“Rittenhouse Derangement Syndrome” now rivals “Trump Derangement Syndrome”

 

I’m sure the very last thing Kyle Rittenhouse wanted was to become a living meme, but sadly that’s what’s happened to him.  America is as divided over his case as it has been over President Trump – so much so that it’s not far-fetched to call it “Rittenhouse Derangement Syndrome”, after the similarly weird and wacky “Trump Derangement Syndrome“.  To cite just a few examples over the weekend:

  • The star of “The Mandalorian” TV series, Pedro Pascal, tweeted:  “Joseph Rosenbaum, 36, and Anthony Huber, 27, murdered August 25th, 2020. Rest In Peace.”  This, despite abundant evidence (including video and audio recordings) presented at Rittenhouse’s trial that proved they were the instigators and aggressors in the conflict, not its victims.  It’s as if the evidence didn’t even enter into Mr. Pascal’s consciousness.  He must have had very selective sight and hearing to miss it.  They were not murdered:  they were shot in self-defense, and the court verdict confirmed that.
  • Mark Ruffalo, another actor, tweeted:  “We come together to mourn the lives lost to the same racist system that devalues Black lives and devalued the lives of Anthony and JoJo. #ReimagineKenosha”.  Sorry, Mr. Ruffalo, but ‘Anthony’ and ‘JoJo’ were convicted felons who were actively engaged in felonious conduct.  Their race had nothing to do with their actions.  They paid the price for their crime (assault, rioting) when they were shot by the person they were assaulting.  Again, video and audio evidence makes that undeniable and beyond doubt.  To ignore it is to ignore reality.
  • A social media director for the Democratic Party in an Illinois county posted a series of tweets in response to last night’s attack on a Christmas parade in Kenosha.  Referring to the attacker, she said:  “Living in Wisconsin, he probably felt threatened … I’m sure he didn’t want to hurt anyone … He came to help people.”  Later she added, “The blood of Kyle Rittenhouse’s victims is on the hands of Wisconsin citizens, even the children … It’s sad people died, but when you open the door to vigilante justice, everyone seems threatening … Wisconsin put that bad energy out there.  It came back real fast.”  Again, she appears to be in denial of the reality so clearly spelled out during Rittenhouse’s trial.  It’s as if she didn’t bother to watch any of the evidence, and isn’t interested in what it proved.  Her ideologically warped and twisted perspective isn’t even nudged by the facts.  Instead, she finds amusement, even perhaps a diabolical pleasure, in the murder of children last night for what appear to be politically motivated reasons.  I’m very, very glad that I haven’t been infected by her brand of mental derangement.
  • A great many anti-Rittenhouse tweets and posts have described those he shot as black, and claimed that the outcome of his trial is evidence that the judicial system is biased and unfair.  In fact, as we all know (at least, all those of us who bothered to read the evidence and watch the video clips ourselves), none of them were black.  They were all Caucasian.  A white man with a gun shot three white protesters who were attacking him.  Where’s the racism in that?
  • Amber Ruffin, speaking on her show on NBC, said:  “It’s not okay for a man to grab a rifle, travel across state lines and shoot three people and then walk free.  It’s not okay for the judicial system to be blatantly and obviously stacked against people of color.  It’s not okay for there to be an entirely different set of rules for white people.  But I don’t care about Kyle Rittenhouse.  I don’t care about that racist judge.  And I don’t care about how f***ed up that jury must be.  White people have been getting away with murder since time began.  I don’t care about that … Every time one of these verdicts come out, it’s easy to feel like you don’t, but I’m here to tell you that you do, you matter.  You matter so much that the second you start to get a sense that you do, a man will grab a gun that he shouldn’t have in the first place, and travel all the way to another state just to quiet you.”  To me, that entire diatribe is so far from reality, so devoid of facts, that I have to question whether Ms. Ruffin and I inhabit the same planet.  She obviously believes in, and feels strongly about, what she said – but I look at the evidence-based reality of our situation, and I can’t recognize where she’s coming from.  The Rittenhouse case dealt with only one race, and it wasn’t black.  It had nothing to do with her racially tinged outlook on life, but she can’t see that.  She’s incapable of seeing that… and that bodes very ill indeed for the future of America, given how many people watch her show and clearly agree with her sentiments.

Perhaps Jed Babbin is right:

For liberals there are only two acceptable explanations for the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse: racism and (or) the lack of gun controls depriving private citizens of their Second Amendment rights.

. . .

Racism? Kyle Rittenhouse is white. The two men he shot and killed — and the one he wounded — were all white. Yet President Biden and too many other nitwits in Hollywood, the media, professional sports, and among the hoi polloi Democrats insist that Rittenhouse is a white supremacist despite the lack of a scintilla of evidence that he is or was.

The liberals’ insistence that the law, the trial, and its outcome are tainted by racism is risible. But, to them, it has to be true because they have only two frames of reference, racism, and gun control.

There’s more at the link.

On the other side of the equation, there are some very strong reactions as well.  I’ll mention only two here.  First, the brother of one of the victims of the late and unlamented Joseph Rosenbaum writes on Reddit:

So sick of people praising my brothers rapist

I’m not going to talk about the Rittenhouse Case verdict or my opinion on it, but instead I wanna reflect on the insane amount of people praising Rosenbaum, including celebrities.

In the Early 2000s, my younger brother was sexually abused with I think about a dozen other kids by Rosenbaum. The court cases are sealed because they/we were minors so I won’t be providing the names of any of them or the exact charges. He and every other victim deserves privacy. We already had batshit crazy conservatives try to unseal the case so they could tout around the victims stories as a “gotcha” moment.

Anyways, the f***er plead out of like 11 counts of child rape (there were more accusations, they just never made it to court) and only got like 10 years (ended up only being 8). My brother and I are late 20s/Early 30s now and he has mostly moved on but up until he was 14 he would cry almost every night and ask to sleep In the same bed as me or my sister or mom. I can only imagine what the other victims are going through.

Now, somehow he made his way to Kenosha and was shot dead. Whatever. Couldn’t care less. Also couldn’t care less about the trial or the verdict of Kyle.

What gets me is all these f***ing celebrities calling him cutesy f***ing nicknames and talking like him like he was such a great human being. “RIP Joseph” “Such a kind soul” “He didn’t deserve this” Pedro Pascal is a good actor but somehow saw fit to call this POS a Hero.

What finally made me lose it was Mark Ruffalo’s “RIP JoJo” What the whole f***? Literally petnaming him. I’m so f***ing angry. This man was a terror who deserved hell 20 years ago and major celebrities are making him to be a Martyr.

My brother is acting like he’s ok through this whole thing and he has been on a media blackout. I on the other hand have been listening since day one and am so sick of people defending a pedophile. I’m so goddamned disappointed in our politicians and celebrities and athletes who all have acted like he was a hero.

Larry Correia embarks on one of his well-known rants, fisking an idiot who lies through his teeth while completely misrepresenting the legal situation surrounding Kyle Rittenhouse’s actions.  Here’s a short excerpt.  Text in italics is from the idiot;  normal text is Larry’s response.

Legally, if you are in the process of a commission of a crime, it negates your ability to claim self defense if you kill someone. As in, it can’t even be entered as your official defense in court.

– except this trial needed to determine if KR was in fact in the commission of a crime or not. Related, and I’m surprised this guy didn’t bring it up is the claim that the judge was “biased” because he wouldn’t let the rioters be called “victims.” Well duh, that’s because the purpose of a case like this is for the jury to decide if they are victims or assailants.

On that note, since I’m shooting down all the other stupid talking points, here’s a common one. Whenever some prog says the judge was biased, ask how, and then watch them choke. If they respond, it’ll be the “victims” bit, or it’ll be that the judge yelled at the prosecutors for saying that invoking your 5th Amendment rights makes you guilty, or when they got caught not giving the defense the right evidence. But none of that was bias. That was embarrassing levels of prosecutorial misconduct. They didn’t deserve to be yelled at, they deserve to be disbarred, and then sent to jail.

It is similar to getting rear-ended at a red light through zero fault of your own, but you were driving without a license or insurance. It automatically makes you at fault because you weren’t even legally allowed to be driving.

– as you will see, this guy loves to torture analogies. Too bad they don’t actually apply to this case.

That 17 year old in Kenosha had committed two crimes and was not even legally allowed to open carry the rifle he used to shoot three people. This means that he legally cannot claim self defense.

– Demonstrably false. He was legally allowed to be carrying that rifle in Wisconsin. So that whole opening argument was moot. The weapons charge was dropped because the Wisconsin law did in fact allow KR to carry that gun, in that way, in that place.

I’m glad he didn’t bring up the whole hE cRoSsEd sTaTe lInEs!! talking point though, because that’s just stupid. He drove in from the suburbs to a place where he works and a bunch of his close family live.

Another key discussion is the Castle Doctrine

– thus begins a super long digression into a law which doesn’t really have anything to do with the KR case in an attempt to sound smart to low information types.

Some of you may be vaguely familiar with it,

-More than this jackass, obviously.

Again, more at the link.  Recommended reading.

I want you to notice two things about the last two excerpts posted above.  They’re solidly based on facts and the law.  There’s no speculation, no jumping to conclusions, no second-guessing the court or the verdict.  They’re grounded in reality – something that’s far from evident in the anti-Rittenhouse comments quoted earlier.

That’s what I look for in deciding whether someone is worth listening to, or just another idiot living in cloud cuckoo land (whether they’re on the left or the right of the political spectrum).  I don’t want feelings:  I want objective, verifiable, undeniable facts.  To quote the late, great Robert A. Heinlein:

What are the facts? Again and again and again – what are the facts? Shun wishful thinking, ignore divine revelation, forget what “the stars foretell,” avoid opinion, care not what the neighbors think, never mind the unguessable “verdict of history” – what are the facts, and to how many decimal places? You pilot always into an unknown future; facts are your single clue. Get the facts!

It’s not just the “loony left” that ignore the facts.  The right has more than enough of its own loonies to deal with.  When you hear someone rant about “niggers” or “the Joos”, or posting anti-semitic or anti-black cartoons, or assigning blame for any crime or wrongdoing or tragedy to a particular racial or ethnic group, you should have learned the hard way by now that they’re always wrong.  It’s never one race or ethnic group behind anything like that.  It’s our fallen, sinful human nature – and if you believe our nature isn’t that way, you know nothing about life at all.  Even if you reject any belief in God, if you deny the existence of objective evil, and the capacity of any human being to act in an evil way when there’s sufficient pressure or provocation… you don’t know what you’re talking about.  The most ordinary of people can become monsters, and frequently have.  I’ve seen far too much of that reality, as regular readers of this blog will know (and, yes, it applies to me, too;  it applies to each and every one of us).  We saw it in World War II, on all sides of the fighting.  It cannot be denied.

Furthermore, one can’t blame an entire race or group or whatever for the actions of individuals.  There may be (no, there certainly are) criminals and evil people in every race and ethnicity and skin color – but there are also good people, even saints, in those same communities.  To tar everybody with the same brush is to ignore reality yet again.  If anyone blames a group for the evils they see around them, without acknowledging that reality, you may be sure that they haven’t thought things through, and their perspective on reality is fatally flawed.

What’s more, responding to evil by doing evil oneself is to make yourself as guilty as the original perpetrator(s).  There’s legitimate self-defense, and then there’s murder.  Both may involve the same actions, but both are not morally or ethically or legally equal, as the Rittenhouse verdict shows yet again.  It’s a tired old saw that “two wrongs don’t make one right” – yet many of us seem incapable of applying it.  We’d rather blame Rittenhouse for objectifying all that we see as wrong with “the system”, even if he had nothing whatsoever to do with those wrongs.

So, when we see these extremist reactions to current events, let’s take a step back and a deep breath, and look for the facts.  They are our only reliable guide.  It’s not about our interpretation of the facts, or the spin we put upon them – it’s what they actually tell us about reality.  Far too many people won’t do that… and the polarization we currently see all around us is the result.

Peter

17 comments

  1. "It may help to understand human affairs to be clear that most of the great triumphs and tragedies of history are caused, not by people being fundamentally good or fundamentally bad, but by people being fundamentally people."
    – Neil Gaiman/Terry Pratchett, Good Omens

  2. The "mature, responsible, Conservative" radiomouth early AM's insists that Rittenhouse 'made a bad decision' by responding to a call for help to defend his village from marauders from ANOTHER village. Really? Isn't that why we have a US Army?

    In addition, he decries Rittenhouse' decision to appear on Fox with Tucker Carlson, claiming (without evidence) that it is all about 'fame.' Actually, it's all about money, as Rittenhouse' attorney made very clear. Kyle needs money, Fox provided money…QED.

    "Responsible Conservative" radiomouth really should study the history behind the 2A. It's about defense of self, nation, and township….

  3. A white man with a gun shot three white protesters who were attacking him.

    Actually Peter, Rittenhouse is half Latino. So it would be more accurate to say a Hispanic man shot three white men, one of whom was screaming racial epithets. 😉

  4. "When you hear someone rant about "niggers" or "the Joos", or posting anti-semitic or anti-black cartoons, or assigning blame for any crime or wrongdoing or tragedy to a particular racial or ethnic group,"

    Ahem. Just who in America is doing these things, in connection with Kyle Rittenhouse? Maybe the "alt-right" people have done so – I don't keep close track of them – but those aren't conservatives, by their own admission. Every right-wing commenter I've seen has put the blame for this on the men Rittenhouse shot, and on the government in Kenosha that allowed the riots to continue.

    Whereas the fantasy version of the shooting the media foisted on the public exists precisely to jam it into the "white oppressors/black victims" template the Left adores so much, and feed their increasingly poisonous bigotry against the Straight White Male.

  5. Per Fox they did not pay him.
    https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/fox-news-says-it-didn-e2-80-99t-pay-for-rittenhouse-trial-access-in-making-of-documentary/ar-AAQZn8i

    Kyles background:
    https://marycumminsmarycummins.blogspot.com/2021/11/kyle-rittenhouse-kyle-h-rittenhouse.html?m=1

    And Kyle said he supports blm, due to the huge prosecutional abuse issue:
    https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/megan-fox/2021/11/21/kyle-rittenhouse-says-he-supports-the-blm-movement-in-tucker-carlson-interview-n1535237

    If blm actually was about judicial reform, instead of being a communist ideology front using blm for political points / advantage to push their agenda, I would agree with him.

  6. "By their actions shall you know them." (Matthew 7:16, more or less.)

    The pool of human beings consist of "people", of varying tones, features, undercarriage, language, beliefs and customs, et cetera. Defining groups by commonalities (unless it is something the *individuals* do) is dumbassery.

    Dumbassery is a choice. An action, usually made by conscious decision. (Being taught stupidity is one thing, but not applying your own brain to spot the BS is a choice as well.)

    And I can say this having grown up in Montana in the 1970s, not exactly a hotbed of inclusiveness. A kid deliberately breaks my favorite toy in about 3rd grade, I don't blame his race, sex, background, whatever – I blame *him*. Other kids decide it6's a great idea to huck rocks at me on my way home from school daily. (In 7th grade, for godsake. [rolls eyes]) It's on them, not anyone else.

    I'm not perfect (deliberately so, out of humility, because I'm awesome enough as it is :V) but "not being a dumbass" is really low bar to clear… so how lazy do you have to be to just go with "[race] is evil, they do [bad thing]!", or religion, reproductive hardware, originating culture, which hand they use to pick their nose or whatever?

    Oh well. I just end up rolling my eyes, "Whatever, dumbass. Oh, you don't like being called a dumbass? Then stop being a dumbass."

    Which makes me a dumbass too, but it's that whole humility thing again.

  7. The car crashing into the holiday parade was more about the thug life and drug dealing than about 'systemic racism' and 'racial inequality.'

    Just saying.

    How do you know the perpetrators of any crime don't fit the eneMedia's paradigm? The race, sex, sexual proclivities, political affiliation and criminal background aren't immediately released. As the 'suspects' weren't.

  8. Again, video and audio evidence makes that undeniable and beyond doubt. To ignore it is to ignore reality. But then, that's what they DO. Their brain(?)s can't cope.

  9. War is the ultimate in group punishment. The enemy do not care about your feelings. They do not care about your motivations. They do not care about your charities. They only want to know one thing – are you with them, or against them?

    The Left making war against us. Not fighting back is a choice, as is pretending it's not happening. But neither of those choices ultimately leads to individual or cultural survival.

    In a civil war, the first step is to admit it is happening. The second step is to clearly and carefully identify "we" and "they", especially as seen by those who would destroy you, for they have already made those distinctions.

  10. It appears as though it's being orchestrated by the very same people who established the TDS. Isn't it about time that those of us, who are not easily affected by these psychotic TV dramas, rounded up the writers and arrangers: those who are determined to upset the sheep.

  11. The vehicular terrorism was in Waukesha, not Kenosha. Not super far from Kenosha, but a different town.

    Also, I pray that Pedro Pascal and Mark Ruffalo are forced into a situation where they must defend themselves with violence, and ask that they be crucified by their peers for doing so.

  12.         Concerning the fallen nature of humanity, I once wrote to some friends on an apa (a sort of paper version of an electronic bulletin board), quoting Chesterton's remark that you needed faith to believe all Catholic doctrines, with one exception.  That exception was original sin.  To believe that, you only needed to be able to read a newspaper.

            One of the mothers on the apa replied that you didn't even need to be literate.  All you needed was to spend some time watching toddlers interact, and you'd see original sin displayed.

  13. It is better to keep your mouth shut and let people think you are an ass then to open it and prove them right. It’s obvious to those of us who followed the facts that those with RDS don’t want to be confused by the truth.

  14. RAH has a slightly shorter version of the paragraph you quoted, which he usually used when discussing "Slipstick" Andy Libby.

    It goes, " What are the facts and to how many decimal places? That is what one needs to know."

    Night Driver

  15. Reason and logic are things that you use to try talking another person over to your point of view.

    Neither of those things has the slightest chance of working when you're dealing with a soulless, inhuman monster who was placed on Earth by the Devil for the sole and explicit purpose of spreading death and misery wherever they go.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *