Kyle Rittenhouse Legal Proceedings - Come for the trial, stay for….

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What do you think will happen?

  • Guilty on all charges

    Votes: 282 8.8%
  • Full Acquittal

    Votes: 1,077 33.7%
  • Mistral

    Votes: 264 8.3%
  • Mixture of verdicts

    Votes: 479 15.0%
  • Minecraft

    Votes: 213 6.7%
  • Roblox

    Votes: 132 4.1%
  • Runescape

    Votes: 203 6.3%
  • Somehow Guilty Of Two Mutually Exclusive Actions

    Votes: 514 16.1%
  • KYLE WILL SUBMIT TO BBC

    Votes: 35 1.1%

  • Total voters
    3,199
  • Poll closed .
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I know who'll play the Judge too.
stefano-carta-beautytestg-edit.jpg
 
I plan on teaching my kids cursive.
It's a good skill to have. In addition to other lost skills, like being able to sew on a button.
Learned cursive many, many years ago. Only time I use cursive now is to sign my name. Otherwise, it's manuscript - want to make sure others can read what I write. When I write in Hangul (Korean alphabet), always write in manuscript, for the same reason. While Hangul has no stroke order, like to do a good job writing.
 
How the fuck you write without using cursive? I thought cursive is the most common thing since its much faster without having to lift your pen so often. Writing like that must feel painful.
Unless you're going into a job that specifically requires pen and paper, nobody actually writes anymore. It's the logical conclusion of the digital era.
 
/kyle/ - 19th century asymmetrical warfare general



Hell, with these standards of behaviour and "proof" of guilt in a televised setting with the world watching, I would not be comfortable supporting fines from day-to-day courts, let alone the death penalty. America and Europe may as well just ask newspaper owners what the penalty for each individual case should be, and apply that - it's just as fair, it doesn't waste the talents of clever people who need to memorize laws and procedures which don't matter anyway, and it offers some transparency in a way the current system doesn't.
I wonder if Binger read Les Miserables and decided the prosecutor in the novel, was the kind of character that he should aspire to.
 
Nobody verifies signatures ever. And if that was legit just draw a picture. It's legal and anyone not intimately aware of your habits won't know not to sign your name lol
Powerlevel alert:

Actually had a $15 million trial turn on the genuineness of a single signature way back when. We ended up losing, even though the client had bribed the title company.
 
Learned cursive many, many years ago. Only time I use cursive now is to sign my name. Otherwise, it's manuscript - want to make sure others can read what I write. When I write in Hangul (Korean alphabet), always write in manuscript, for the same reason. While Hangul has no stroke order, like to do a good job writing.
i always wanted to learn how to do copperplate, there's a real art to writing in cursive.
 
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Y’all are missing the point.

Theyre no longer teaching children cursive so they can’t read the US Constitution or grandma’s Christmas cards. It’s a Jewish reptilian conspiracy and everyone’s to busy harping on the miracles of print and computers to notice. Now no one will know their rights or their grandma’s Christmas wishes.
Bold of you to assume we have grandmothers anymore, it's grandperson now.
 
People on Reddit were saying that the defense made a statement confirming the rumors about the alleged identity of jumpkick man, and that they believe that the prosecution deliberately withheld it from them, which I didn't confirm because lazy. (Edit: Apparently this is all according to Fox News)

If true, what are the odds we see it brought up before the judge today?
 
Are prosecutors immune to any consequence?
in theory they can be charged and tried for abuse of process, malicious prosecution and even false imprisonment if the circumstances allow for it.
but in practice a prosecutor has to commit absolutely outrageous abuses to face legal consequences like these, it is extremely rare and super hard to prove.
 
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