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Reply to "Victoria’s Secret “Karen” sues, says she is the victim "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The problem here is that the mentally ill person was potentially violent. Despite her mental illness, she should not have been allowed out of her communal home without a caretaker who could monitor her to make sure she didn't have an episode. It was completely negligent of whoever her guardian is to let her out without a caretaker for both her protection and the public's protection. This women, while mentally ill, should still be held accountable for her actions. In this case, it was during Covid and at the checkout line, she was unmasked and closing in on her victim. The victim asked her to step back 6 feet (at the time, it was store policy). The aggressive white woman complained to the cashier. Knowing how these situations often unfold and to protect herself from racist accusations that she was in the wrong, the victim, the black woman, started filming. When she pulled out her phone, the white woman thought it was appropriate to slap the other woman's phone out of her hand because she didn't want to be filmed. She missed the phone and struck the victim. Then after the victim would not stop filming her, she chased the victim around the shop yelling "Get her away from me". That is not normal behavior. You can't yell "get away from me" while chasing someone around the store. Sorry, she could have stayed away or left herself instead of chasing her victim around the shop. And the Victoria's Secret staff was definitely complicit here. They ultimately did step in between the women to stop the mentally ill aggressor from continuing to chase the victim, but they should have done so much earlier and should have called mall security to stop the white woman from continuing to chase the black woman around the store. And then to tell the victim that she needed to leave instead of telling the aggressor to leave was just inappropriate. I don't think either woman deserves anything from the other, but I think the black victim definitely deserves compensation from Victoria's Secret for letting this situation get out of hand and just ignoring the situation until they had to step in much too late. [/quote] She should not have been allowed out of her home? Do you hear yourself? I wonder if you said the same thing about Jordan Neely. You probably cried about that one instead of thinking too bad, so sad, where was his caretaker?[/quote] I said she should not be allowed out unattended. She clearly needs a caretaker to help her navigate being out in public. [/quote] That really isn't a thing. If it ever was, it isn't now. And I'm not at all sure it ever was. It's up to you to tolerate others, not for others to be tolerable. [/quote] In that case, then they need to be held responsible when they assault other people. And just because she doesn't want to be videotaped, does not give her a right to slap another person. You can't say that they can go out unescorted and then say that they are not responsible for their own actions. [b]Sorry, but no one gets to act that way without consequences[/b].[/quote] Correct if you are a white person. This logic gets twisted on its head if it a minority, just saying.[/quote]
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