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When he says "I would even spray myself" I was thinking more along the lines ofthan pepper spray.
I'd say this forum provides plenty of examples.Chris wants people to "like him positively." How do you like things negatively?
This latest string of incidents suggests Chris believes real-life bans work the same way they do in his comics. That is, concepts like the law or store policies never enter into his thoughts.
Any given person banning him is (in Chris's eyes) acting alone, and overstepping their authority by making up new rules. If he can defeat the person committing this injustice, somehow the ban doesn't count. He genuinely doesn't get that the employees are just following Wal-Mart policy, let alone that every Wal-Mart has the same policies. Unlike in the comics, he never had superpowers, so he couldn't fight back. Well. Now he kind of does.
"If you make verbal attacks then I'll defend myself." "I'll even spray myself."
Now all I can see is Chris staring into a mirror holding the pepper spray, ready in case even he himself turns out to be a troll.
True, but leaving Chris to his own devices is clearly not in Chris' best interest. Part of a lawyer's job is to advise their client, and I have no doubt he would strenuously advise Chris (and mostly Barb on the side) that Chris is better off restrictively supervised before the hearing and trial.The thing is a Lawyer is required to put the best interest of their client first, it's part of the oath.
I might disagree here. The PD is qualified in the law, but he's not a psychologist. It's his job to get the best legal deal for his client, but the court won't expect him to judge his client's mental state beyond a basic level. Last time, all that meant was a cursory psych eval; I don't see the court re-examining his competency this time when they already satisfied themselves.True, but leaving Chris to his own devices is clearly not in Chris' best interest. Part of a lawyer's job is to advise their client, and I have no doubt he would strenuously advise Chris (and mostly Barb on the side) that Chris is better off restrictively supervised before the hearing and trial.
Right plus the PD would have like 5 minutes max with Chris before the appearance, no time to figure out if he should be out or notI might disagree here. The PD is qualified in the law, but he's not a psychologist. It's his job to get the best legal deal for his client, but the court won't expect him to judge his client's mental state beyond a basic level. Last time, all that meant was a cursory psych eval; I don't see the court re-examining his competency this time when they already satisfied themselves.
Right plus the PD would have like 5 minutes max with Chris before the appearance, no time to figure out if he should be out or not
If anything it will become a joke among employees... It's weird that he thinks of SEGA as an entity when A) it didn't make Sonic Boom (not that Chris would know this) and B) Video game companies tend to consist of smaller sub-sections that focus on specific genres. Either way Chris will never convince SEGA of anything except that crazy fanboys exist and that some are more crazy than others.I like how he says Sega will hear about the Gamestop incident, like they really give a crap.
"Hey fellas! Some guy in Virginia is vandalizing displays and assaulting employees, all over Sonic! We gotta shut this down!"