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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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Jorj X Mckie
To: tejek who wrote (725111)7/7/2013 8:54:02 PM
From: Bilow2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) of 1578495
 
Hi tejek; Re: "appeared to be a broken nose".

The job of the prosecution is to show that a crime was committed beyond a reasonable doubt. The job of the defense is to provide doubt. But even if they were arguing on civil standards where "predominance of the evidence" is used, the only evidence on the question "did Zimmerman have a broken nose" is that a professional said that it "appeared" that he did. The prosecution has rested. There was no evidence by the prosecution to the effect that it "appeared" that Zimmerman's nose was not broken.

And by the way, it wasn't Zimmerman's lawyer or Zimmerman who said he had a broken nose. It was a prosecution witness who testified that Zimmerman's nose "appeared" to be broken.

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People's noses have been broken for many thousands of years. This is an injury that dates long before the invention of the x-ray machine. X-rays are not needed in order to have a finding of a broken nose in a court of law.

Let's explore this little issue further. Here's a photo of Rodin's famous statue, "Man with the Broken Nose":


musee-rodin.fr

This statue was made in 1863. But x-rays weren't discovered until 1895.

So how the hell did Rodin know what a broken nose looked like? With your logic, appearances alone weren't enough, you'd have Rodin rename his statue: "Man with what Appears to be a Broken Nose", LOL.

-- Carl

P.S. Why do I talk to idiots like you? I find it amazingly entertaining. The reason you're clueless is that you get your information from a very restrictive set of sources. These sources do not give you the full picture. Instead, they tell you what you already believe. It's very comfortable but it makes you look like an idiot when you walk around in public.
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