I mean, I feel the same way, just from the opposite side. Like, they very much don't want to charge him (charitably because they feel he did defend himself properly, but if I'm being honest it's because the people shot and killed were protesting the police/Justice system), but have to due to the fact about how quickly this blew up in social media and the news. A manslaughter charge would be a slam dunk that basically starts and ends with "are you legally able to carry a rifle around in public?" "No." (I mean, apparently there is video of Rittenhouse going "wish I had my rifle to shoot these shoplifters" days before he illegally carries a rifle to a protest and has to shoot his way out), but instead they bring forth murder charges where it's next to impossible to prove intent unless he literally writes a manifesto. Plus, if they really wanted to string him up for murder, do you really think they would have left it in the hands of this buffoon they have running the prosecution? Because they have seemingly gone out of there way to make sure this ends in a mistrial for the defense at every opportunity, long past the point where it can be disregarded as an accident or just bad procedure on their part.That happens when you don't have the evidence to prosecute successfully, have a pile of evidence to build a legal defense around unless the defense lawyer is an utter moron, and absolutely cannot drop the case for political reasons.
Yeah, but...how does that make you suddenly qualified to handle lions? Because you groom cats for a living? If you go to a zoo, and the people there ask you to help corral some lions, that is when you get the fuck out of there before you get mauled by lions, irresponsible zoo be damned. Like, I don't like fire, and neither does the fire department, but they aren't going to be giving me medals and congratulatory handshakes after they need to save me because I thought I was a firefighter because I had a small handheld extinguisher and ran into a building fire, are they?A car dealership was torched the day before the shootings so it's less jumping in the cage and playing lion tamer and more trying to tame the lions that roam loosely across the zoo because nobody else is doing anything about em and you were asked by the zebra enclosure to not let em meet the end that the wildebeests met the day before.
I don't think so.A manslaughter charge would be a slam dunk that basically starts and ends with "are you legally able to carry a rifle around in public?" "No."
"Why didn't they rush the guy with a gun? He could only have shot so many of them."Then, all it takes is people at the back of the crowd panicking and going "oh my god, he has a gun and just killed someone" for others operating on this same bullshit mixture of good intentions and wanting to see some excitement/get into some shit that brought Rittenhouse here as they go after someone who they think is a spree shooter.
That is a tragic part of this thing. The last 2 people to get shot may have been bravely facing an armed person they thought had just unlawfully killed someone and were doing the right thing."Why didn't they rush the guy with a gun? He could only have shot so many of them."
"Why did they rush a guy with a gun? They were asking for trouble!"
Deploy whichever suits your position in the relevant situation.
This is one of the reasons I'm skeptical about the public carrying guns. I'm not sure why the first guy fired, but I suspect it was "warning shot" sort of territory, to get attention and stop someone doing something. It was probably part of what scared another guy with a gun to shoot someone. Who later also shot another guy who was potentially trying to subdue the gun-armed guy he thought was a killer, and then shot a third guy who also had a gun, in part because that guy had his got his gun out for self-defence fearing someone was going round shooting people.That is a tragic part of this thing. The last 2 people to get shot may have been bravely facing an armed person they thought had just unlawfully killed someone and were doing the right thing.
Ok, so I freely admit that this still makes no sense to me. In my mind, the second you pull out a gun or weapon that is illegal/banned, then you have automatically escalated past the point of "reasonable force", due to the weapons in question being banned. Like in your hypothetical, what if, instead of going for the ghost gun, I just hock a grenade at the intruders? Or just go full Tarantino on them and fry them with a flamethrower (yes these examples are ridiculous, I know)? But again, I freely admit that I just don't understand this and have had this pointed out to me a few times now.I don't think so.
Suppose it is a completely illegal gun. Numbers have been filed off. You have a restraining order from the court stating it is illegal for you to possess a fire arm. Hell, you mugged someone and stole it from him.
Then, on camera, a guy breaks into your home screaming he is going to kill you by kicking you to death with his legally deadly weapon: he is wearing sneakers. If you shoot him with this gun you stole and illegally possess, you might be facing all sorts of criminal charges. Manslaughter, I don't think, would be one of them.
Yeah, like I said before, this whole thing was fucked from top to bottom right from the start.That is a tragic part of this thing. The last 2 people to get shot may have been bravely facing an armed person they thought had just unlawfully killed someone and were doing the right thing.
"You should be ready to give your life stopping an active shooter. Unless he's a good ol' boy lookin' to plug some librulz, in which case he is a good guy and you're evil.""Why didn't they rush the guy with a gun? He could only have shot so many of them."
"Why did they rush a guy with a gun? They were asking for trouble!"
I think you're looking at it from the wrong direction. [Keeping in mind though that I'm looking at this from my understanding of canadian law rather than US law.] The question of reasonable force is a question of "how bad am I allowed to hurt a person who is trying to hurt me", rather than being a question of "what methods am I allowed to use to defend myself".Ok, so I freely admit that this still makes no sense to me. In my mind, the second you pull out a gun or weapon that is illegal/banned, then you have automatically escalated past the point of "reasonable force", due to the weapons in question being banned. Like in your hypothetical, what if, instead of going for the ghost gun, I just hock a grenade at the intruders? Or just go full Tarantino on them and fry them with a flamethrower (yes these examples are ridiculous, I know)? But again, I freely admit that I just don't understand this and have had this pointed out to me a few times now.
You do have to wonder about the inherent conflict of interest that the people murdered where protesting police brutality and an unfair justice system, and now the justice system gets to judge if that was okay."You should be ready to give your life stopping an active shooter. Unless he's a good ol' boy lookin' to plug some librulz, in which case he is a good guy and you're evil."
Ok thanks, that really did clear up a lot (and you too @CM156), I appreciate it. Though I will still go on record as not liking it all that much (using illegal weapons to defend yourself). It still feels kind of weird.I think you're looking at it from the wrong direction. [Keeping in mind though that I'm looking at this from my understanding of canadian law rather than US law.] The question of reasonable force is a question of "how bad am I allowed to hurt a person who is trying to hurt me", rather than being a question of "what methods am I allowed to use to defend myself".
Some methods are immediately more deadly than others, but we can't write a law that requires a person to run around looking for the "right" weapon in a situation where someone is trying to kill them. Imagine a slasher movie and seeing a person who is not legally allowed to hold sharp objects running around trying to find a rolling pin in the kitchen because they aren't allowed to use a knife to fight off Jason. Or, more directly, if following the law causes you to die because you had no legal method to defend yourself, then the law killed you and we shouldn't be writing laws that do that.
This can be answered by what I'm about to say.This is one of the reasons I'm skeptical about the public carrying guns.
There is no such thing as a warning shot, and the idea of it needs to fade from collective consciousness. Shit like this is precisely why.I'm not sure why the first guy fired, but I suspect it was "warning shot" sort of territory, to get attention and stop someone doing something. It was probably part of what scared another guy with a gun to shoot someone. Who later also shot another guy who was potentially trying to subdue the gun-armed guy he thought was a killer, and then shot a third guy who also had a gun, in part because that guy had his got his gun out for self-defence fearing someone was going round shooting people.
wait, what?and unaffected by wind resistance and terminal velocity.
As I understand it, Rosenbaum got into a confrontation with Rittenhouse because Rittenhouse was putting out a fire and may also have been misidentified as someone else Rosenbaum had been in conflict with earlier. It escalated, Rittenhouse fled, the famous bag was thrown, someone fires a shot, Rittenhouse turns and shoots the guy that's been pursuing him. According to the pathologist report, Rosenbaum was within 4 feet when he was shot, and there's soot at the injury on his hand that suggests he may have been trying to grab the gun when he was shot (at the very least, his hand was very close to or on the barrel when the shot was fired).but the first man shot and killed was not armed, or even attacking Rittenhouse. His only crime was being in the same crowd where someone else fired a gun into the air and being the first person Rittenhouse saw when he panicked and fired his weapon
Relevant Wisconsin law (I think): https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statutes/940A manslaughter charge would be a slam dunk that basically starts and ends with "are you legally able to carry a rifle around in public?" "No." (I mean, apparently there is video of Rittenhouse going "wish I had my rifle to shoot these shoplifters" days before he illegally carries a rifle to a protest and has to shoot his way out), but instead they bring forth murder charges where it's next to impossible to prove intent unless he literally writes a manifesto.
...and that's fundamentally the problem. Look at the events from the perspective of Rittenhouse starting from Rittenhouse trying to put out a fire. Rosenbaum comes up, yells at you, starts to escalate. You don't want some guy assaulting you because he's seemingly angry you tried to put out a fire, so you try to flee. Rosenbaum chases you, throws shit at you, then someone shoots a gun. You don't know who exactly, or definitely what they were shooting at, possibly you? You turn, and the guy chasing you is almost in arms reach and seems to be reaching for your gun. In this scenario, would you as a reasonable person believe you are at risk of great bodily harm or death, especially from the person who you've tried to flee, has pursued you, is within 4' of you and seems to be going for your gun?The notion of self-defense is based upon the perception of the alleged defender, and whether that tracks with what an hypothetical "reasonable person" would perceive in that alleged defender's stead. If any reasonable person would believe themselves in threat of imminent serious harm or death, the use of lethal force in self-defense is justified. Duty to retreat may be imposed based on jurisdiction, but even in jurisdictions that do impose a duty to retreat, if that duty has been fulfilled and the alleged defender still reasonably believes themselves threatened as discussed, lethal force in self-defense is still justified.
He didn't write it correctly, but I think he means that if you shoot a gun in the air the bullet still travels in a parabolic arch and at a lethal velocity. The bullet is not significantly slowed down by wind resistance, and moves at greater than its terminal velocity on the way back down.wait, what?
Rosebaum was attacking Rittenhouse.View attachment 4875
Ok, so a genuine shower thought I had last night while thinking about this. So I was thinking about how everyone just wants to view this event entirely through the lense of what we saw in videos from the event, of a kid fighting off two people by shooting them, with no further context before or after, when I realized this was the entire problem, because while we have the videos of Rittenhouse shooting the two men in a street, I don't remember seeing video of the first man getting shot and killed. This is important because not only is this the inciting incident that leads to the other two shootings, but the first man shot and killed was not armed, or even attacking Rittenhouse. His only crime was being in the same crowd where someone else fired a gun into the air and being the first person Rittenhouse saw when he panicked and fired his weapon (which was illegal for him to carry, pretty much for this exact reason). Then, all it takes is people at the back of the crowd panicking and going "oh my god, he has a gun and just killed someone" for others operating on this same bullshit mixture of good intentions and wanting to see some excitement/get into some shit that brought Rittenhouse here as they go after someone who they think is a spree shooter.
I thought the argument was over the fact to footage had been upscaled from SD to HD anyway?In the strictest, most pedantic sense it does, albeit not in a practically meaningful sense, unless you have to zoom in a lot on a particular spot where something smallish is happening. Because it's digital zoom, and digital zoom takes the image as it is and using an algorithm invents what "should" be in between the pixels it actually has. So it necessarily "modifies" the video for playback, and the right response would be to argue that any modification to the video done by the digital zoom is irrelevant in context which it shouldn't be hard to find an expert willing to state so long as the area in question is more than a handful of pixels. Or they could just take the image and zoom without interpolation and let the jury see the grainier resulting footage as what the camera actually saw and see if it still appears to show what is relevant.
Well yeh, it's political. A number of activist groups think they own and should have the right to own the streets and that was challenged by a 17 year old kid not letting them beat him senseless and steal his gun to contribute to the revolution!!!! or some such BSI mean, I feel the same way, just from the opposite side. Like, they very much don't want to charge him (charitably because they feel he did defend himself properly, but if I'm being honest it's because the people shot and killed were protesting the police/Justice system), but have to due to the fact about how quickly this blew up in social media and the news. A manslaughter charge would be a slam dunk that basically starts and ends with "are you legally able to carry a rifle around in public?" "No." (I mean, apparently there is video of Rittenhouse going "wish I had my rifle to shoot these shoplifters" days before he illegally carries a rifle to a protest and has to shoot his way out), but instead they bring forth murder charges where it's next to impossible to prove intent unless he literally writes a manifesto. Plus, if they really wanted to string him up for murder, do you really think they would have left it in the hands of this buffoon they have running the prosecution? Because they have seemingly gone out of there way to make sure this ends in a mistrial for the defense at every opportunity, long past the point where it can be disregarded as an accident or just bad procedure on their part.
If you feel this is too cynical, keep in mind that the police force I'm most likely to run into where I live is the Mesa PD. Yes, that Mesa PD (warning, link includes man executed on camera).