Judgement joined in and replied with this 1 month ago, 10 minutes later[^][v]#1,431,926
Fourteen years ago, I have almost killed a homeless man. His life was for me to decide, and I would not have faced any consequences. In the end, I chose mercy. I think about this decision daily, whether it was the correct one to take.
> Fourteen years ago, I have almost killed a homeless man. His life was for me to decide, and I would not have faced any consequences. In the end, I chose mercy. I think about this decision daily, whether it was the correct one to take.
> Fourteen years ago, I have almost killed a homeless man. His life was for me to decide, and I would not have faced any consequences. In the end, I chose mercy. I think about this decision daily, whether it was the correct one to take.
> Fourteen years ago, I have almost killed a homeless man. His life was for me to decide, and I would not have faced any consequences. In the end, I chose mercy. I think about this decision daily, whether it was the correct one to take.
Since you let him live a bunch of children contracted Hep C from needles he left on a playground. He pushed a man into traffic who was going home to his wife and three daughters. He stabbed a security guard who was working a night shift to pay for college.
Anonymous F joined in and replied with this 1 month ago, 23 minutes later, 3 hours after the original post[^][v]#1,431,963
One of those children would grow up to be a mass murderer if they didn't have hepatitis. The man who died in traffic was abusing his daughters. They hugged each other and cried when they found out he was dead. The security guard was a negroid.
> One of those children would grow up to be a mass murderer if they didn't have hepatitis. The man who died in traffic was abusing his daughters. They hugged each other and cried when they found out he was dead. The security guard was a negroid. > > That man is a hero.