CEO murder... somethings not right

That’s a dumb fucking statement that doesn’t serve you or anyone else. Though we do have some stellar loud and old role models normalizing killing fellow citizens.

Thank you. :LOL:

That's literally the percent of 18-29 year olds who believe killing that CEO was acceptable. That's a fucking psychopathic thing to believe, at least to my generation.

Young Voters (Ages 18-29): An Emerson College poll indicates that 41% of voters in this age group perceive the killing as somewhat or completely acceptable, while 19% remain neutral.
 
Last edited:
So if I’m reading that right 41.3% find killing of the CEO somewhat unacceptable.
You're reading it wrong. Percent column for each category is what matters. Less than 60% found cold blooded murder in the street "completely unacceptable".

And those who find it unacceptable is not the headline here. :cool:

41% of these psychos found cold blooded murder in the street at least acceptable to some degree.

What's surprising to me is the push back on this forum. Of course young people are ignorant dipshits. It's not their fault. They lack life experience. We get wiser with age. But the fact that so many didn't choose "completely unacceptable" when asked about premeditated, cold blooded murder of a father/husband/son disturbs me.
 
Last edited:
Cold blooded murder is wrong. But corporate profiteering that results in death is ok because that is capitalism and corporate crime doesn’t really matter. All you have to do if you commit a crime as a CEO is sit at a table in front of Congress and get beat up for a little while so everyone can get their sound bytes and then they all end up shaking hands and going to lunch at the same restaurants.


STORY HIGHLIGHTS​

  • 38% say they put off treatment, up 12 percentage points from 2021
  • 27% say medical treatment was for a very or somewhat serious condition
  • Lower-income, younger adults, women most likely to report delaying care

I wonder why so many young people would say that this murder was ok? Could it be that they or someone they love has delayed medical care they truly needed because they couldn’t afford it?

Let’s just say that our good friend Luigi wasn’t part of some conspiracy and that it isn’t a false flag operation to distract us from the real murder happening in Gaza. Let’s just pretend that he had continued his privileged education track and had become a lawyer, politician, and then a lobbyist in Washington fighting for change in healthcare. He spends his entire career pushing for change and trying to get people to talk about Medicare for all or maybe even just getting copay rates to be more reasonable. At his retirement party would he even have moved the needle at all? No. That is why he is charged with terrorism. He did more in 10 seconds to change the conversation about healthcare in this country than people who spend their entire career doing it the legal way.
 
You're reading it wrong. Percent column for each category is what matters. Less than 60% found cold blooded murder in the street "completely unacceptable".

And those who find it unacceptable is not the headline here. :cool:

41% of these psychos found cold blooded murder in the street at least acceptable to some degree.

What's surprising to me is the push back on this forum. Of course young people are ignorant dipshits. It's not their fault. They lack life experience. We get wiser with age. But the fact that so many didn't choose "completely unacceptable" when asked about premeditated, cold blooded murder of a father/husband/son disturbs me.
Some people don't value life the same way others do.

Today's young generation have grown up with their government starting illegitimate wars and funding genocide that have led to hundreds of thousands of murders in the street, law enforcement agencies murdering and executing defenseless people in the streets without repercussions, and corporations moving closer to the robber barons of old while essentially murdering people in their own homes. They've been polarized beyond anything we've seen before and are being pushed to the fringes because they lack the wealth or power to have their voices heard. They're jaded, fatigued, and perhaps worst of all, hopeless. And they've been trained to feel that way.

Violence isn't ALWAYS the answer, but SOMETIMES it is. What's happening shouldn't really be that surprising.
 
Some people don't value life the same way others do.

Today's young generation have grown up with their government starting illegitimate wars and funding genocide that have led to hundreds of thousands of murders in the street, law enforcement agencies murdering and executing defenseless people in the streets without repercussions, and corporations moving closer to the robber barons of old while essentially murdering people in their own homes. They've been polarized beyond anything we've seen before and are being pushed to the fringes because they lack the wealth or power to have their voices heard. They're jaded, fatigued, and perhaps worst of all, hopeless. And they've been trained to feel that way.

Violence isn't ALWAYS the answer, but SOMETIMES it is. What's happening shouldn't really be that surprising.

"And they've been trained to feel that way."

Yep, they've been trained to feel that way...by a constant barrage of hyperbole. 13 unarmed blacks shot by police in a year out of 2,300,000 black arrests is tragic but hardly an epidemic. It's something to improve on through training.

Fuck anyone who tries to justify murder of this CEO. Regardless of of how it makes you feel, it's unacceptable.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ATH
You’re complaining that folks won’t sacrifice a days wage when they’re living paycheck to paycheck, potentially risking losing their job and being homeless in a heartbeat? People are just trying to survive.
Hes just saying and has a point. Heck our governors told restaurant owners and so many more businesses owners to stay home and literally lose the business they worked for their whole life. That is a lot shittier than missing a couple days of wages.

So many places never came back. I don't think it unreasonable for a worker who has to do nothing other than show up for work, complete some tasks and then go home to take on some hardship for a little bit of time to attempt to enact change. The loss they experience is only temporary. A credit card can pay the power bill until next month if necessary.

After a little bit of hardship the new raise could more than make up for the lost wages.
 
Nonviolent resistance didn't work too well for the Buddhists monks when China invaded Tibet... they were slaughtered by the thousands...

They msm calls this a cowardly act... I think it took balls... I'm way too much of a pussy to do something like that. And honestly I've wondered why something like this didn't happen sooner.

That said, I think the kid enjoys the attention on some level. He didn't have that "I just ruined my life" look on his face during the perpetrator walk. There was no shame or sadness in the way he carried himself. His body language was strong and proud.

My buddy did a psychic reading on him last night... says he recruited by the CIA to take out CEO because CEO had dirt on someone from one of the 5 most powerful families on the planet that CEO was trying to use as blackmail to get the insider trading charges/investigation squashed. That had something to do with pedophilia.

Obviously pure speculation, but makes more sense to me than the kid was so smart he hung out without ditching the gun for 5 days.
 
That’s a dumb fucking statement that doesn’t serve you or anyone else. Though we do have some stellar loud and old role models normalizing killing fellow citizens.
How is that a dumb fucking statement when Mike is citing a study where 41% of the young people polled agreed with it? He can't make a comment based upon information?
 
  • Like
Reactions: ATH
Fuck anyone who tries to justify murder of this CEO. Regardless of of how it makes you feel, it's unacceptable.
I don't disagree, but I'm also not going to shed a tear for the CEO. I may not accept what the shooter did, but I can understand it. Sometimes the only way to make yourself heard is to be as loud as fucking possible and he did that. Two wrongs don't make a right, but neither does ignoring the initial wrong.
 
My buddy did a psychic reading on him last night... says he recruited by the CIA to take out CEO because CEO had dirt on someone from one of the 5 most powerful families on the planet that CEO was trying to use as blackmail to get the insider trading charges/investigation squashed. That had something to do with pedophilia.
THAT makes sense to you?
 
Yep, they've been trained to feel that way...by a constant barrage of hyperbole. 13 unarmed blacks shot by police in a year out of 2,300,000 black arrests is tragic but hardly an epidemic. It's something to improve on through training.
It's not the numbers, it's the lack of accountability. The very officers and officials that should be held to a higher standard skate free or get a slap on the wrist.

There's the potential this guy gets the death penalty. Meanwhile, the police beating or indiscriminately shooting a guy to death get "paid administrative leave".

A terrorism charge for a single targeted shooting? Get fucked. It's the elites who are the terror.
 

New threads New posts

Kask Stihl NORTHEASTERN Arborists Wesspur TreeStuff.com Teufelberger Westminster X-Rigging Teufelberger
Back
Top Bottom