An Observation:At True Gossip Forums much of the chat is around
"What if..." rather than
"What is"A "what if.." is a "rabbit hole"... there is no end to it. If you do try and debate and propose some counter argument then there is no limit to more speculation.. more "What if..." One usually ends up chasing and obscure detail far removed from any main stream of discussion. Like chasing a Rabbit down into it's burrow. You find yourself, and the discussion lost in a maze of tunnels. "What if... branching into more "what if..."
If you throw in a lot of anecdotal chat around what people IMAGINE they would do in the same circumstances, and little anecdotes from their own lives, about what happened to them, or their cousin's best friend's husband etc It really becomes just gossip as opposed to discussion of a case and trial.
What is needed is to look at
what IS... perhaps what realistically may be, provided it is possible to test and determine when evidence is presented.
One example is the chat around the text messages.What is = 4 "arguments" over thousands of messages. Actually evidence that they WERE a loving relationship since there were just so few disagreements (It had only been a relationship for a short time. I would expect FAR MORE disagreements, even in normal loving relationship, if it had gone on longer.. but I digress)
"What if..."Starts from that point... and spreads like a virus. The text arguments alone are seen as an indicator of the tone of messaging between them. They show OP to be verbally abusive, and so likely physically abusive (in the future if not now). Further more, this is supposed to be an indicator that he is a violent angry physical abuser, ready to snap and shoot Reeva in a rage.
See where we are? Donkey deep in "rabbit poo" somewhere deep in a maze of rabbit burrow tunnels
So.... as they say at True Gossip Forums...Lets all chat about
"What if..." because it is never-ending and can always confirm our Presumption that the defendant is guilty!

Where is the fun in discussing
"What is"... that often falls short of proving guilt.
