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Rittenhouse/Kenosha Shooting Split

Wait a minute here, why is this case so cleanly divided along political lines? Clearly multiple people are looking at the same evidence and arriving at different conclusions. That isn't surprising at all. But there seems to be a clean delineation based on only a single demographic factor. That is surprising (to me ) and disturbing.

Is the political lense that one or both sides look at reality through so distorting that we can't trust that the other side is seeing the same objective reality we think we are seeing?

I think the US is fucked.
I think this article addresses some parts of your question:

 
But, they weren't doing anything to stop the riots. They were letting the city burn. The politicians told the cops to not do anything. Why didn't they tell the cops to do non-lethal riot control?
According to Wikipedia:
Day 1: Large trucks used to block streets, police used tear gas and rubber bullets.
Day 2: National Guard activated, rail service suspended, highway closed. Tear gas used again.
Day 3: Courthouse fenced off, police arrest looters. More national guardsmen deployed.

Seems like you're just flat out wrong on that one.
While I can agree and understand that nobody deserves to die over property, there is no good outcome if we take this logic to its full conclusion. We would have to let thieves take whatever they want from us.
What you're saying here is that you have two choices:
1. Execute thieves.
2. Do nothing to stop thieves.
From your wiki link:
"Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers activated the Wisconsin National Guard to protect firefighters and critical infrastructure in Kenosha.[29] The ACLU of Wisconsin strongly opposed the move.[30]"

ACLU is civil liberties. Which civil liberties do you think they were protecting when they opposed the National Guard? Was the ACLU conceding to let the riot continue until it fizzles out on its own?

Do you agree with the National Guard being deployed?


This is such a naked dodge and weave.
1. Makes claim about politicians’ lack of action
2. Is shown that he is flat out wrong
3. Refuses to discuss new data and admit he was falsely accusing people and trying to stir up emotion with lies
4. Instead jumps to, “but what about the non-profits?”


Is that a deliberate tactic to stir up shit instead of discussing issues?
 
I think everyone is missing the important conundrum that needs to be solved. If you kill someone damaging property, it does sound dumb if you say, "I had to kill that person to protect a building! Protecting a building is more important than a human's life! They deserved to die for damaging buildings and property!" However, it also sounds dumb to say, "Just let them continue and do whatever they want. Who cares? It's just property."

I think everyone can agree that it does sound dumb to value buildings and property over human life. Most people would agree that human life is more important than the "life" of a building. But, what's the alternative? Let them do whatever they want? Imagine if everyone in a grocery store just decided to start looting and run out the door. Nobody could stop them. Is it right to let them continue? How would you stop them? It also sounds weird to say, "Just have the cops show up and start firing into the crowd! Hell yeah!!!"

What is the way out of this conundrum? We can't have a society if we just let people loot every store whenever they want with no repercussions. But, on the other hand it does sound bloodthirsty and savage to say, "Just start killing them all!!" But, what is the real alternative? How would someone protect their property? We can't have property rights if someone can just show up and steal your building or destroy it.

What do you guys think about this? I think everyone is missing this. Think about if a person broke into your house and you are standing there with a gun and the person is trying to steal your TV and he says to you, "You're not gonna kill me over a TV are you?" and you say, "I guess not" and then he moves to your bedroom and starts looking through jewelry and says to you again, "you're not gonna kill me over something as stupid as jewelry are you?" You respond, "I guess not. It's just a piece of meaningless property." This exchange happens over and over until the thief empties your whole house of everything and now you have nothing.

At what point does it become OK to kill to protect your property despite the fact that you may believe, "no one deserves to die for just taking property."

Do you really see the world this way, or are you just trying to say the most inflammatory thing possible?

There are scores of middle ground options. Including increased camera footage to identify looters and bring them to justice later. INcluding using police and national guard to observe and deter. Including better window covering structures. Including listening to the protesters who identify trouble makers in the crowd. Including many many more. But if all you want to talk aboout is wholesale looting versus murder, then I would choose wholesale looting.
 

A couple quibbles though. Is there any proof the people he shot were looters? And 2, what did you think of the judge's actions in the courtroom, including his phone ringing several times? I've heard at least two prominent legal minds say his actions should be investigated.
Legally, that would require a trial to determine. Assuming they were looters without giving them the opportunity to defend themselves in court would be just as bad a assuming Rittenhouse was a murderer. Right? Unfortunately, two of them are no longer available to defend themselves in a court of law.
 
I haven't read all of your posts, but I have read several articles that explained that the real problem is with our laws. It's too hard to prove that someone wasn't acting out of self defense in the US. Our gun laws, including the stand your ground laws etc. make it very difficult to prove that someone wasn't acting in self defense. Of course, imo, Rittenhouse also benefitted from White privilege, If you don't agree, ask yourself without if you honestly can see a young Black man holding a similar weapon, then killing 2 White men during a protest! Do you honestly think the verdict would be not guilty in such a case? I can't see it. I honestly can't.

I'm going to link one article that discusses the law. I'm not sure if I've used up my gift articles, but if I have some left, the article will be available for anyone.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/rittenhouse-acquittal-self-defense.html

For many Americans, the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on all charges on Friday was a vindication of an innocent, if not heroic, teenager with good intentions. For others, it was a brutal disappointment, further evidence that the courts give white men a pass for their actions.
But for legal scholars, it was not a surprise. Once Mr. Rittenhouse claimed that he had acted in self-defense when he shot three men, killing two, during unrest following the police shooting of a Black man in Kenosha, Wis., the onus was on the prosecution to prove otherwise.
“When people look at this, and they’re feeling frustrated, they’re not recognizing just how high the prosecutors’ burden is here,” said Cecelia Klingele, a University of Wisconsin law professor. “It was a real uphill battle to get out from under self-defense.”
The acquittal points to the wide berth the legal system gives to defendants who say they acted out of fear, even if others around them were also afraid.
 
But, they weren't doing anything to stop the riots. They were letting the city burn. The politicians told the cops to not do anything. Why didn't they tell the cops to do non-lethal riot control?
According to Wikipedia:
Day 1: Large trucks used to block streets, police used tear gas and rubber bullets.
Day 2: National Guard activated, rail service suspended, highway closed. Tear gas used again.
Day 3: Courthouse fenced off, police arrest looters. More national guardsmen deployed.

Seems like you're just flat out wrong on that one.
While I can agree and understand that nobody deserves to die over property, there is no good outcome if we take this logic to its full conclusion. We would have to let thieves take whatever they want from us.
What you're saying here is that you have two choices:
1. Execute thieves.
2. Do nothing to stop thieves.
From your wiki link:
"Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers activated the Wisconsin National Guard to protect firefighters and critical infrastructure in Kenosha.[29] The ACLU of Wisconsin strongly opposed the move.[30]"

ACLU is civil liberties. Which civil liberties do you think they were protecting when they opposed the National Guard? Was the ACLU conceding to let the riot continue until it fizzles out on its own?

Do you agree with the National Guard being deployed?


This is such a naked dodge and weave.
1. Makes claim about politicians’ lack of action
2. Is shown that he is flat out wrong
3. Refuses to discuss new data and admit he was falsely accusing people and trying to stir up emotion with lies
4. Instead jumps to, “but what about the non-profits?”


Is that a deliberate tactic to stir up shit instead of discussing issues?
But Rittenhouse was allowed to carry that weapon. One of the people he shot also had a gun on him. Why did that person bring a gun to the protest, too? Rittenhouse also wasn't
The jury probably followed the law and judge's instructions in reaching their verdict. Remember: In Amerika one need not be at risk of grievous injury to be entitled to kill in self-defense: One need only THINK one is at such risk. And hate-crazed teeny-bopper punks like KR think stupidly.

In fact, I suppose any hot-blooded murder could be claimed as self-defense, especially if the case appeals to the Proud Boys, QAnon, GOP or other hate-filled organizations whose supporters will donate to a legal defense fund. With a well-paid "dream team" of defense lawyers not only will any such murder be acquitted, but the murder is a profit-making opportunity. As a guest star on the Tucker Carlson comedy and elsewhere, KR will soon be a millionaire.

It's really a shame that the prosecution couldn't come up with one single charge, even a misdemeanor, that KR was certainly guilty of. Illegal possession by a minor seemed like it, but apparently illegal possession applies to gas-charged pistols with plastic pellets but NOT to assault rifles! Is anyone else as struck as I am to learn that nobody knew whether it was legal for a 17-year old to wander around with an assault rifle until the judge ruled on the matter at the end of this trial?

Still, it's hard to believe the DA couldn't come up with a single charge that had to stick. Disturbing the peace?

I don't have the heart to watch Fucker Carlson interview Kallow Kyle. It would be sweet to hear the dolt say "Even though I was acquitted, I did learn that it's not right for a cowardly teenybopper to carry a weapon into a demonstration like that." But I'm not betting on any such outcome.
But Rittenhouse was allowed to carry that weapon. One of the people he shot also had a gun on him. Why did that person bring a gun to the protest, too?

Rittenhouse also wasn't a coward. How many people would have the guts to show up to a warzone like that and put themselves in harm's way to try and help people? That is the opposite of a coward. This would be like saying a firefighter is a coward for trying to help people out of a burning building and then yelling at the firefighter for shooting soemone in self-defense who tried to harm the fire fighter. People say, "he shouldn't have been there," but the rioters shouldn't have been there either. Why is that ignored?

He didn't kill anyone who didn't threaten him. When he was being chased down the street, he didn't turn around and fire. He just kept running away until people attacked him and then he shot. You could tell he had good gun training. He knew what he was doing. I don't know how anyone can watch that and say he was a coward.

When the Black Panthers were carrying assault rifles in the capitol, you guys said that was fine and OK. What would you guys think if someone attacked the Black Panthers and they shot someone claiming self-defense? Would you be condemning the Panthers or celebrating it? Is it worse to open carry on a street or at the Capitol building? What do you think?
 
I've seen this baseless claim repeated over, and over, and over. Specifically, that Rittenhouse was armed when he crossed state lines. (That he was 'looking for trouble', is, of course, something that could be said of everyone else at the protest, too).

Why do the people who believe Rittenhouse to be guilty repeat this claim? Do they not know any better? Or do they know and just don't care? The 'crossing state lines' really, really seems to be a point of fascination, as if driving 21 miles were somehow a big deal. None of the original charges against Rittenhouse have a 'crossing State lines with a weapon' basis.
 
I haven't read all of your posts, but I have read several articles that explained that the real problem is with our laws. It's too hard to prove that someone wasn't acting out of self defense in the US. Our gun laws, including the stand your ground laws etc. make it very difficult to prove that someone wasn't acting in self defense. Of course, imo, Rittenhouse also benefitted from White privilege, If you don't agree, ask yourself without if you honestly can see a young Black man holding a similar weapon, then killing 2 White men during a protest! Do you honestly think the verdict would be not guilty in such a case? I can't see it. I honestly can't.

I'm going to link one article that discusses the law. I'm not sure if I've used up my gift articles, but if I have some left, the article will be available for anyone.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/rittenhouse-acquittal-self-defense.html

For many Americans, the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on all charges on Friday was a vindication of an innocent, if not heroic, teenager with good intentions. For others, it was a brutal disappointment, further evidence that the courts give white men a pass for their actions.
But for legal scholars, it was not a surprise. Once Mr. Rittenhouse claimed that he had acted in self-defense when he shot three men, killing two, during unrest following the police shooting of a Black man in Kenosha, Wis., the onus was on the prosecution to prove otherwise.
“When people look at this, and they’re feeling frustrated, they’re not recognizing just how high the prosecutors’ burden is here,” said Cecelia Klingele, a University of Wisconsin law professor. “It was a real uphill battle to get out from under self-defense.”
The acquittal points to the wide berth the legal system gives to defendants who say they acted out of fear, even if others around them were also afraid.

But it was clear self defense. You hear someone yell "Get that guy!" in the video and they start chasing him down the street. Rittenhouse is running away at this point, even though he has his rifle. He still didn't want to shoot despite the fact that he was being chased. Then, the people attacked him and he shot them. He then stood up and kept walking through tons of people and still didn't fire the weapon again as he was walking.

He then flagged down the cops and told them someone was injured over there. If those people never attacked him, they would still be alive. If you say that those people attacked Kyle because he had a rifle, why didn't anyone attack the BLM protestors who had rifles at their protests?

This is what I am getting out of this:

Right wingers: It's OK for white people to have rifles, but not black people.
Left wingers: It's OK for black people to have rifles, but not white people.
Why can't it be OK for both?
 
'I threw them out of the room several times': Kyle Rittenhouse's attorney says he didn't approve of Tucker Carlson film crew
"I did not approve of that. I threw them out of the room several times," Mark Richards told CNN's Chris Cuomo.

He added: "I don't think a film crew is appropriate for something like this but the people who were raising the money to pay for the experts and to pay for the attorneys were trying to raise money and that was part of it so I think, I don't want to say an evil but a definite distraction was part of it. I didn't approve of it but I'm not always the boss."
:lol:

And as to the claim that KR acted in self-defense, where does it end? What will *not* qualify as self-defense?
 
I've seen this baseless claim repeated over, and over, and over. Specifically, that Rittenhouse was armed when he crossed state lines. (That he was 'looking for trouble', is, of course, something that could be said of everyone else at the protest, too).

Why do the people who believe Rittenhouse to be guilty repeat this claim? Do they not know any better? Or do they know and just don't care? The 'crossing state lines' really, really seems to be a point of fascination, as if driving 21 miles were somehow a big deal. None of the original charges against Rittenhouse have a 'crossing State lines with a weapon' basis.

I know people on this board probably hate Tucker Carlson, but he said, "These same people who are telling you that borders don't matter and we shouldn't build the wall and let everyone into our country are the same ones telling you that it's so terrible for someone to cross state borders and go to another state." Say what you will about the guy, but this one is spot on.

Even when Trump first saw the footage he said, "It looks like he's running away before being attacked and looks like it could be self-defense." Turns out Trump was right while the media crucified Trump for saying that and said he went there as a white supremacist just looking to kill. Say what you will about Trump, but he was right again, too.

De BNlasio tweeted out how the verdict wasn't good and how it's sad that Rittenhouse isn't in jail. Someone pointed out how New York has a shooting every day and he never comments on it and only comments on Rittenhouse. Gang violence is a big problem in this country that needs to be stopped. Republicans point this out all the time but the Democrats seem to ignore it and let the gangs continue and roam free.

This is something I don't understand, either. I'm not saying I'm a Republican, but at least they are trying to get people to acknowledge the problem and not ignore it. I will never understand why it's OK for some cities to have hundreds of murders due to gang violence with not so much as a peep from the Democrat leaders, but when someone like Rittenhouse kills in self0defense, all hell breaks loose and the Dems go crazy on Twitter condemning it. Why not do the same every time there's a gang shooting? Makes no sense to me.
 
'I threw them out of the room several times': Kyle Rittenhouse's attorney says he didn't approve of Tucker Carlson film crew
"I did not approve of that. I threw them out of the room several times," Mark Richards told CNN's Chris Cuomo.

He added: "I don't think a film crew is appropriate for something like this but the people who were raising the money to pay for the experts and to pay for the attorneys were trying to raise money and that was part of it so I think, I don't want to say an evil but a definite distraction was part of it. I didn't approve of it but I'm not always the boss."
:lol:

And as to the claim that KR acted in self-defense, where does it end? What will *not* qualify as self-defense?

If the Black Panthers at the state Capitol had people run up to them and try to disarm their rifles, would you say it was self defense if the Panthers shot them or would you say, "They should've never had rifles at the Capitol. Just by having them they are threatening?"

If someone has a rifle and is standing on the street not doing anything and then people start running up to them to try to disarm them, are they wrong for trying to do that or are they right for doing that? You either think someone walking with a rifle but not pointing it at anyone is a threat or not.

What do you think?
 
Wait a minute here, why is this case so cleanly divided along political lines? Clearly multiple people are looking at the same evidence and arriving at different conclusions. That isn't surprising at all. But there seems to be a clean delineation based on only a single demographic factor. That is surprising (to me ) and disturbing.

Is the political lense that one or both sides look at reality through so distorting that we can't trust that the other side is seeing the same objective reality we think we are seeing?

I think the US is fucked.
Now that’s the $64,563.13 question! I’m a proud progressive. Liberal as anyone on this board. I think our gun culture is nuts. I think people who open carry semi automatic rifles probably deserve to get blown away every now and then just for being stupid dumbfucks. They need to be heavily regulated at a minimum. I protested in a local BLM March. I think Ashli Babbit deserve to have her shit blown away and a lot of others on January 6. I think Ahmed Arbery was murdered by a racist fucktard.

but I’m also a civil rights lawyer. I have to look carefully at the law and the facts. And not what I want the law to be. This case, like virtually every other cases out there, boils down to a narrow set of factual and legal issues. And I am not in favor of changing the laws or the standards of proof just so I can get some little fucker Who was too stupid to know what he was getting into.

I hope he’ll at least learn a lesson, but with all these right wing fucktards, like Matt Gaetz, calling him a hero and praising him for shooting looters, I fear his head will be swollen. He can be redeemed. Finish his nursing degree and save lives, especially gun trauma victims, and become an anti gun nut. That would give him fitting purpose.

And the message of this case is nothing more than the prosecution failed to prove it’s case beyond a reasonable doubt in this particular instance. Those claiming it has some larger political meaning, either on the left or right, are full of shit. They are the ones giving it meaning. They’re turning it into something it isn’t. The ones on the left saying this case means it’s open season on protesters are in fact giving ideas to right wing vigilantes who will believe them. people need to quit politicizing this case or it will become a self fulfilling prophecy.
I agree with some of this.

A couple quibbles though. Is there any proof the people he shot were looters? And 2, what did you think of the judge's actions in the courtroom, including his phone ringing several times? I've heard at least two prominent legal minds say his actions should be investigated.
I didn’t mean to imply that they were looters, but that is what right wingers are implying and that therefore it was a good thing to shoot them. I disagree profoundly with such sentiments.

The judge was a bit pro defense, but not overtly so. Frankly I’d rather have judges be pro defense than pro prosecution! Prosecutors have enormous power. Most judges come from their ranks. The prosecution deliberately went against his commands and they could have had a mistrial for that. He didn’t dismiss the claims even though he said he couldn’t tell what the video showed. He still let the jury decide the case. They could’ve gone another way.
 
Wait a minute here, why is this case so cleanly divided along political lines? Clearly multiple people are looking at the same evidence and arriving at different conclusions. That isn't surprising at all. But there seems to be a clean delineation based on only a single demographic factor. That is surprising (to me ) and disturbing.

Is the political lense that one or both sides look at reality through so distorting that we can't trust that the other side is seeing the same objective reality we think we are seeing?

I think the US is fucked.
Now that’s the $64,563.13 question! I’m a proud progressive. Liberal as anyone on this board. I think our gun culture is nuts. I think people who open carry semi automatic rifles probably deserve to get blown away every now and then just for being stupid dumbfucks. They need to be heavily regulated at a minimum. I protested in a local BLM March. I think Ashli Babbit deserve to have her shit blown away and a lot of others on January 6. I think Ahmed Arbery was murdered by a racist fucktard.

but I’m also a civil rights lawyer. I have to look carefully at the law and the facts. And not what I want the law to be. This case, like virtually every other cases out there, boils down to a narrow set of factual and legal issues. And I am not in favor of changing the laws or the standards of proof just so I can get some little fucker Who was too stupid to know what he was getting into.

I hope he’ll at least learn a lesson, but with all these right wing fucktards, like Matt Gaetz, calling him a hero and praising him for shooting looters, I fear his head will be swollen. He can be redeemed. Finish his nursing degree and save lives, especially gun trauma victims, and become an anti gun nut. That would give him fitting purpose.

And the message of this case is nothing more than the prosecution failed to prove it’s case beyond a reasonable doubt in this particular instance. Those claiming it has some larger political meaning, either on the left or right, are full of shit. They are the ones giving it meaning. They’re turning it into something it isn’t. The ones on the left saying this case means it’s open season on protesters are in fact giving ideas to right wing vigilantes who will believe them. people need to quit politicizing this case or it will become a self fulfilling prophecy.
I agree with some of this.

A couple quibbles though. Is there any proof the people he shot were looters? And 2, what did you think of the judge's actions in the courtroom, including his phone ringing several times? I've heard at least two prominent legal minds say his actions should be investigated.
I didn’t mean to imply that they were looters, but that is what right wingers are implying and that therefore it was a good thing to shoot them. I disagree profoundly with such sentiments.

The judge was a bit pro defense, but not overtly so. Frankly I’d rather have judges be pro defense than pro prosecution! Prosecutors have enormous power. Most judges come from their ranks. The prosecution deliberately went against his commands and they could have had a mistrial for that. He didn’t dismiss the claims even though he said he couldn’t tell what the video showed. He still let the jury decide the case. They could’ve gone another way.

While I can't say I agree with shooting looters, something does need to be done about it. Remeber Broken Windows policing that cleaned up NY? They cracked down on small crime (not saying they shot people for small crime!) but they cracked down with harsher penalties on small crime such as jaywalking, graffiti, vandalism, breaking windows, property crime, etc. This lead to an an all time low in crime. Why? Because when people are deterred from committing small crimes, they are deterred from committing bigger crimes such as murder and theft.

Compare that to letting shoplifters go free in San Francisco and now you have groups of people going into stores and looting them and not being punished for it. When people know there is no punishment, they will try and get away with it. De Blasio moved away from Broken Windows policing and now the city is in ruins again back to 1970's level crime.

For all the jokes about Giuliani that go on in left0wing circles, he sure did know how to clean up the crime. Not saying he's a perfect sane man today, but to dismiss the great job he did as Mayor is stupid, IMO. Just look at the difference in crime during his term and now.

This is the discussion that seems to go on:
Person #1: A black man was killed in the city today.
Person #2: By who?
Person #1: Another black man.
Person #2: OH, whatever.
Person #1: A black man was killed in the city today.
Person #2: By who?
Person #1: A white guy.
Person #2: OUTRAGEOUS RACISM!! BLACK PEOPLE KEEP GETTING KILLED!!! THIS ISN'T OK!!!!!

You see why this doesn't make sense? I've even listened to rap songs where they rap about killing other black people (but tey obviously say the N word here) while they vilify cops for shooting black people in the same song! To me, that is outrageous and deserves an explanation for why it's OK for black people to kill other black people but it's not OK for any other race to kill black people. Logically, this needs to be explained. Now, people may say, "but white people kill hwhite people all the time!" Yes, this happens but thye don't write songs about how awesome they are for killing other whites. You don't hear them singing, "I'm a bad whitey killin' whitey daily! Whiteys need to be afraid of me!" like you hear in rap songs. Strange, right? Never got a good explanation for this.
 
Wait a minute here, why is this case so cleanly divided along political lines? Clearly multiple people are looking at the same evidence and arriving at different conclusions. That isn't surprising at all. But there seems to be a clean delineation based on only a single demographic factor. That is surprising (to me ) and disturbing.

Is the political lense that one or both sides look at reality through so distorting that we can't trust that the other side is seeing the same objective reality we think we are seeing?

I think the US is fucked.
Now that’s the $64,563.13 question! I’m a proud progressive. Liberal as anyone on this board. I think our gun culture is nuts. I think people who open carry semi automatic rifles probably deserve to get blown away every now and then just for being stupid dumbfucks. They need to be heavily regulated at a minimum. I protested in a local BLM March. I think Ashli Babbit deserve to have her shit blown away and a lot of others on January 6. I think Ahmed Arbery was murdered by a racist fucktard.

but I’m also a civil rights lawyer. I have to look carefully at the law and the facts. And not what I want the law to be. This case, like virtually every other cases out there, boils down to a narrow set of factual and legal issues. And I am not in favor of changing the laws or the standards of proof just so I can get some little fucker Who was too stupid to know what he was getting into.

I hope he’ll at least learn a lesson, but with all these right wing fucktards, like Matt Gaetz, calling him a hero and praising him for shooting looters, I fear his head will be swollen. He can be redeemed. Finish his nursing degree and save lives, especially gun trauma victims, and become an anti gun nut. That would give him fitting purpose.

And the message of this case is nothing more than the prosecution failed to prove it’s case beyond a reasonable doubt in this particular instance. Those claiming it has some larger political meaning, either on the left or right, are full of shit. They are the ones giving it meaning. They’re turning it into something it isn’t. The ones on the left saying this case means it’s open season on protesters are in fact giving ideas to right wing vigilantes who will believe them. people need to quit politicizing this case or it will become a self fulfilling prophecy.
I agree with some of this.

A couple quibbles though. Is there any proof the people he shot were looters? And 2, what did you think of the judge's actions in the courtroom, including his phone ringing several times? I've heard at least two prominent legal minds say his actions should be investigated.
I didn’t mean to imply that they were looters, but that is what right wingers are implying and that therefore it was a good thing to shoot them. I disagree profoundly with such sentiments.

The judge was a bit pro defense, but not overtly so. Frankly I’d rather have judges be pro defense than pro prosecution! Prosecutors have enormous power. Most judges come from their ranks. The prosecution deliberately went against his commands and they could have had a mistrial for that. He didn’t dismiss the claims even though he said he couldn’t tell what the video showed. He still let the jury decide the case. They could’ve gone another way.
Judges aren't supposed to be pro any side. They are just there to make sure the trial is fair.
 
David Axelrod, former chief adviser to President Obama, took to Twitter on Monday to criticize the Wisconsin judge presiding in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial, accusing him of being "a de facto defense attorney."
Axelrod slammed Judge Bruce Schroeder after the latter dismissed a misdemeanor gun charge against Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager facing murder charges for fatally shooting two protesters during unrest over police brutality last year in Kenosha, Wis.

In his tweet, Axelrod praised Rittenhouse's luck and said that "this kid has the great good fortune of a de facto defense attorney on the bench."

Adding further criticism, Axelrod said that "In keeping with the Wisconsin state motto, the judge’s message to gun-toting vigilantes: Forward!"

This argument over Rittenhouse's rifle is based on whether the length of the weapon qualified it as dangerous under the Wisconsin state law.

Earlier, Schroeder had dismissed the defense's effort to get the charge thrown out, but then said on Monday that he believed the statute was poorly written. He added that he was open to challenging the count, which carries a maximum possible sentence of nine months in jail and a $10,000 fine.

"I have big problems with this statute, I've made no bones about that from the beginning," the judge said.
But you waited until the last minute before dropping the charge, disallowing the defense to get an outside ruling on the law. If you had a problem with it from the beginning you should have had the law questioned in the beginning.
 
David Axelrod, former chief adviser to President Obama, took to Twitter on Monday to criticize the Wisconsin judge presiding in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial, accusing him of being "a de facto defense attorney."
Axelrod slammed Judge Bruce Schroeder after the latter dismissed a misdemeanor gun charge against Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager facing murder charges for fatally shooting two protesters during unrest over police brutality last year in Kenosha, Wis.

In his tweet, Axelrod praised Rittenhouse's luck and said that "this kid has the great good fortune of a de facto defense attorney on the bench."

Adding further criticism, Axelrod said that "In keeping with the Wisconsin state motto, the judge’s message to gun-toting vigilantes: Forward!"

This argument over Rittenhouse's rifle is based on whether the length of the weapon qualified it as dangerous under the Wisconsin state law.

Earlier, Schroeder had dismissed the defense's effort to get the charge thrown out, but then said on Monday that he believed the statute was poorly written. He added that he was open to challenging the count, which carries a maximum possible sentence of nine months in jail and a $10,000 fine.

"I have big problems with this statute, I've made no bones about that from the beginning," the judge said.
But you waited until the last minute before dropping the charge, disallowing the defense to get an outside ruling on the law. If you had a problem with it from the beginning you should have had the law questioned in the beginning.
Sounds like the judge was doing what he was supposed to:

EXPLAINER: Why did judge drop Rittenhouse gun charge?

To Kenosha-based defense attorney Michael Cicchini, the statute clearly requires a weapon to be short-barreled to apply, and the judge made the right call.

“There doesn’t seem to be much ambiguity here,” he said. “(The charge) should have been dismissed earlier.”

The current wording of the overarching law seems clear: “Any person under 18 years of age who possesses or goes armed with a dangerous weapon is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.” A lead-in paragraph defines dangerous weapon as several things, including “any firearm, loaded or unloaded.”

The subsection that defense attorneys relied upon to seek dismissal reads: “This section applies only to a person under 18 years of age who possesses or is armed with a rifle or a shotgun if the person is in violation of s. 941.28 ...” That section of law isn’t specific to minors, but rather forbids any person from having a short-barreled shotgun or rifle.

“We knew from the beginning, that if you read that statute correctly, he was legal in having that firearm,” Richards said Friday after Rittenhouse was cleared of the remaining charges.
 
I've spent a few weeks with my latest trainee at work. He's a young guy, but very smart. Before he worked for us, he was on track to be a success at Amazon corporate. Nice guy. Wears a hoodie. And yeah...he's black.

If he'd walked into that maelstrom of the protest in Kenosha with an AR-15 in his hands that day? He's probably be dead. If he was leaving the scene, walking towards cops with that rifle in hand after shooting three people? He'd definitely be dead. There might have been a trial, but he'd still be dead.
 
This is the discussion that seems to go on:
Person #1: A black man was killed in the city today.
Person #2: By who?
Person #1: Another black man.
Person #2: OH, whatever.
Person #1: A black man was killed in the city today.
Person #2: By who?
Person #1: A white guy.
Person #2: OUTRAGEOUS RACISM!! BLACK PEOPLE KEEP GETTING KILLED!!! THIS ISN'T OK!!!!!

You see why this doesn't make sense? I've even listened to rap songs where they rap about killing other black people (but tey obviously say the N word here) while they vilify cops for shooting black people in the same song! To me, that is outrageous and deserves an explanation for why it's OK for black people to kill other black people but it's not OK for any other race to kill black people. Logically, this needs to be explained. Now, people may say, "but white people kill hwhite people all the time!" Yes, this happens but thye don't write songs about how awesome they are for killing other whites. You don't hear them singing, "I'm a bad whitey killin' whitey daily! Whiteys need to be afraid of me!" like you hear in rap songs. Strange, right? Never got a good explanation for this.

I believe it may be a cultural appropriation sort of thing.

Killing Black people and bragging about it through lyrics apparently has some roots in Black culture.
As such, it is wrong for white people to try to kill Black people because such white people try to claim credit for the idea of killing Black people, fail to respect the culture that generated such a practice, and are thus clearly doing it wrong.

It's essentially what happened to the US Pilot of the British sitcom "The IT Crowd".
 
I haven't read all of your posts, but I have read several articles that explained that the real problem is with our laws. It's too hard to prove that someone wasn't acting out of self defense in the US. Our gun laws, including the stand your ground laws etc. make it very difficult to prove that someone wasn't acting in self defense. Of course, imo, Rittenhouse also benefitted from White privilege, If you don't agree, ask yourself without if you honestly can see a young Black man holding a similar weapon, then killing 2 White men during a protest! Do you honestly think the verdict would be not guilty in such a case? I can't see it. I honestly can't.

I'm going to link one article that discusses the law. I'm not sure if I've used up my gift articles, but if I have some left, the article will be available for anyone.

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/19/us/rittenhouse-acquittal-self-defense.html

For many Americans, the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on all charges on Friday was a vindication of an innocent, if not heroic, teenager with good intentions. For others, it was a brutal disappointment, further evidence that the courts give white men a pass for their actions.
But for legal scholars, it was not a surprise. Once Mr. Rittenhouse claimed that he had acted in self-defense when he shot three men, killing two, during unrest following the police shooting of a Black man in Kenosha, Wis., the onus was on the prosecution to prove otherwise.
“When people look at this, and they’re feeling frustrated, they’re not recognizing just how high the prosecutors’ burden is here,” said Cecelia Klingele, a University of Wisconsin law professor. “It was a real uphill battle to get out from under self-defense.”
The acquittal points to the wide berth the legal system gives to defendants who say they acted out of fear, even if others around them were also afraid.
"White Privilege." FFS. The media is responsible for such ridiculous blood libel. It selectively amplifies and misreports cases to create racial animus. Don't fall for it.

Jury acquits Gifford man who claimed self-defense after girlfriend killed by sheriff's SWAT team in 2017 raid

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St. Paul man who shot at MPD in self-defense acquitted of all charges by jury

Court records show 28-year-old Jaleel Stallings was acquitted on Wednesday of multiple charges, including two counts of attempted second-degree murder, two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree assault, second-degree riot and intentional discharge of a firearm that endangers safety.
Stallings claimed self-defense in court.

Black man acquitted of killing white man after race dispute

Spencer, 31, was accused of killing Christopher Williams, 32, in a confrontation outside the Pittston bar in July 2017 after another man refused to shake his hand because of Spencer’s race following a dispute over a game of pool. Spencer had testified that he fired in self-defense as a group of would-be attackers came at him outside.

Suspected Texas high school gunman released on bail — one day after teacher and students shot

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Man acquitted in stabbing death of Enfield High School student

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“How can a 16-year-old get stabbed to death, and people do nothing about it?” said Brady’s father, Thomas Brady III, after the verdict. “There’s no way to wrap my head around it.”
Thomas Brady also recalled that people stood over his son and did nothing to help him at the scene of the stabbing, which occurred in Hoover Lane around midnight on Sept. 9-10, 2018. But defense lawyer Christopher D. Parker said, “From the facts, it was clear that it was self-defense, and I’m glad the jury saw it that way.”
 
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