re: #232 Anymouse š¹š
I still see it as negligence, not an accident.
Iām a smoker. If Iām tired, I do not smoke.
Put this a different way: Instead of burning down his own house, he was a visitor at someone elseās house. Instead of killing his own children through negligence, he killed someone elseās.
Does he still get off for an āaccident?ā If the answer is āyes,ā Iām not sure we can come to an agreement here, any more than negligent handling of a firearm.
If he doesnāt get off for killing someone elseās children, then the XIV Amendment applies (equal treatment under the law - someone elseās children have more rights to life than his own children).
+1