Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Hi Yvonne:

What is even more interesting to me than Simpson, which I know you know
how I feel about him, is why these people stayed with him after the way
he treated them.

I'm not only referring to his wives, I also mean men and women who still
held him in the highest regard throughout his life before the murders,
and some that still do.  They will not even face the truth that he
killed these two people and would fight to the death even now for him.
Paula kept coming back and even lied to protect him at the end. 

And his lawyers didn't even get paid, yet they still hang around. 
Bailey still goes to bat for him, and they fought for him in the civil
trial.

Look how he treated his own family after the criminal trial and during
the civil trial.  They were no longer needed so send them back to where
they belong.  Without jobs or other such things to survive, now that
they had given this all up to help him.  

It sure is an interesting thing.  I bet a psychologist would have a
field day with this bunch.

Sue
> "Urban myths,"  by definition, are decades old canards keyed into a
> culture's fears.  As such, a family's catastrophe (the senior Mr Simpson's
> homosexuality and ultimate death from AIDS) doesn't even enter into the
> realm of "urban myths."
> More to the point, the fact is that Simpson's father was a haphazard entity
> in his son's early life and  interesting shadow figure in creating what
> matured into his son.   Added to that is  "Ms Eunice's" role at head of the
> family and how she attempted to raise her second son.
> Any out-of-kilter family modalities can and are used to analyze why a kid
> grows up to beat up women.   Why Orenthal grew up to lord it over his
> sisters and his former (living) wife.
> Shut off a person's prologue for politically correct sentiments
> ("homophobia," current cultural mores) and you miss all the fun of solving
> the puzzle.  Unless, of course, some of you out there think that his
> baterring, abuse, beating and kicking  of wives is not all that important.

-- 
Two rules in life:

1.  Don't tell people everything you know.
2.


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