Soccerdad1995 wrote:I took it as meaning that he didn't feel sorry for the motorcycle rider, not that the rider deserved to get injured. Subtle difference, but meaningful.TVGuy wrote:This is the comment that concerned me:Soccerdad1995 wrote:I have not seen a single post here saying that the car driver was in the right. Everyone is saying that he was wrong. A lot of folks are also saying that the motorcycle rider was in the wrong.TVGuy wrote:We don't know the circumstances for the invalid license charge. Did he never have a class "M" license? Did he never have a license? Was it the day after his birthday and it expired?
The old man tried to kill these two people, he then had zero remorse after he saw what his actions caused. This thread is about lane splitting, which is currently illegal. Would you have an only somewhat problem if someone was lane splitting and a cage driver shot them? What about someone going 70 in a 65 (in a car), are they worthy of agg assault or attempted murder?
Some of the responses here are bizarre.
Did the rider "deserve" to get injured? No.
Was the car driver right to try and injure him and his passenger? No.
Was the motorcycle rider also in the wrong? Yes.
Could the rider's actions have injured someone else? Yes.
Could this whole incident have been avoided if the motorcycle rider been responsible and followed the law? Yes.
These are the consistent responses throughout this thread. Which part do you find to be "bizarre"? Do you not believe there is mutual fault here?
That's the equivalent of saying "he deserved it", which as I mentioned above is bizarre.If he was injured while breaking the law, here's the world's smallest violin
If I get drunk and jump out of a second story window, do I "deserve" to break a leg? No. I haven't harmed anyone, so why would I "deserve" to be injured?
But does anyone feel sorry for me if I do break a leg? No, because I was doing something reckless and stupid that led to my injury.
Not sure how you don't see the difference there. In the example above, you chose to jump out of the window (stupidly) and got hurt. This is not the same as the incident we are discussing.
Let's make it the same...
We are at a party and Soccerdad is drunk. He acts like he might and tells me he will jump out of the window, so I grab some large knives out of the kitchen and jam them in the ground below, pointing upward toward the window.
Soccerdad jumps and thinks it's a good idea to pull his girlfriend out with him, both land on the knives and nearly die.
Yes, Soccerdad made a poor decision. By putting the knives down there I was a complete moron and criminally responsible.
There is a reason the old man is in prison and the rider only got a couple of tickets.
I'm not advocating breaking the law. I've never driven without a license, or insurance. I can't say I've never driven or ridden over the speed limit. The number of people driving without a license or insurance makes me frustrated, but that doesn't mean I'm going to open fire on one.