They are such sweet, poor little innocent victims who have never, ever done any wrong, aren't they?
"Religion of Peace."
__________________ Paleontologists have tried to turn Archaeopteryx into an earth bound feathered dinosaur. But it is not. It is a bird, a perching bird. And no amount of 'paleobabble' is going to change that.-- Alan Feduccia-a world authority on birds, quoted in "Archaeopteryx:Early Bird Catches a Can of Worms," Science 1994, p.764-765
Last edited by eThneoLgrRnae on Sep 2nd, 2021 at 04:15 PM
I don't think it's lost, I believe they're fully aware of their hypocrisy and double standards, where incels are not responsible for their shit to horrible acts when they lash out, because they can't get women and that is somehow society's fault. They just don't care about being hypocrites.
edit: eg Remember Elliot Roger, the incel that went on a killing spree back in 2014? While he was reviled by many, there was a sizeable amount of people who sympathized with his "plight" and expressed similar "this is what happens when you put guys down" mentality. When he was just a true creep who felt he was "owed" women and it turned deadly.
Faced with a Nazi sympathiser convicted of downloading bomb-making instructions, and white supremacist and fascist material from the internet, Judge Spencer issued a suspended two-year sentence and instructions to read Jane Austen or Charles Dickens instead. “Think about Hardy. Think about Trollope,” he added, helpfully. Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, the judge thought, might be a good place to start. -snip
For Ben John, the 21-year-old former student convicted of downloading more than 67,000 extreme documents, seems to have fallen down a depressingly familiar dark rabbit hole. The judge described him as a lonely individual with few, if any, proper friends. He fits a well-worn pattern of socially awkward, angry young men retreating from the outside world into dark online subcultures, where each click leads to something more extreme. -snip
I fear this judge made a grievous error, as I don't think Austen and Dickens can compete with the Rightwing online rabbit hole, when it comes to these people. We saw it here starting late 2016.
Hopefully I'm wrong and this guy reverses his radicalization like the judge thinks, but I fear you'll see a future attack.
Faced with a Nazi sympathiser convicted of downloading bomb-making instructions, and white supremacist and fascist material from the internet, Judge Spencer issued a suspended two-year sentence and instructions to read Jane Austen or Charles Dickens instead. “Think about Hardy. Think about Trollope,” he added, helpfully. Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, the judge thought, might be a good place to start. -snip
For Ben John, the 21-year-old former student convicted of downloading more than 67,000 extreme documents, seems to have fallen down a depressingly familiar dark rabbit hole. The judge described him as a lonely individual with few, if any, proper friends. He fits a well-worn pattern of socially awkward, angry young men retreating from the outside world into dark online subcultures, where each click leads to something more extreme. -snip
I fear this judge made a grievous error, as I don't think Austen and Dickens can compete with the Rightwing online rabbit hole, when it comes to these people. We saw it here starting late 2016. Even YouTube will lead you down the Far Right shit waterfall if you keep clicking suggested links.
Hopefully I'm wrong and this guy reverses his radicalization like the judge thinks, but I fear you'll see a future attack.
attacking a mom and her infant. that'll earn him respect in prison. nobody'll f*ck with him
__________________ Your Lord knows very well what is in your heart. Your soul suffices this day as a reckoner against you. I need no witnesses. You do not listen to your soul, but listen instead to your anger and your rage.
well, the stability and peace of mind a healthy relationship gives is a positive. For me the goal was always furthering my bloodline, which I've done well at and earn for, but that is animal instinct really.