martinanders--disqus
Martin Anders
martinanders--disqus

So, what you are saying is that you felt real sorry for these fictional kds, but if they had been a gang of real homeless, orphans who were kidnapping women to be their mommy, you wouldn't have cared?

Barely. They were all 15 and given the severity of their crimes, in real life, they'd have been tried as adults.

Way too long to respond to all of it, so I'll just address the key points.

"…but given the events at the old house, she has genuine reasons to be concerned for her (and Kelly's) safety."

The kids did end up with a Wesen warden who knew what they were - so, I'm guessing someone did take care to put them in the right place.

Do you speak German? Because if you did, you'd probably have a stroke, right?

I'm pretty sure Juliette's transformation was a complete anomaly and had nothing to do with genetics.

Okay, sure - there is a lot to being a Hexenbiest. But as far as we know, they often die just like any other human. 2 Hexenbiests were killed by bee-stings. Another died when she got a face full of glass. Another died by being stabbed in the stomach and another died when her throat was slit.

"My poor heart (especially when the wee Fuchsbau girl thought Rosalee was her mother…ahhhh)."

I don't understand the relevance.
Are you saying that because Adalind got her powers back through a ritual, she should know everything there is to know about Hexenbiests?

So, here's the deal with Juliette's death:

Didn't need to.

Showing remorse is just one way of atonement. Renard chose another - helping Nick at every turn, covering for him, saving Juliette at great personal risk and using his power and position in Nick's favor. I doubt if Adalind is in any position to do that.

But he'd already apologize with his actions long before he told Nick.

"Their actions, though horrific, were borne of desperation and isolation, not malice."

Good. Now go learn more.

Then you remain ignorant.

Okay, so let me see if I can summarize this whole discussion.

Juliette used to have a lot of friend and we know that she had a Spanish grandmother who was apparently a big influence in her life, but apart from that there doesn't seem to be anyone who cares what happened to her.

Except, not every lie automatically becomes fraud. And I'm not the one who gave it a definition. Like I said - look the topic up and educate yourself.