I cry for Lenny because he was a good boy who had to be killed because a worthless woman was big sad about her life and walked into a dangerous situation to be a thot.
Most "real victims" I'm told to cry about are the same type of retarded woman who gets victimized after doing something stupid they should know better than. Or niggers getting the consequence of their own action.
As I recall, the book starts with Lenny and George already on the run because Lenny tarded out on another woman before, grabbing and tearing her skirt because he thought it was perty. He also cannot be trusted with small animals because he squeezes them to death because he cannot figure out that he keeps squeezing them to death. True, the woman was not wise, but Lenny being a problem was inevitable.
He is a large man meant for manual labor, a place where women shouldn't be around to begin with. Have his wrangler near him to help prevent as many small animal deaths as possible and he can live a fulfilling and productive life just fine.
The book made it quite obvious that the woman kept coming around to start trouble, and no one who wasn't blinded with lust wanted her there. Her death is entirely her fault and is far beyond just being "not wise."
It was inevitable because of the evils of the world that surrounded them, but that's why his fate is a tragedy instead of a necessity.
I cry for Lenny because he was a good boy who had to be killed because a worthless woman was big sad about her life and walked into a dangerous situation to be a thot.
Most "real victims" I'm told to cry about are the same type of retarded woman who gets victimized after doing something stupid they should know better than. Or niggers getting the consequence of their own action.
As I recall, the book starts with Lenny and George already on the run because Lenny tarded out on another woman before, grabbing and tearing her skirt because he thought it was perty. He also cannot be trusted with small animals because he squeezes them to death because he cannot figure out that he keeps squeezing them to death. True, the woman was not wise, but Lenny being a problem was inevitable.
He is a large man meant for manual labor, a place where women shouldn't be around to begin with. Have his wrangler near him to help prevent as many small animal deaths as possible and he can live a fulfilling and productive life just fine.
The book made it quite obvious that the woman kept coming around to start trouble, and no one who wasn't blinded with lust wanted her there. Her death is entirely her fault and is far beyond just being "not wise."
It was inevitable because of the evils of the world that surrounded them, but that's why his fate is a tragedy instead of a necessity.