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by greypowerOz 3562 days ago
I get that his treatment upsets you and with good reason... however please bear in mind that in his OWN words:

"Peyton said he wanted to "live according to Sharia law." When asked to describe what that meant, he could only remember the rules that "non-Muslims must pay a tax to live in an Islamic land" and "that homosexual people are killed." He claimed to have read "eight chapters" of the Quran, but "I don't got any of it memorized."

So we have his own confirmation that he has a radicalised view of the world, agrees with some of the worst aspects of ISIS/radical islam, and lives in a country where access to deadly force is a constitutional right.

If the US authorities failed to act on this they would be held accountable for anything this troubled and damaged young man did.

So lets not rush to condemn the authorities here.... that's all I'm saying...

1 comments

The moment that they where aware of his mental state, they should have looked into that. They where too quick to just act on the case. You can see some evidence in that, when they handed the case over to the state. They knew it would be messy and did not want to be involved.

That the state assigned judge happens too be scared of shadows has not helped the issue. This is the sad state of things, and I truly hope things change, and people wake up. The media scares people into a frenzy and then we get crappy judges who are afraid of the scary terrorist hiding in his basement.

Too add to my previous point, there seams to be a big issue with people with mental issues being locked up in jails, especially in smaller cities. This also includes people with drug addictions. The first judge should have approved the investigation to make sure that the accused is fit for trial. A judge should not be allowed to dictate of the accused is or is not fit. If there is even a hint of a mental issue it needs to be investigated before the trial continues. ALWAYS.