Thursday, January 26, 2023

What, someone isn't accusing Marilyn Manson of the Ontario "car bomb fiasco"?

 

The abuse cases against shock rocker Marilyn  Manson seem to be slowly unraveling. We are learning that Illma Gore had a hand in orchestrating the accusations, and she is an individual who is even “weirder” than Manson, if that is possible. For years Gore had a “business” in which she charged people $10 to have something of their choosing tattooed on herself. It’s been pointed out that this has largely been a scam, since Gore seems to be running out of space to tattoo herself:

 


So this idiot is Evan Rachel Wood’s partner in crime, and we are not supposed to question the accusations against Manson? Yeah, he was a friend of Johnny Depp and looks “weird.” It worked for Amber Heard, right?  Well, let’s see, Ashley Morgan Smithline’s lawsuit against Manson was dismissed by a judge, and Esmé Bianco’s civil case against Manson was “settled,” probably because her accusations against him could be proven to be motivated by a “business deal” gone wrong. 

As for Wood, she has given interviews in which her mental health state is of question, people are  pointing out her use of a faked document as "evidence," and questioning why she continued to live with Manson and participated in various projects with him if he engaged in the kind of “horrific” BDSM-type abuse she claims, when it is more likely she was a curious consenter if such claims have any "truth" to them.

The suspicion that Manson’s accusers were “consenters”--if not outright lying--until they were told by people who were themselves of questionable habits like Gore, that what Manson allegedly had them engage in was “abuse,” brings up the question of personal responsibility. If Gore consented to "abuse" her own body to "please" others for just a few dollars, then her credibility in determining what a "victim" is seems of a rather low order. 

Last week we learned that another case related to Manson demonstrates just how low people can go in blaming others for their own behavior. Remember this?

 


Probably not, because it occurred in Canada.  Business Insider tells us that Daniella Leis was involved in the following after being kicked out of a Manson concert for excessive intoxication and driving on the wrong side of the street:

Referred to as the "car bomb" fiasco by the CBC, the incident occurred on Aug. 14, 2019, at 450 Woodman Ave in London, Ontario, Canada — a seven-minute drive from the show at the Budweiser Gardens arena. Leis crashed her Ford Fusion, which had been registered under her father's name, into a single home. But moments later, a broken gas line caused by the crash set off an explosion that ripped apart four homes and injured seven people nearby, per the CBC. 

The crash caused a mind-blowing $15 million in damage. Leis eventually pleaded guilty the following October to “four counts of impaired driving causing bodily harm” and sentence to three years in prison. Since then she has had time to “think”—or at least her parents and their attorney have since they are being sued for the damages their daughter obviously cannot pay. It is now claimed that Ovations Ontario Food Services is at least partially at fault for selling her the alcohol at the venue in the first place, and thus even more "liable." Well, at least she isn’t blaming Manson—yet.

So here we go again, people who don’t want to take responsibility for their own actions. Nobody “forced” this individual to consume an excessive amount of alcohol; that was her own decision. There were probably many other people who did as well, but they didn’t drive into traffic at excessive speed, swerve and plow into a house and cause a gas explosion that destroyed four homes and the lives of the families who lived there, plus repairs to the gas line that effected many other families. 

Of course we can go on and on about cases where accusers are incapable of self-reflection and taking a hard look at that self-obsessed deceiver staring at them in the mirror.

No comments:

Post a Comment