rEvolutionist wrote:Coito ergo sum wrote:rEvolutionist wrote:Well clearly the judiciary thinks it's fine to shoot someone in the back after a contractual disagreement and call it self-defence. What point are you trying to make?
On what basis do you make the allegation that "clearly the judiciary thinks it is fine to shoot someone in the back after a contractual disagreement?" Where do you get that?
He was fucking acquitted of it. Are you even aware what we are talking about?!?

yes, but, it seems you are making an unwarranted leap in logic. The acquittal was not based on any determination that it is "fine to shoot someone in the back after a contractual disagreement."
First of all, genius, it was jury acquittal on the charge of murder, which entailed an allegation of "intentional killing of another human being with malice aforethought."
One of the defenses raised was that the guy shot at the tires of the car. If the jury believed that, then they would be justified in acquitting on the murder charge.
If the jury found that shooting at the car was "reckless" - which it seems so to be -- they could have convicted him of manslaughter. But, the prosecution did not bring the lesser included offense of manslaughter. They left that out -- they may not have wanted to give the jury that option, figuring murder was a likely outcome. I don't know what the prosecutions strategy was.
So, since we don't know the basis of the jury's decision, we don't know what swayed them. So, we don't even know if the jury thinks it is fine to shoot someone in the back after a contractual dispute. We absolutely cannot conclude, also, that "the judiciary" in Texas thinks it is fine to shoot someone int he back after a contractual dispute, since no member of the judiciary has expressed this view of it.