Diocletus
Illuminator
- Joined
- May 19, 2011
- Messages
- 3,969
There are a swarm of Flies feeding on this article, CaliDeeva, Yves L., etc. Where do these people come from?
Flies come from maggots.
There are a swarm of Flies feeding on this article, CaliDeeva, Yves L., etc. Where do these people come from?
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.I actually think there are two kinds of guilters; those who think they're right, and those who know they're wrong.
The former are usually low information types. The latter are something else entirely. Mischievous, sadistic, criminal, loathsome.
I'm not sure there's any value in engaging with either. But I can see the benefit of watching the guiters get confronted with argument, and having to defend their positions. I just can't.
Fact is though, their positions are not defensible. So when cornered, they resort to ad hominem attacks, or just run away and bad mouth on their own enabler recovery sites.
It's a strange group for sure. Wonder what they'll do when innocence is formally recognized?
Flies come from maggots.
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
ANOTHER ONE!!!!!
Stunning Interview by Amanda Knox with Chris Cuomo
The author is, get this, "Eyes for Lies Deception and Credibility Expert"
Lots and lots of flies here high fiving each other with Gusto
"defenders on the PR payroll have sociopath tendancies"
Where do the Italian judges find and hire these people?
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
Test?
One thing I think about the pro-guilt side is that they are not even willing to examine the pro innocent arguments instead dismissing them out of hand. I am quite willing to examine any pro-guilt arguments.
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<snip> I can see the benefit of watching the guilters get confronted with argument, and having to defend their positions. <snip>
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
I don't think that's quite fair, CoulsdonUK. The assertion was that the people who believe AK & RS are guilty of murder do not confront arguments about the case and do not defend their position with facts. The sweeping statement you refer to is just that -- the PGP have demonstrated repeatedly that they have no desire to honestly confront any issues that might undermine their convictions.
It's probably not helpful to guess about the psychology of what that might mean, but the statement itself is true.
For one small example, I once got into an extended wrangle with Mach about whether or not AK was really an honor student at a respected university. He simply refused to accept that those facts were in evidence. Her grades and history as a student meant nothing to him, as compared to details that he was convinced showed her true nature as a "party girl."
I brought up the ranking of the UW as compared to other schools. I showed him evidence about the difficulty of getting admitted, and the rigor of a foreign language major. There were many statements on the record from her former teachers and fellow students, all of which spoke to her diligence and determination.
All for nothing. The reality of a hard-working college student with an ambitious academic workload was invisible to him. That's what I mean when I say that the PGP refuse to engage in an honest discussion. AK the honor student in a difficult program at a quality university was incongruent with the person they have conjured . . . so, big shrug.
I could give you a dozen examples, and I've only been reading these threads carefully for a few months.
Unfortunately this is true. None of it holds up actual logical analysis based on the facts. I don't know Amanda or Raffaele. Never met them. Probably never will. If the evidence was conclusive, I'd put the rope around their necks. They would deserve neither sympathy or forgiveness on this earth.
I find there are examples of pontification on both sides of this case in guise of sweeping statements being made by individuals, for example when people speak of “guilters” as though they are a recently discovered tribe of Homo Sapiens who have developed differently than pro-innocence folk; they think differently, probably look different, it’s easy to see how elitism or racism can spring up out of nowhere.
The behaviour you describes exist on both sides.
I don't think that is right. . . .
If they committed the murder and rape, there is something wrong inside them.
They would probably need to be kept away from the population at large but I don't consider them to deserve the noose.
Well, I'm against Capital Punishment DF. But not because I don't believe that the guilty don't deserve it, but because I know that the system is unjust and capricious. That we apply capital punishment in a bizarrely arbitrary fashion. People like Garry Ridgeway are allowed to live?? Excuse me??
I also know that the system is wrong too much to accept the ultimate penalty. And then there is the cost involved. It is actually significantly cheaper to house someone for 40 years than it is to go through 15 years of legal appeals.
I can appreciate that some people are against it on moral grounds that it is just wrong to kill. Ii was just trying to make it clear to any and all guilters, that I have no love for Amanda Knox or Raffaele and I'm open to an intellectual argument for their guilt and challenge any of them to present one.
.Vibio,
From the Borsini-Belardi report: "Then, apart from the attempt to staunch the flow of blood from the wound and the proof that it was not he that held the knife that was compatible with the worst of the lesions, it should also be remembered that Guede was the only one, even if in a somewhat fanciful reconstruction of events, to indicate the perpetrators." If Guede were shown mitigation for identifying the others that participated (as indicated in this passage), then the distinction you tried to maintain collapses.
Karate is specifically mentioned several times on p. 369 of the English translation, and "Meredith's physical and personality characteristics" is mentioned on p. 370. There is a good deal of additional conjecture that ignores expert opinion in this section (that almost goes without saying when discussing the Massei report). As for how the defense will respond to Nencini's treading over fundamental principles of judicial fairness in bringing in Guede's trials, we will have to wait for the appeal documents and then see.
Personally I like the idea of motivations reports. What I think is highly questionable is that in them the presiding judge can make up his or her own theory of the crime, against which the defense has had no chance to respond. Whether it is better to have both or neither is an interesting question.
I just watched a documentary on Andrea Yates and that Texas both sought the death penalty and argued that she was not considered insane. If anybody is mentally ill and deserving consider insane it is her. I actually understand the jury not wanting to classify her as insane so that she cannot go free in a few years but the state seeking the death penalty?
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I also like the idea of Motivation documents. I think accused persons deserve them as a fundamental right. I wish we had them in Canada.
Perhaps it should be the prosecuting team that has to provide a Motivations document before the trial begins, or maybe even before charges are laid. The judge and jury would have to stick to the prosecution's script and either approve or disapprove it, plus provide a document giving their reasons for doing so.
If the prosecuting team had to produce a motivations document they might be more likely to find the evidence first, and charge people later, rather than the other way around. It would also force them to put some serious thought into assembling the evidence they have into a consistent and believable theory.
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I also like the idea of Motivation documents. I think accused persons deserve them as a fundamental right. I wish we had them in Canada.
Perhaps it should be the prosecuting team that has to provide a Motivations document before the trial begins, or maybe even before charges are laid. The judge and jury would have to stick to the prosecution's script and either approve or disapprove it, plus provide a document giving their reasons for doing so.
If the prosecuting team had to produce a motivations document they might be more likely to find the evidence first, and charge people later, rather than the other way around. It would also force them to put some serious thought into assembling the evidence they have into a consistent and believable theory.
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