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Anion
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She didn't do that at all, actually.

I can't touch the tip of my nose with my eyes closed and/or head back, so I share your fear.

Eli Cash is especially not a genius.

No. It's just terrifying. There's no need for us to "remember" that injustice happens everywhere on occasion, when condemning a particular injustice. We can condemn injustice no matter what.

…"who also used the toilet for twosies and didn't flush."

Oh, come on. Who hasn't told the person they've been dating for a week or two about their desire to have a drug-fueled sex orgy?

Did she actually say that was a "cat burglar" costume? Did she ever confirm it?

Oh, please. It takes an enormous amount of delusion to think Guede isn't guilty. He confessed—a confession that didn't mention Knox or Sollecito—and then when he was told he'd get a reduced sentence for fingering them, suddenly added them to his confession.

There was plenty of evidence, sure, just none that wasn't fabricated, misinterpreted, or contaminated.

That Santa and his criming.

That "trace amount" was lab contamination, even.

Lol. "There's no anti-Americanism here," says the person who's made a bunch of snippy anti-American comments.

Yes, it was shitty that the police did that, and sad that she was finally browbeaten into agreeing with them. She didn't send anyone to jail; last time I checked the police are the ones who put people in jail.

By "verifiably done to our people," do you mean finally agreeing, after hours of accusations and interrogation, with the police's insistence that Patrick Lumumba must have been at the scene of the crime?

Except she didn't accuse him to take the heat off herself. She and Lumumba had a brief text exchange the evening of the murder (about her not needing to come in to work that night). She ended the exchange with "See you later," which, in America, is a general goodbye statement; that's not the case in Italy. The Italian

I love that movie, lol.

Yes, that's awful. I feel so bad for them; they were straight up lied to by the prosecutors from the beginning.

I dunno. I think if she was black she still would have gotten a ton of attention here; the murder was big news from the beginning, and she's a young American citizen railroaded by a biased foreign government in a ridiculously inept investigation. I think it would be a pretty big deal no matter what.

Are you sure that using Sacco (who was almost certainly guilty, btw) and Vanzetti as examples of fine, upstanding Italian immigrants who made America a better place is really the way you want to go here?

Same difference in this case. There's no worldwide legal authority that determines who or what is "entitled" to feelings or opinions about things; and in the US *everyone* is entitled to their own feelings, attitudes, and opinions.