What makes pretty young white girls decide to do ignore their instincts and form close relationships with men who are violent thugs? Is it a form of giving the finger to their parents? A f##k " you moment? Or is it that they are constantly told that it is just and kind to embrace diversity, forgetting that the embrace does not have to be literal?
An 18-year-old animal shelter volunteer in Colorado was allegedly beaten to death in a parking lot by her ex-boyfriend, authorities said.
The young lady was found unconscious “with life-threatening injuries consistent with an assault” in the parking lot of an apartment complex on Feb. 6, according to local police.
She was taken to a local hospital, where she died of her injuries. Police didn’t say what kind of injuries she had... Police arrested her ex-boyfriend.
It seems that she had been " hanging out " with her ex and another man when things went wrong.
She was described as an animal lover who “genuinely cared about others.”
I have often wondered if one of the purposes of the Social Justice Warrior agenda is to cause people to feel uncomfortable and eventually learn to ignore the instincts that keep us safe. Make people feel guilt and self loathing for feeling "bad vibes" about the wrong people. Force them to embrace the danger as a way of showing their commitment to the woke brigade.
" See? I am so woke and kind that I will date a brutal thug and maybe he will change."
Well, any woman who thinks she can change an evil man or violent man or a gambler or a drunkard just by loving him is sadly very much mistaken.
It reminds me of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo where Martin Vanger explains how easy it is to capture his victims, despite their better instincts telling them to run.
Let me ask you something? Why don't people trust their instincts? They sense something is wrong, someone is walking too close behind them. You knew something was wrong but you came back into the house. Did I force you, did I drag you in? No. All I had to do was offer you a drink. It's hard to believe that the fear of offending can be stronger than the fear of pain. But you know what? It is. And they always come willingly. And then they sit there. They know it's all over, just like you do, but somehow they still think they have a chance. "Maybe if I say the right thing? Maybe if I'm polite. If I cry, if I beg." And when I see the hope draining from their face like it is from yours right now, I can feel myself getting hard.