Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trump is not happy with the lack of praise from LaVar Ball. Apparently not praising trump means your kids should be jailed. So presidential!
“Now that the three basketball players are out of China and saved from years in jail, LaVar Ball, the father of LiAngelo, is unaccepting of what I did for his son and that shoplifting is no big deal. I should have left them in jail!”
Unpresidented. And embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Trump is not happy with the lack of praise from LaVar Ball. Apparently not praising trump means your kids should be jailed. So presidential!
“Now that the three basketball players are out of China and saved from years in jail, LaVar Ball, the father of LiAngelo, is unaccepting of what I did for his son and that shoplifting is no big deal. I should have left them in jail!”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Irrelevant. Point is I’m sure they were stressed from all that transpired which no doubt prevented them from reciting their statements to the liking of the nitpicky DCUM community.
Perhaps irrelevant to those thieves and people who think like you.
Split hairs about that other stuff to your hearts content my point remains intact - their less than stellar reading of written statements was no doubt due to stress.
It's not splitting hairs to note "that other stuff." Make light of it all you wish.
You’re the ethics expert you handle the criminality and culpability I’m familiar with anxiety and how it can affect speaking that’s all I’m commenting on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere three Asian kids who did not get into UCLA are saying WTF
How the fuck do you know. Jealous? And 3 black kids didn't get into Harvard b/c of alumni preference.
No because Harvard ran out of affirmative action slots
You are very ignorant, but I'm sure you know this. Used to blaming others for your lack of achievement I see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Irrelevant. Point is I’m sure they were stressed from all that transpired which no doubt prevented them from reciting their statements to the liking of the nitpicky DCUM community.
Perhaps irrelevant to those thieves and people who think like you.
Split hairs about that other stuff to your hearts content my point remains intact - their less than stellar reading of written statements was no doubt due to stress.
It's not splitting hairs to note "that other stuff." Make light of it all you wish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Irrelevant. Point is I’m sure they were stressed from all that transpired which no doubt prevented them from reciting their statements to the liking of the nitpicky DCUM community.
Perhaps irrelevant to those thieves and people who think like you.
Split hairs about that other stuff to your hearts content my point remains intact - their less than stellar reading of written statements was no doubt due to stress.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Irrelevant. Point is I’m sure they were stressed from all that transpired which no doubt prevented them from reciting their statements to the liking of the nitpicky DCUM community.
Perhaps irrelevant to those thieves and people who think like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Irrelevant. Point is I’m sure they were stressed from all that transpired which no doubt prevented them from reciting their statements to the liking of the nitpicky DCUM community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you watch them read their statements? My third grader can read from a prepared statement with less hang ups!
Not a chance these three can do college level work, esp at UCLA.
I doubt your 3rd grader has had to read a written statement under similar circumstances of emotional stress and intense media scrutiny.
Are they emotionally stressed because they got caught?
I’m sure they’re emotionally stressed from everything that’s transpired over the last three days. They’ve been on an emotional roller coaster 1) initial shock of arrest 2) fear of imprisonment in foreign country 3) worry of reaction from family/school 4) desperation that they’ll get home 5) relief of no punitive action 6) joy of coming home 7) embarrassment of of whole ordeal 8) guilt of whole ordeal 9) depression of potentially ruining their basketball careers 10) anxiety of facing the media...
I’d be stumbling simply reciting my A, B, C’s after all that.
You omitted any mention of feelings of guilt or remorse for a crime...
#8
guilt of whole ordeal is not the same as remorse for a crime
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere three Asian kids who did not get into UCLA are saying WTF
How the fuck do you know. Jealous? And 3 black kids didn't get into Harvard b/c of alumni preference.
No because Harvard ran out of affirmative action slots
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somewhere three Asian kids who did not get into UCLA are saying WTF
How the fuck do you know. Jealous? And 3 black kids didn't get into Harvard b/c of alumni preference.