens. I grew up adjacent to and intermixed with ghettos my entire life. This is completely normal behavior for that demographic. The only unique part of this story is the sauce, but its always something dumb like that. Normal kids wouldn't kill each other over slightly scuffing their shoes walking by on accident, but that's a problem so common to black teens/young adults its a cliche joke on their Comedy Skit shows.
Again, I think you are letting your own experience, which I'm not diminishing the struggle, build you a narrative for this kid that doesn't exist. The simplest answer is she was just a hoodrat and this is normal hoodrat behavior.
Rittenhouse was the suspect, because he was the one being prosecuted even if he had fully valid self defense claims.
Which is my point. I'm calling her the victim just like I called Rittenhouse a victim. When you feel compelled to use the same terminology and framing as the state, you're losing the battle to begin with. I didn't misspeak earlier, or mix up victim and offender. I said it how I meant it from my perspective which is that the one being prosecuted right now actually did act in self defense.
It's just as valid for me to say you're projecting your life experiences and assuming it's more hoodrattery.
If your response to people you are choosing to interact with being mean to you is to murder them, you have ceased to have victimhood. If autists aren't able to handle that basic fact, as you keep trying to push, then they aren't fit for civilized society and I will lump them just as I do the niggers who also act in such a manner. Which is full removal, not kindness and empathy.
I don't believe that is the case, however. Its also entirely possible she acted in self defense, as we have straight up no details other than she was expelled. I am simply rejecting your conjuration that she was some bullied autist finally snapping back against a system that beat her down.
And I will continue to use words as they mean, instead of replacing them with what i feel is more appropriate based on my emotional states and conjured up narratives. You can dislike that as you wish, but that says more about you than me.
While there is probably a lot more going on than the story is portraying, I think you might be projecting your own bad experiences onto hers because of very generalized similarities.
Mostly because it was the suspect who was expelled, not the victim (and only this news clip has that info, so I only half believe it). And considering all we have on her is that she is an impulsive and violent person (based on her actions), she sounds closer to just a regular black teen than any autist I've ever met.
Depends how you see it. The "suspect" claims the stabbing was done out of self defense. They called Kyle Rittenhouse the suspect, did they not?
The link I shared in the linked comment is to show that it isn't just my bad experience. There are a LOT of fucking kids who share my experience. Who are going through it right now. It's a goddamn shame the only way they get seen as abused is if they off themselves in spectacular fashion. Normal kids don't shank people over nuggies. Normal kids don't get expelled. This wasn't a normal kid, this was a kid that fell through the cracks and never got help.
Its not really a "how you see it" problem. Suspect is the one getting charged, regardless of justification or their claims, while victim is the one who was "victimized," whether they are actually victims or the instigators. Rittenhouse was the suspect, because he was the one being prosecuted even if he had fully valid self defense claims.
I wasn't saying it didn't happen. My brother was an autist who struggled his entire life through school, I got to see it happen and raise him mostly myself. I said you saw vague similarities to your own problem and jumped the gun building a narrative.
These weren't normal kids. These were Black Teens. I grew up adjacent to and intermixed with ghettos my entire life. This is completely normal behavior for that demographic. The only unique part of this story is the sauce, but its always something dumb like that. Normal kids wouldn't kill each other over slightly scuffing their shoes walking by on accident, but that's a problem so common to black teens/young adults its a cliche joke on their Comedy Skit shows.
Again, I think you are letting your own experience, which I'm not diminishing the struggle, build you a narrative for this kid that doesn't exist. The simplest answer is she was just a hoodrat and this is normal hoodrat behavior.
Which is my point. I'm calling her the victim just like I called Rittenhouse a victim. When you feel compelled to use the same terminology and framing as the state, you're losing the battle to begin with. I didn't misspeak earlier, or mix up victim and offender. I said it how I meant it from my perspective which is that the one being prosecuted right now actually did act in self defense.
It's just as valid for me to say you're projecting your life experiences and assuming it's more hoodrattery.
If your response to people you are choosing to interact with being mean to you is to murder them, you have ceased to have victimhood. If autists aren't able to handle that basic fact, as you keep trying to push, then they aren't fit for civilized society and I will lump them just as I do the niggers who also act in such a manner. Which is full removal, not kindness and empathy.
I don't believe that is the case, however. Its also entirely possible she acted in self defense, as we have straight up no details other than she was expelled. I am simply rejecting your conjuration that she was some bullied autist finally snapping back against a system that beat her down.
And I will continue to use words as they mean, instead of replacing them with what i feel is more appropriate based on my emotional states and conjured up narratives. You can dislike that as you wish, but that says more about you than me.