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Zach Brown arrested

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It's kind of pathetic how many people are using this news as a chance to Pat themselves on the back for knowing all along it was best for uconn to part ways. A kids life, which was already harder than most if not all of us have had to endure, just got even harder.

Hopefully he can figure things out and recover from this
 
Aaron Hernandez is more option A than option B. I grew up with him in Bristol. He always had a pretty good head on his shoulders. Dumb as rocks, yes, but a good kid. His dad kept him and DJ on the right path. When his died dad, he started hanging out with a bad crowd, and fell into a pretty bad PCP scene. His life became unhinged, he was plagued with paranoia, and he couldn't or wouldn't shake that life when he started making money.
You're bad to the core if you shoot your friend and leave him in an alley to die, then shoot and kill two guys for bumping into you, then call your friend up to hang out so you can murder him. He clearly never had a good head on his shoulders, he's a sick puppy.
 
You're bad to the core if you shoot your friend and leave him in an alley to die, then shoot and kill two guys for bumping into you, then call your friend up to hang out so you can murder him. He clearly never had a good head on his shoulders, he's a sick puppy.
People are more than the worst thing they've done.
 
You're bad to the core if you shoot your friend and leave him in an alley to die, then shoot and kill two guys for bumping into you, then call your friend up to hang out so you can murder him. He clearly never had a good head on his shoulders, he's a sick puppy.
Wait, Hernandez killed 3 people? I thought it was just the one in the industrial park.
 
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Yup, he's a pretty solid guy except for the time he murdered his friend, tried to murder his other friend and murdered two random guys for no reason.
That's not what I said. But, personally, I feel that the context of somebody's actions and the circumstances that led to somebody committing horrendous acts is important. I'm not saying he is any less guilty, but for me it's important to recognize what led him there. Having known him personally for a long time I can confidently say that he was an okay person who was deeply affected by the sudden death of a father, especially considering how his father was the one that kept him on the right path. I think all of those things matter and I'm sorry that you don't.

Anyway, here's a great piece Rolling Stone did on him a few years back. A great read: Aaron Hernandez: Patriots Tight End Violent Evolution | Rolling Stone
 
That's not what I said. But, personally, I feel that the context of somebody's actions and the circumstances that led to somebody committing horrendous acts is important. I'm not saying he is any less guilty, but for me it's important to recognize what led him there. Having known him personally for a long time I can confidently say that he was an okay person who was deeply affected by the sudden death of a father, especially considering how his father was the one that kept him on the right path. I think all of those things matter and I'm sorry that you don't.

Anyway, here's a great piece Rolling Stone did on him a few years back. A great read: Aaron Hernandez: Patriots Tight End Violent Evolution | Rolling Stone
I read the article when it came out. There are tons of people who basically never had a chance in life, Aaron Hernandez is not one of them. He had more opportunities than the overwhelming majority of the population. He was blessed with a talent that a very select few have and with that talent comes incredible opportunites to do good, instead he chose to do the worst possible things a human being can ever do. Gacy might have lost his dad as a teenager as well and maybe did some nice things for people at one time in his life, I don't think he's more than the worst things he did in his life, same goes for Hernandez.
 
That's not what I said. But, personally, I feel that the context of somebody's actions and the circumstances that led to somebody committing horrendous acts is important. I'm not saying he is any less guilty, but for me it's important to recognize what led him there. Having known him personally for a long time I can confidently say that he was an okay person who was deeply affected by the sudden death of a father, especially considering how his father was the one that kept him on the right path. I think all of those things matter and I'm sorry that you don't.

Anyway, here's a great piece Rolling Stone did on him a few years back. A great read: Aaron Hernandez: Patriots Tight End Violent Evolution | Rolling Stone

I didn't know Dennis, but I knew his older brother Vito in HS, who was a pretty good athlete at Bristol Central. From what I've read about Dennis and Aaron's mom, they were far from great role models. DJ turned out to be OK, but Aaron obviously had issues dealing with his dad's untimely death. That happens, and it happens to other people, but they don't turn into serial killers if they were brought up the right way and had positive role models as parents. Unless the things that have been written about his parents' involvement in drug trafficking and related stuff is all BS, I'm not so sure I believe they were consistently positive role models.
 
Its unfair to bring up Hernandez and Zach Brown in the same conversation. One is hopeless the other hopeful.

Zach's issues can be fixed and there are many success stories proving that. We're talking about a high school kid not a grown man. I know guys in high school who were bad news, fighting, stealing, etc.. Year later they became working, honest family men and giving back to the community. Its like they got it out of their system.

Not familiar with the particulars or what his issues 'really are', but Florida does not seem like a good space for him. I just feel that positive friends, upward moving friends and friends who want to do and become something are best found in college. A good coach can build character, team building skills and help kids overcoming adversity. Ollie is one of many.

A good judge will direct him accordingly with probation with life changing conditions. But he's got to get out of the hood!

Old folks say don't throw the baby out with the bath water. Just saying his environment is toxic. I hope he gets another chance somewhere.
 
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You're bad to the core if you shoot your friend and leave him in an alley to die, then shoot and kill two guys for bumping into you, then call your friend up to hang out so you can murder him. He clearly never had a good head on his shoulders, he's a sick puppy.

Not defending AH in any way, but drugs, specifically PCP (there's a reason they call it Angel Dust), can induce serious psychosis. Prolonged use actually changes the brain physically and can cause both brain damage and schizophrenia; plus it has side effects like hallucinations, mania, and extreme paranoia. That kind of drug can make a normal person become really f--d up and do some really messed up things, even when not on the drug itself. If AH never gets involved in that scene, maybe he never kills anybody.
 
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Yup, he's a pretty solid guy except for the time he murdered his friend, tried to murder his other friend and murdered two random guys for no reason.
People are more than the worst, 2nd worst, 3rd worst, and 4th worst things they've done.
 
This has always been an interesting debate to me if people are born bad or are a product of circumstances. I would argue circumstances play a much larger role than Dna so to speak. If that was not the case it would have been an enormous statistical anomaly that so many awful people were born in Germany in the 20s or in Rwanda decades later or any other place where mass tragedy has taken place. To me these gangs and groups of people that these young people hang out with are major influences on their lives and are microcosms of those countries where mass atrocities took place. I can't truly say had I grown up in similar circumstances that I would have turned out differently although I certainly hope I would have. All I'm saying are people like Caron and others are the exceptions not the rule and even in his case he's a forgiving cops discretion from likely being in jail right now. I hope this kid turns his life around but let's not demonize him for some mistakes he is making at 17.
 
The interesting point is: what separates a Caron or Michael Oherr from an AH or, so far, Zach Brown.Some take an opportunity and run with it. Others don't seem capable of not screwing up their lives.
Drugs can do it, but sometimes people are just too broken even without drugs. I do know that if you are hell bent on screwing up your life, a better neighborhood and all the money in the world won't stop it.
 
The interesting point is: what separates a Caron or Michael Oherr from an AH or, so far, Zach Brown.Some take an opportunity and run with it. Others don't seem capable of not screwing up their lives.
Drugs can do it, but sometimes people are just too broken even without drugs. I do know that if you are hell bent on screwing up your life, a better neighborhood and all the money in the world won't stop it.
It's the people you surround yourself with, too. AH could have cut ties from his former life and started a new life in Foxboro, but he wasn' mature enough to do that. With ZB, from what I gathered from the Vice doc, at least, couldn't see that his family didn't have his best interests in mind, and who can blame the kid. Of course though that's speculation based on how one 15 minute clip framed it.
 
People hang out with people they feel comfortable with. It takes seeing yourself capable of being different to hang with a different crowd. I don't think Zach is there yet. Caron almost went back to being incarcerated and he was ready for a new life. And I think he felt he deserved one.
 
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The interesting point is: what separates a Caron or Michael Oherr from an AH or, so far, Zach Brown.Some take an opportunity and run with it. Others don't seem capable of not screwing up their lives.
Drugs can do it, but sometimes people are just too broken even without drugs. I do know that if you are hell bent on screwing up your life, a better neighborhood and all the money in the world won't stop it.


Witness Johnny Manziel.
 
Just Dumb. I seen a interview of this kid with his adopted family and he seemed like a well respectful young man but than during the video he heads back home to see his mother which she lives in one of the baddest projects in Fl. So I kind of seen this coming after he was sent home from Prep in Connecticut. Hopes he finds his self because it's alot of people who helped him get where he's at.....not jail skills on the ball court
 
Why is Aaron Hernandez in this conversation?

He's a homicidal maniac.

Zach Brown is not a homicidal maniac. He's an untethered mess who's on the verge of tossing a winning lottery ticket, but he's not out there shooting people for aggravating him.
 
Why is Aaron Hernandez in this conversation?

He's a homicidal maniac.

Zach Brown is not a homicidal maniac. He's an untethered mess who's on the verge of tossing a winning lottery ticket, but he's not out there shooting people for aggravating him.
Agree, even not knowing the supposed weapon this kid is not in the same demented universe as AH.
 
I didn't know Dennis, but I knew his older brother Vito in HS, who was a pretty good athlete at Bristol Central. From what I've read about Dennis and Aaron's mom, they were far from great role models. DJ turned out to be OK, but Aaron obviously had issues dealing with his dad's untimely death. That happens, and it happens to other people, but they don't turn into serial killers if they were brought up the right way and had positive role models as parents. Unless the things that have been written about his parents' involvement in drug trafficking and related stuff is all BS, I'm not so sure I believe they were consistently positive role models.

Weren't Dennis and Vito both punks in HS and arrested for robbery? I know Dennis cleaned up and was a role model for the kids, but Aaron wasn't ever really on a great path, and it got worst when dad passed.
 
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Why is Aaron Hernandez in this conversation?

He's a homicidal maniac.o/QUOTE]

Because everything bad in sports goes back to the Patriots?
 
Why is Aaron Hernandez in this conversation?

He's a homicidal maniac.

Zach Brown is not a homicidal maniac. He's an untethered mess who's on the verge of tossing a winning lottery ticket, but he's not out there shooting people for aggravating him.
I'm just surprised Godwin's law hasn't been invoked yet.
 
Weren't Dennis and Vito both punks in HS and arrested for robbery? I know Dennis cleaned up and was a role model for the kids, but Aaron wasn't ever really on a great path, and it got worst when dad passed.

I don't remember anything about that, but it's certainly possible. In those days it was pretty easy to sweep stuff under the rug in Bristol. It all depended on who you knew in the police dept., and everybody knew everybody. I've always called it the smallest city of 60,000 in the country.

I knew Vito from playing basketball against Central, plus we occasionally might see him at events like school dances, because I had quite a few friends there. I always liked him but I didn't know him well.

Dennis later attended UConn and played briefly for a couple of seasons on the football team. I don't know for sure, but I would think if he had a serious enough criminal record at the time, he wouldn't have been admitted. That was back during the era when nobody got admitted to UConn, athlete or not, unless they had the academic resume and relatively clean background. We lost a lot of stellar, homegrown talent back then because the admissions office would make no exceptions for athletes.
 
I read the article when it came out. There are tons of people who basically never had a chance in life, Aaron Hernandez is not one of them. He had more opportunities than the overwhelming majority of the population. He was blessed with a talent that a very select few have and with that talent comes incredible opportunites to do good, instead he chose to do the worst possible things a human being can ever do. Gacy might have lost his dad as a teenager as well and maybe did some nice things for people at one time in his life, I don't think he's more than the worst things he did in his life, same goes for Hernandez.

John Wayne Gacy asked for a lb of fresh strawberries as the dessert for his last meal before execution. That alone shows he was just a sweet old guy with a heart of gold. Haven't we all dressed up like clowns and killed a few people in our time?
 
I don't remember anything about that, but it's certainly possible. In those days it was pretty easy to sweep stuff under the rug in Bristol. It all depended on who you knew in the police dept., and everybody knew everybody. I've always called it the smallest city of 60,000 in the country.

I knew Vito from playing basketball against Central, plus we occasionally might see him at events like school dances, because I had quite a few friends there. I always liked him but I didn't know him well.

Dennis later attended UConn and played briefly for a couple of seasons on the football team. I don't know for sure, but I would think if he had a serious enough criminal record at the time, he wouldn't have been admitted. That was back during the era when nobody got admitted to UConn, athlete or not, unless they had the academic resume and relatively clean background. We lost a lot of stellar, homegrown talent back then because the admissions office would make no exceptions for athletes.

Yeah I know they did something similar back int he day because my brother played hoops against them in the old CCIL and dad worked at NDH on the hill so Bristol news was always heard in our household.

did you play in the CCIL nick? years?
 
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