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Guy looks like a piece of shit and to be living with your parents at 41, likely never amounted to anything. RIP to the parents.
I wish he could have found another way to resolve the situation, but maybe Joseph felt he had exhausted all other options. Not sure why he had to behead the dog though. Maybe he thought it was spying on him for the Jehovah's Witnesses.That was wrong, he shouldn't have done that.
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I feel for all the parents who have to live with complete fuck-up offspring. It's an incredible burden.
The least a guy like this could've done, after all the suffering he probably put them through, is put a bullet in his brain and let his parents live the rest of their days in peace.
A return of Asylums that aren't just houses for abuse and fucked up experiments on people that no one else cares about is neededMentally ill people can be a real danger to their families. We need to figure something out. You can't just have lunatics living side by side with regular people.
A return of Asylums that aren't just houses for abuse and fucked up experiments on people that no one else cares about is needed
But that would be extremely expensive, and who could you get to staff it?
It would, but what is the cost of having lunatics do harm in the free world? It isn't good for anyone.But that would be extremely expensive
What makes you so sure they're not at least partially responsible for his issues?
I agree. I think properly paid for and staffed asylums that are humane would be very good things.It would, but what is the cost of having lunatics do harm in the free world? It isn't good for anyone.
"He was trying to protect his teammate." The kid never had a chance with such parents.The fact that his family is trying to defend him for stomping on someone's head in a basketball game shows they support and encourage it.
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13-year-old basketball player stomps on opponent's head during Bay Area game
"You could clearly see the size of his shoe on his face. My son suffered a concussion for the first time he played basketball," said Eva Guingab.abc7.com
13-year-old basketball player stomps on opponent's head during Bay Area game
There is a police investigation over what is seen on video in this story. One 13-year-old basketball player stomping on an opposing player's head.
"He was down on the floor and this kid just came and just stomped on him and on his head."
Eva and Roderick Guingab's son was playing on the Tumakbo United team, which is a Filipino-American youth team based in the Bay Area, with players from all across the U.S.
The game took place Sunday at the College of Alameda versus Payton's Place, another Bay Area team. There was a scuffle to get possession of the ball, then another player reacts.
"You could clearly see the size of his shoe on his face. My son suffered a concussion for the first time he played basketball," said Eva Guingab.
The Guingabs says their son is now in concussion protocol and still dealing with headaches. The family of the other boy who did the stomping, says that he was standing up for his teammate who he believed had just been kicked and punched in this melee.
Family members tell me the player for Payton's Place is now being cyberbullied by adults online.
They also say he immediately left the gym after this because he was told to leave by an organizer.
The Payton's Place team says the boy is "seeking help to control his emotions and he is not playing with the program at this time." They also say they are saddened by what happened adding, "The behavior that was exhibited by our player is not acceptable, and is being taken seriously."
Police say this is an ongoing investigation after the Guingabs filed a report.
I think everyone was just in shock - I think we all kind of went on the court and went to the coach of the other team to say, 'What just happened what's going on?'" said Michael Tolentino who coaches Tumakbo United.
"If we don't say anything right now, this kid will think it's OK to do it because he's young. He thinks that walking away from this situation is OK, and it's not OK," said Guingab.
There are also questions about possible attacks that happened after the stomp, involving parents and officials but nothing could be seen on video and police haven't detailed those to us.
The fact that his family is trying to defend him for stomping on someone's head in a basketball game shows they support and encourage it.