Comments by "voteZDLR" (@voteZDLR) on "LegalEagle"
channel.
-
9
-
@stentor1980 You said that it's against the law to defend your home with lethal force. THAT isn't true, it depends on the state. In my state, the only stipulation is I can't shoot you in the back, in the event you decide to burglarize my home. I can shoot you if you're facing me, especially if you're heading towards me with what I feel is a gun or weapon of your own, as long as you're trespassing to begin with. If someone breaks and enters in your home in New Jersey and you shoot someone, you are probably going to go to jail, but if you do the same thing in Louisiana, you'll be fine. Because like firearms laws themselves, IT DEPENDS ON THE STATE. I wasn't talking about booby traps specifically, I was addressing your comment that somehow presumes federal law dictates Castle Laws. It doesn't. State law does.
7
-
4
-
2
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
It's been pointed out by others but Tyrion wasn't going to get a fair trial, no matter what. His father hated him for being a dwarf, basically, and being "embarrassing" to him his entire life, as well as being the one during whose childbirth his beloved wife Joanna (Tyrion's mother) died. His sister hated him I think for similar reasons, but there's something else psychologically going on there as well, but I think it started with the death of her mother then yeah it just boiled down to embarrassment on their family name, or perceived embarrassment, but also Cersei Lannister (his sister) I think more than anything else resented being born a woman in what's clearly a man's world, using satellite men in her life to run things (poorly and emotionally) behind the scenes, like her son Joffrey and even Jaime. But no, Tyrion was the scapegoat. I do not think for a second that Tywin believed Joffrey was killed by Tyrion. Cersei may have believed it, but that's because she's a temperamental, unreasonable person, by character.
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1