Their criminal “logic” makes sense - to criminals
Still, the enablers often don’t wake up until it’s too late.
Who remembers the guy from Austin(?). With his cowboy hat, he wandered into feral territory (I think it was Chicago but it’s been awhile), because, like, he was one of them and down with the cause. He had a play he had written - with the liberal SJW overtones.
Well, the ferals murdered him, anyways.
Two more who championed the SJW cause:
Corrina Mehiel
“Just a few days after she was photographed with Nancy Pelosi grinning in approval, friends found Mehiel tied up, stabbed, tortured, and ultimately dead at the hands of El Hadji Alpha Madiou Toure, a black man arrested driving her car and using her debit card.
He said he didnt do it.”
“Her belief in black victimization came, she said, at an early age when her mother read to her the book that would change her life: It Takes a Village, by Hillary Rodham Clinton.”
By the way, he raped her too, before she died.
Man Found Guilty in 2017 Rape, Murder of Artist Corrina Mehiel in NE DC Apartment
David Ruenzel
Some liberals, most of which are ego-soaked, look for ways to support their self-perceived importance so they champion imaginary causes for that purpose, Newburn said. They are adult-children who feel free to construct fantasies about their greatness. Their narcissism in part functions to blind them to inconvenient realities. So to compensate, they idealize the targets of their misdirected and pathological caring.”
I'm reminded of a murder quite some time ago (late '80s or early '90s) that happened in NYC. The victim was the adult son of an extremely wealthy family (billionaire-level). He had become a teacher, and chose to work in a very poor school district somewhere in the city.
He sometimes invited teenagers to his apartment (perhaps there was something more than teaching going on there). Eventually, he was murdered in his apartment by IIRC two of his guests.
The quote about liberals and how "their narcissism in part functions to blind them to inconvenient realities" is excellent.
Much of this was anticipated by a character in a book I loved as a teenager, called Red Sky At Morning, by a little-known author named Richard Bradford. It takes place in New Mexico. One of its colorful characters is an aging, wealthy woman who is the unabashed champion of Native Americans (Indians). This woman has a one-track mind, all she thinks about is the "red people" and how virtuous and selfless and authentic they are. She tries to actually become a Native American herself. The actual Native Americans who live in the town think she's a joke, and laugh at her behind her back.