Speaking with only respect and understanding, we should consider some of the emotional and health challenges that KW has experienced. Because of that I believe we should be careful when considering KW quotes and comments as to their validity. We may not be fully aware of the context they were given in.
Finally, though not exactly related, people with mental health challenges are more prone to self harm, rather than harming others, even though there are too many examples of each.
Good stuff.
In the spirit of it, I’ll post some floating chips that won’t advance our group along the whodunnit trail, but they’re things I feel compelled to post:
> I don’t believe any sort of money, loaned or gifted, could ever, will ever act as a remedy for KW’s upset.
I believe the pain rises from an imagined future with his Dad alive, guiding the family with strong principles and creating not just success for himself but a real Winter family foundation; where money would take a rightful backseat to the best qualities only a complete family can provide.
I don’t believe this imagined future to be fantasy; I believe it was there, and then...it wasn’t. That’s devastating.
> In light the above, understanding KW’s pain to at least some degree, knowing he reads posts here, there is some struggle, sometimes, to defend Barry Sherman, who KW apparently hates, who drew a long straw in life and lived at least some of the imagined future I think KW envisions for Lou Winter.
After much reading, I do not know any of the principal figures nearly enough to judge them.
I don’t want to judge them, and won’t. I’m trying to understand, what happened on Dec. 25, 2017, and the bigger picture.
I may never get it right, but I will try.
I’m much less caught up in the enormous wealth of Barry Sherman than I am in this ability, if not outright enthusiasm, to repeatedly take on Big Pharma.
I’m less interested in who did the deed and why than I am saddened The Shermans met a fate my knowledge of the facts suggest was completely unjust. I doubt many posters would be here if they thought the couple deserved their fate.
There is a lot of sadness in the broader story that actually serves to underline how money is certainly not everything.
There are streams of sadness that won’t just evaporate with an arrest and conviction.
There are reminders that words and actions matter in our everyday lives.
That might be the most important takeaway.
( apologies if the above is outside the lines. If it is, I would understand if it must be removed. )