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Aaron Hernandez Suicide


TexasAg1969

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I think he pronounced the proper verdict and executed the proper sentence for the jury's getting it wrong. May all his victims rest in peace. He's got some splainin' to do and it's not to any of us or them.

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I am somewhat surprised by his suicide for this reason: I believed that the guy was a true narcissist and that he had no real conscience. As a general rule, those kind of people do not kill themselves. People with a conscience kill themselves over remorse for what they have done. I do not think he had any remorse.

 

So, perhaps this really was the act of a true narcissist. He thought too much of himself to have to subject himself to a lifetime of confinement. So be it. I have no real sympathy for him.

Some have said they feel sorrow for his young daughter. While yes, it is always bad if someone loses a parent at that young age, this may be best for her. She can live her life without the specter of her father in prison hanging over her. This way, perhaps, she (or her mother) can find someone that can be a true parent to her without worrying about the old man locked away.

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It could be leading up to the acquittal he had hope if he beat this latest charge (which he did) he could potentially appeal and the beat the charge that has him in prison. Maybe he realized after a few days of this acquittal that this wasn't the case despite winning and lost hope. The Odin Lloyd case from what I understand is about as airtight as it gets and the defenses only real argument was "he was there but didn't do it". Maybe the dude now that the dust settled realized that was formally his life until he or someone else ended it.

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To each his own dom. If you want to splain your life to the empty sky, go for it.

Well, I say Karma will be a bitch for Aaron Hernandez:

 

The Upanishads, the ancient set of Hindu religious texts, postulated an eternal, changeless core of the self called as the "Atman." This soul or "deep self" was viewed as being identical with the unchanging godhead, referred to as Brahma (the unitary ground of being that transcends particular gods and goddesses). Untouched by the variations of time and circumstance, the Atman was nevertheless entrapped in the world of "samsara" (the cycle of death and rebirth). Unlike Western treatments of reincarnation, which tend to make the idea of coming back into body after body seem exotic, desirable, and even romantic, Hinduism, Buddhism, and other southern Asian religions portray the samsaric process as unhappy. Life in this world means suffering.

 

What keeps us trapped in the samsaric cycle is the law of karma. In its simplest form, this law operates impersonally like a natural law, ensuring that every good or bad deed eventually returns to the individual in the form of reward or punishment commensurate with the original deed. It is the necessity of "reaping one's karma" that compels human beings to take rebirth (to reincarnate) in successive lifetimes. In other words, if one dies before reaping the effects of one's actions (as most people do), the karmic process demands that one come back in a future life. Coming back in another lifetime also allows karmic forces to reward or punish one through the circumstances to which one is born. Hence, for example, an individual who was generous in one lifetime might be reborn as a wealthy person in the next incarnation.

 

"Moksha" is the traditional Sanskrit term for release or liberation from the endless chain of deaths and rebirths. In the southern Asian religious tradition, it represents the supreme goal of human strivings. Reflecting the diversity of Hinduism, liberation can be attained in a variety of ways, from the proper performance of certain rituals to highly disciplined forms of yoga. In the Upanishads, it is proper knowledge, in the sense of insight into the nature of reality, that enables the aspiring seeker to achieve liberation from the wheel of rebirth.

 

What happens to the individual after reaching moksha? In Upanishadic Hinduism, the individual Atman is believed to merge into the cosmic Brahma. A traditional image is that of a drop of water that, when dropped into the ocean, loses its individuality and becomes one with the sea. Although widespread, this metaphor does not quite capture the significance of this merger. Rather than losing one's individuality, the Upanishadic understanding is that the Atman is never separate from Brahma; hence, individuality is illusory, and moksha is simply waking up from the dream of separateness.

 

Along with heaven realms, Hinduism also developed notions of hell worlds in which exceptionally sinful individuals were punished. Many of the torments of Hindu hell worlds, such as being tortured by demons, resemble the torments of more familiar Western hells. Unlike Western hells, however, Hindu hell worlds are not final dwelling places. They are more like purgatories in which sinful souls experience suffering for a limited term. After the term is over, even the most evil person is turned out of hell to once again participate in the cycle of reincarnation.

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It could be leading up to the acquittal he had hope if he beat this latest charge (which he did) he could potentially appeal and the beat the charge that has him in prison. Maybe he realized after a few days of this acquittal that this wasn't the case despite winning and lost hope. The Odin Lloyd case from what I understand is about as airtight as it gets and the defenses only real argument was "he was there but didn't do it". Maybe the dude now that the dust settled realized that was formally his life until he or someone else ended it.

 

And for the latest... per his lawyer... Hernandez didn't kill himself... Right, guards- or inmates? LOL how the hell would they all get out of their cells unnoticed @ 2 AM? were able to peacefully subdue an ex NFL player, hang him, and barricade the door from the inside. Craziest notion I've heard in a long time.

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And for the latest... per his lawyer... Hernandez didn't kill himself... Right, guards- or inmates? LOL how the hell would they all get out of their cells unnoticed @ 2 AM? were able to peacefully subdue an ex NFL player, hang him, and barricade the door from the inside. Craziest notion I've heard in a long time.

He is a lawyer. The more shit he can spread out means more money he can get for the family in a lawsuit. And by family of course I mean himself.
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He is a lawyer. The more shit he can spread out means more money he can get for the family in a lawsuit. And by family of course I mean himself.

Damn straight. Give the lawyer the money. :P Of course, any lawyer has to have facts and evidence to back up any claim. And at this point we have no clue if such facts and evidence exists.

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Damn straight. Give the lawyer the money. :P Of course, any lawyer has to have facts and evidence to back up any claim. And at this point we have no clue if such facts and evidence exists.

It'll be a civil trial. Preponderance of the evidence my friend, you know this. All he has to do is make sure some jury members think the staff was even somewhat neglectful. Of course, the prison system most likely will pay out more money than they should before it goes to trial. It's a fucked up world we live in, taxpayers take it in the ass either way.
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It'll be a civil trial. Preponderance of the evidence my friend, you know this. All he has to do is make sure some jury members think the staff was even somewhat neglectful. Of course, the prison system most likely will pay out more money than they should before it goes to trial. It's a fucked up world we live in, taxpayers take it in the ass either way.

You still have to have a "preponderance" of the evidence. If there is no evidence at all, you cannot have a preponderance.

And the question of neglect...there still has to be evidence of neglect.

If someone is going to kill themselves, then there is little you can do about it.

The statement above however said that his lawyer does not think he killed himself. So that is a whole other story.

Jurors also like a sympathetic plaintiff. Where are you going to find one in this case?

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And for the latest... per his lawyer... Hernandez didn't kill himself... Right, guards- or inmates? LOL how the hell would they all get out of their cells unnoticed @ 2 AM? were able to peacefully subdue an ex NFL player, hang him, and barricade the door from the inside. Craziest notion I've heard in a long time.

My theory is that he was told he had a choice , kill himself or his family would be killed. Thug life and thug death. The people behind the scenes on it likely related to the dead people he just beat the charge on.
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My theory is that he was told he had a choice , kill himself or his family would be killed. Thug life and thug death. The people behind the scenes on it likely related to the dead people he just beat the charge on.

that's a interesting take that would fly by most but detectives. never thought of it..If so, you would think in time,the story would be told..but than again,maybe not

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Murderer committing suicide, never happens! He wrote jojn 3:16 on his forehead as well and had red maker on his hands and feet. Semblence of jesus. He is dead and dont care one way or the other. Glad he is not wasting tax payer money anymore.

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I am somewhat surprised by his suicide for this reason: I believed that the guy was a true narcissist and that he had no real conscience. As a general rule, those kind of people do not kill themselves. People with a conscience kill themselves over remorse for what they have done. I do not think he had any remorse.

 

So, perhaps this really was the act of a true narcissist. He thought too much of himself to have to subject himself to a lifetime of confinement. So be it. I have no real sympathy for him.

Some have said they feel sorrow for his young daughter. While yes, it is always bad if someone loses a parent at that young age, this may be best for her. She can live her life without the specter of her father in prison hanging over her. This way, perhaps, she (or her mother) can find someone that can be a true parent to her without worrying about the old man locked away.

If I may inflect my football friend that I'd bet he knew he was a goner. If you read into the murders and how they progressed from a bump into a night club to a shooting then the other from out of the blue in the dark of night in an industrial park. It's gang related all of it and Hernadez is a punk that was at wits end. I've seen it Gip...not a hanging or murdering no but have seen the consequence.
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This way, perhaps, she (or her mother) can find someone that can be a true parent to her without worrying about the old man locked away.

 

As I recall, the mother isn't too swift either.

 

I'll never forget his TD celebration. Digging a grave.

...and the dippy announcers saying, "Oh look. He's shoveling snow!"

 

He was just a bad dude......who thought he was one of The Sopranos.

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