Nope.
He made exactly -one- “bad decision”.
*All* of the rest of it is the inevitable “unintended consequences” of that one “bad decision”.
Quite the terrifying cautionary tale, IMO.
I’m really looking forward to your next post to see how much more of Goodwin’s Law you can break by twisting 4 short sentences.
He made exactly -one- bad decision.
*All* of the rest of it is the inevitable unintended consequences of that one bad decision.
Quite the terrifying cautionary tale, IMO.
Im really looking forward to your next post to see how much more of Goodwins Law you can break by twisting 4 short sentences.
What you just posted is the argument of a coward.
American military personnel became American military personnel because they looked at America, looked at those who would destroy America, and, personally, in themselves, said, "no."
They said, in effect, "I would rather die than let you bastards destroy America."
But somehow, that morality choice, that human principle, doesn't apply to this cowardly antihero meth freak.
Somehow, just because he made that first decision, absolutely no one believes that it would be better to die trying to get out, than to stay in. No one believes that he should try to call on God for protection for himself and his family. No one believes that maybe his entire family should risk dying by fighting these evil bastards that he turns against after making that first mistake. No, somehow, one mistake means that he is free of any further morality choices.
Bull.
Meth IS the freaking Nazi death camps. That is NO exaggeration.
And the "hero" of Breaking Bad is a damn coward - and Left-wing Hollywood suckered every one of you into admiring him.
COWARD.
Not "anti-hero."
Not "classic tragedy."
Cruel, sadistic, evil COWARD.
JUST like the Nazis.