[Vision2020] Noble Found Not Guilty Due to Temporary Insanity
Tom Hansen
thansen at moscow.com
Wed May 5 18:59:14 PDT 2010
Sunil -
Unless Mr. Noble lives in a total vacuum, void of any/all human contact,
the degeneration of his stability must have been apparent to somebody.
I am simply saying that Mr. Noble should be required to undergo medication
and/or therapy.
Furthermore, this incident should be investigated/researched to identify
any "red flags" that could have been treated prior to the incident.
Question: Does anybody know whether or not Mr. Noble has been
court-ordered to therapy/medication?
Since Mr. noble was acquitted on the grounds of temporary insanity, the
logical next step would/should be prevention.
Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho
>
> What Utter Crap.
>
> "Treatment is fine and necessary but there should also be
> some
> penalty for the lack of responsibility in not seeking
> treatment/mitigation
> before the mental illness progresses so far that control is lost."
>
> What personal responsibility do you expect to be exercised by a person who
> is losing his or her mind?
>
> You think he should recognize the signs that he's losing his mind WHILE
> HE'S LOSING HIS MIND?
>
> Maybe you come to this remarkable conclusion having spent a significant
> amount of time working with mentally ill people. Maybe you have the
> training and expertise to conclude that they are able to exercise reason
> while their minds are disintegrating.
>
> Does this expertise extend to people with no prior diagnosis? With no
> prior experience of the symptoms and conditions? Who may not even realize
> that something is wrong?
>
> Yeah, the mentally ill have it too friggin' easy. Let's penalize them for
> lacking the foresight to responsibly deal with terrifying symptoms, while
> they're lost in their own heads.
>
> I just knew you were going to post something like this when I saw Tom
> Hansen's post. Like clockwork, just like clockwork.
>
> Sunil
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