tripledash--disqus
tripledash
tripledash--disqus

I've read a couple AMA's, but I can't see any other reason for it. I'm old, so things like tumblr and reddit confuse me.

Whoa. Just shows what a sense of entitlement he had. "These lottery millions are MINE." Scary, unhinged.

NOOOOOOOOOOOO

Allow people to carry single-bullet muskets, like from when the Constitution was written. Instruments of modern warfare are banned EVERYWHERE.

He was crazy AND a misogynist.

UGHHH.

Well, I'm kind of with them on that one. Crazy people find crazy reasons to kill people. 100% misogynist that hated women, but every crazy person has a CRAZY reason to kill people. Did Lanza have a reason? i don't even remember anymore and why do I know the shooters names and not the victims?

I've avoided the internet when it comes to this story, but what could the sexist responses be? And if it's something along the lines of "if some chick would've just banged this guy, none of this would have happened…" then I think I may quit internetting forever. It was so much more pleasant NOT searching out

I think Brave stands out because it has ridiculously impressive animation and it's main plot point is the relationship between a mother and a daughter, which is not common in animation and I found endearing.

It feels like they transitioned that Pixar magic and inventiveness to Disney animation (Wreck-it Ralph, especially) with Lassiter. I thought Brave was really good, but Monsters U and Cars 2 suffered from being sequels with already built worlds, that didn't really expand on them much. There was no emotional pull to

Sorry, everything can't be FROZEN to you people!

The problem is that he's ASSUMING he knows, which fits his know-it-all persona. He answered honestly, but ignorantly. HOW does he know how a murderer feels? I'm sure many murderers feel horribly after they murder somebody, but I can't say for sure because I've never murdered somebody. It was a stupid answer, and

We all did stupid things when we were 19, but at a certain point you have to realize what's going on around you. I'm just befuddled that people write off his "whatever, man" attitude about being blamed for 3 of the most heinous deaths in recent history as him being a kid. This is NOT a normal reaction, and something

So ACT like you care. Maybe?

He was 18, not 12. 19 years old when he was on the stand. Sorry, he was a shithead.

The lawyers seemed shockingly inept. The first of the MW3 was told to keep his head down the entire time, and did literally that, staring at the floor the ENTIRE trial. And Echols didn't look like he was coached at all when he went on the stand. He seemed to be prepared for the questions, but nobody told him that

I'm not talking emotional as in histrionics. I'm talking about lose the flat-affect I'm too cool for this attitude. he came across as uncaring and flip. Much better for him to stay off the stand if he was going to act in that manner, it's just common sense. Somebody going for a job interview with that attitude

I couldn't take Part 2, at all. Too much time spent on that loon Byers, which became unbearable.

Weirdly, it sounds like that relationship didn't last.

Maybe show a sense of urgency that give the impression that he actually gave a shit about anything that was happening? I know teenagers generally have their heads up their asses, but he clearly didn't give a fuck which is a TERRIBLE look to a jury. What do you think the jury remembers, that the notebook doodles had