aquascoot wrote on Feb 3
rd, 2024 at 1:23pm:
i'd prefer he went to jail where he becomes a mandela/ghandi/jesus type figure.
A lot of people are saying that, dear, it's so unfair. It might be best if the big fella was sentenced, locked up, sodomised, etc. This, you see, would expose the deeply inequitable two-tiered system of justice in America. It would act as a "cautionary tale". After all, if they can come after him, they can come after you, no?
You've always been consistent on this, Aquascoot. You blame the system, the layers of interstitial inequality - race, class, gender, etc, the whole host of human rights problems and systemic injustices, it's so unfair.
If we reflect on the big fella's life and all the insurmountable obstacles, it becomes clear. There were parenting problems, developmental issues, difficulties adjusting, fitting in and mental health factors, we can hardly blame the big fella for all that. A stern, disciplined father; a dutiful and devoted mother - a toxic recipe for disaster as you have always pointed out.
When we weigh things up, it is astounding the big fella managed to adjust so well at all. The 60s were a terrible time, no? The Vietnam war, race riots, student protests and shootings, it was shocking. Then the 70s with those discos, parties and licentious behaviour with all sorts of depraved things going on, completely inappropriate.
People like Jeff Epstein, can you imagine?
He was a great guy to party with, actually, even if he did like his girls a little on the young side. Anyway, despite these challenges, the big fella thrived. He even managed to succeed. He invested his father's money, married his lovely first wife, bred children. Ivanka was hot - he would have dated her if she wasn't his daughter.
But the casino business wasn't kind. The regulators were mean. The bankers were globalists, putting America last. The tabloids gave him hell - according to John Barron, anyway. They all turned on him in the end. Typical.
The Superior Man has a tough life, it's not fair. He's a bit of a victim. Personal responsibility? Never ever. The buck stops with the chodes, who as we all know, live lives of pure garbage.
You're right, Aquascoot. As a modern myth, the big fella's story is deeply tragic, a "cautionary tale". The big fella is a victim, like so many other Real Americans.
When you think about it, the courts should really be compensating
him, no?