No.3219
Also, I hope it's okay that there's no anime in the OP picture… Maybe I should have edited in Yunocchi.
No.3223
Today I read a story about a death row inmate saving a guard’s life by shielding her from rioting prisoners who were tearing her clothes off to do bad things to her. The state fried him in the chair anyway. No kind deed goes unpunished in America. Capitalism baby! But it shows that even society’s worst can be kind.
No.3225
Today the dentist offered to give me treatment for free!
>>3223Thats kinda dark
No.3229
>>3223Doing good is separate from bad acts. Billionaires behave sociopathically to make their fortunes and then wash it clean by giving a portion to charity. It's the same thing the Masons do to excuse their heinous shit.
No.3230
>>3218i was passing an old friend (?) while i was out and he let me pet his dog! nice dog…
>>3223ouch… why was the guy in jail?
>>3229what about karma?
No.3236
>>3230He shot a sheriff while trying to escape from jail. During the Mecklenburg Death Row break, he saved a bunch of guards and nurses from other inmates and chose to stay with them in the prison rather than escape.
No.3237
>>3223>man suffers punishment for criminal convictionliterally any country
No.3239
Not Australatina where we're all free buddy.
No.3325
I got a tip yesterday! It just solidified my stance on tipping culture since I used to be the one in board or fry station getting overwhelmed while in window all I have to do is make drinks and cash out. Tipping shouldn’t be in fast food at all. The ten bucks came in clutch for household stuff.
>>3223They get rid of the wrong ones. I wonder what the female guard thought about his execution.
No.3330
>>3325He saved 3 prison staff and a few others. They all wrote to the governor asking to commute his sentence to life without parole. They were denied. Sadly, the same staff members would have been involved in his execution in Virginia’s electric chair. He saved more people than he killed. So I guess even people society writes off still have the ability to do good and help others at their own expense. Maybe there is still hope for humanity?
No.3331
>>3330>maybe there's still hope for humanity…?<he suggested from the cushioned chair of his air-conditioned room
>okay that's enough courage I need a macchiato boost No.3332
>>3331I had enough self control not to point out, you could have it too, my dear unkind troll.
No.3334
>>3333Or you can play some games, eh? What do you choose?
No.3335
>>3334I don't think you have to live an ascetic life to do some good. The most kind man I ever knew was my mentor in middle school. He taught me a lot, but we also played games together and he'd take me out to golf with him. Just spending time with someone and having fun can be a kindness. I can only hope I'm half as good of an influence on the young people and friends in my life as he was for me.
No.3339
>>3335>we also played games together and he'd take me out to golf with himPretty sure school staff aren't even allowed to do this kind of stuff with students anymore.
No.3344
>>3339Governments afraid smart teachers gonna snatch up all the cutest lolis before they can do it!?
No.3433
>even society’s worst can be kind
This final remark betrays the reductive mentality behind your post. It's the same way people will think that just because someone committed a heinous crime, his heart must be made of pure evil; no humanity left. Then they get surprised when they see the same person doing something good.
Humans are multi-faceted beings. Anonymous can tell an obvious underage poster that he should hang himself and attach a step-by-step instruction on how to tie the hangman's noose, then go on another thread and comfort someone who just went through something bad. Such is human nature.