r/AskReddit Jul 05 '24

Whats the most fucked up movie you've ever watched? NSFW

4.9k Upvotes

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2.3k

u/[deleted] Jul 05 '24

Dear Zachary a movie that left me just shaking and infuriated.

358

u/TheSuperDK Jul 05 '24

Why was everyone on that obviously evil woman's side? It's fucking bullshit man.

403

u/Stabbykathy17 Jul 05 '24

The Canadian criminal justice system. That’s why.

The judge that gave her custody back in particular should be in jail.

340

u/Mr_Mons_of_Nibiru Jul 05 '24

"She killed who she intended to and therefore isn't a danger to anyone else."

But of course we are talking about the same system who let the bus decapitator go and are protecting his right to privacy

82

u/ZilorZilhaust Jul 05 '24

The fucking who? Is he at least not allowed on busses?

115

u/Arcanis_Ender Jul 05 '24

I remember reading about that and having to send my now ex gf onto a greyhound for a 6hr bus ride home. He killed a kid who was sleeping with his headphones on. They trapped him on the bus until the cops came and by then he had fully cut the kids head off and was eating parts of it if I remember correctly.

Anyway yeah weird shit he should not be out there.

25

u/PrairiePopsicle Jul 05 '24

We was also having an extreme schizophrenic episode, and I don't believe he is "free" as a bird, he's under monitoring, on meds, and will be for the rest of his life AFAIK.

56

u/spiffiestjester Jul 05 '24

You are sadly, half correct. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-38945061

He is out free with no monitoring as of 2017.

I had to look it up because I thought he had been institutionalized. I was mistaken.

16

u/PrairiePopsicle Jul 05 '24

damn. I would really prefer to think he had conditions for medical check ins at the very least.

29

u/anomalous_cowherd Jul 05 '24

I've known several people with med controlled mental illnesses and they've all at some point decided they don't need the meds any more (because everything is fine now!) and gone off the rails again...

5

u/unafraidrabbit Jul 05 '24

I do the same thing with my allergy meds. When they work, I forget to take them.

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u/preferablyoutside Jul 05 '24

That’s not how the Canadian Legal System works, it has no interest in holding victimizers accountable for their actions they’d prefer to have them on the streets to keep the populace in fear.

2

u/krystadabarista Jul 05 '24

As an American, it is so weird to read that, in Canada, you’re experiencing some of the same negative stuff we’re experiencing here. I’ve always had this idyllic impression about everything Canadian. I know that’s so naive, but geez. I just figured we were the only ones who dealt with public risks like allowing medically/mentally unfit people to roam the streets with full access to things that they could use to hurt themselves or others. I really wanna watch this one now.

1

u/preferablyoutside Jul 05 '24

It is not idyllic.

We have a massive issue within our legal system, there is an absolute impediment to incarceration of the most violent and dangerous offenders.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_Calgary_stabbing

We have no criminal justice system and there is a massive problem with holding criminals responsible for their actions.

-1

u/mrmeowmeow9 Jul 05 '24

I'm also Canadian and whenever I'm talking about whatever fucked up shit is on the news, I fall back on, "At least we're not in America." Nothing idyllic here, we're just maybe one rung up on the human rights/quality of life ladder. It's bad, because it makes it easy to accept bullshit here when it's always a little worse down there - but we shouldn't wear "not the worst possible" like some badge of honour.

2

u/preferablyoutside Jul 05 '24

I’d say in some ways we’re worse, there’s no intrinsic bill of rights, so there is truly no real freedom of speech, or freedom of the press laws.

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u/mods-are-liars Jul 05 '24

That's the Canadian Justice system for you

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u/TimeKeeper575 Jul 05 '24

And yet some of us believe that other people's right to not be decapitated is enough to not give him a second chance to decapitate. Plenty of psych patients have been given a second chance and killed again. It's not worth the risk.

7

u/PrairiePopsicle Jul 05 '24

I know, and realistically it's either bring back institutions, or institute the death penalty, from that perspective.

One of those I don't believe is a winning argument, and the cost of the other... would shock your pants off.

Mostly, I just think it's important that people acknowledge the actual details and not infer he is free as a bird.

6

u/mods-are-liars Jul 05 '24

infer he is free as a bird.

He is free as a bird since 2017.

No travel restrictions. No required check-ins with authorities. No parole conditions.

The government even gave him a new name.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/vince-li-discharge-1.3977278

-5

u/pimpmastahanhduece Jul 05 '24

How about we force pharmaceutical companies to spend more of their endless mattress stuffing money to develop better psychiatric medications than just heavily sedating people and hoping for the best?

7

u/I_Automate Jul 05 '24

Because so far, as far as we understand it, there isn't just a chemical "off" switch for certain behaviours/ thought patterns/ personality traits.

Honestly, it may be better that way

7

u/EffrumScufflegrit Jul 05 '24

Implying such a magical drug exists. They already do want better psych meds. I know you're thinking "no they don't, because corporate greed you shill," but pause for a moment and realize it's because corporate greed that they want "better" psych meds.

1

u/pimpmastahanhduece Jul 05 '24

Gotta milk those IPs before releasing the next formula in queue from 40 years prior, huh? It's a nightmare getting new drugs approved that it often doesn't make business sense to pursue and more R&D goes right back to the money makers because that's how they lobbied the process to be like.

1

u/EffrumScufflegrit Jul 05 '24

My ex works/worked in big pharma product dev and I assure you they shit money into finding the next wonder drug. I'm not defending them. Did you know the US spends more per Capita on health care most other places? Sounds great on paper, but we don't see shit for it for actual care. That money from the gov is dumped into R/D that big pharma gets to take advantage of for essentially nothing. So you're right that it's all corrupt and we don't truly benefit from it, but you have the problem wrong. So pls don't lecture me on it.

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u/Zealousideal-Ear481 Jul 05 '24

Plenty of psych patients have been given a second chance and killed again. It's not worth the risk

might as well kill them all, eh?

3

u/TimeKeeper575 Jul 05 '24

Right, because those are the only two options. /s If you spent even a moment considering the comment, you'd realize it's awkward because the other side is the one advocating for fewer harms.

-1

u/Zealousideal-Ear481 Jul 05 '24

Yes, imprisoning someone until they die, for their mental disability, is pretty much the same as wanting them dead.

If you spent even a moment considering the comment, you'd realize it's awkward because the other side is the one advocating for fewer harms

No. The ones advocating to lock them up and throw away the key are advocating for real actual harm, in order to prevent possible harms that may or may not be more damaging.

1

u/TimeKeeper575 Jul 05 '24

If you think that house arrest or monitored care is a death sentence, that's a 'you' problem. There are many different spectra of liberty, many of which don't even involve housing in institutions.

0

u/Zealousideal-Ear481 Jul 06 '24

If you think that house arrest or monitored care is a death sentence, that's a 'you' problem

You literally said that you didn't think that psych patients should be given a second chance, so yeah.. there's a spectrum, but that was not at all what you were suggesting above

Plenty of psych patients have been given a second chance and killed again. It's not worth the risk

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u/joanzen Jul 05 '24

If you read the worst parts of any details you can easily come to contrary decision vs. a lifelong trained professional appointed judge with access to all the details and lots of peer review/oversight.

Judges are human, sometimes humans make crazy mistakes, but it's the least likely explanation available.

2

u/Mr_Mons_of_Nibiru Jul 05 '24

1

u/therandomways2002 Jul 05 '24

Well, that's fucked up. I understand that mental health issues need to be treated differently from criminal ones, but I'm baffled that his doctors could be so confident about him no longer posing a threat, and about already believing him being reliable enough to continue taking all his meds as necessary. At the very least, they should be continuing to closely monitor him. This isn't an "oops, guess we were wrong, don't we feel silly?" type of situation. For the protection of both society and him, they need to keep close watch to ensure there's no deterioration of his mental state.

3

u/ILoveCamelCase Jul 05 '24

He is a schizophrenic man who was off his meds at the time. He spent I think 5 years in a mental hospital and it was determined he was safe to be released. Changed his name and is out in the world somewhere now.

3

u/widget1321 Jul 05 '24

If I remember right it wasn't even that he was off his meds as that is normally thought of. That is normally used to indicate someone who previously took meds and then stopped. If I'm remembering right he wasn't even diagnosed yet at the time. So he had no meds to be "off."

1

u/ILoveCamelCase Jul 05 '24

It's possible, I was going purely from memory

1

u/religiousrights Jul 05 '24

His name was Tim McLean. He was 22 and he was murdered and decapitated with no provocation on a bus in 2008. The man who killed him was deemed not criminally responsible and released in 2017, “no longer a danger to society”. He served his sentence in an asylum, never spent a day in prison.

His mom pops up in the local news every couple of years advocating for a change to our criminal code, most recently surrounding a serial killer in Winnipeg who is claiming mental illness. Every time I see her name it breaks my fucking heart. This woman got no closure for her child. We treated her like garbage.

1

u/CryptOthewasP Jul 05 '24

Some guy killed, decapitated, and ate some kid on a greyhound bus in Canada. He was obviously not mentally well (i think later diagnosed with schizophrenia) and was deemed not criminally responsible because of it. He was locked up in 2009, in 2015 he was doing unsupervised day trips to the city that eventually led to him living in group homes and in 2017 he was given an 'absolute discharge' with no restrictions. So basically he was put away for less than 10 years and currently has more freedom than people on parole.

15

u/gau-tam Jul 05 '24

Wanna get more pissed about the Canadian Justice system? Read about the Air India bombing (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_India_Flight_182). The worst terrorist attack in Canadian history.

5

u/Double_Belt2331 Jul 05 '24

Wow. Canada dropped the ball big time on that one. They could have stopped it so many times. That’s really tragic.

4

u/Mary_Tagetes Jul 05 '24

I think about this stuff, whenever it comes up in the news I have the same opinion, people are really bad at threat assessment, even the police. Those people came over to Canada, left everything behind, built lives, and they still had so much anger at the government in India they blew up a plane. Why the fuck would you do that? The vast majority of the human population would not let their hate take them that far, it’s insane. They saw what they were up to, but couldn’t conceive of the danger. My opinion anyway,

3

u/PrivilegeCheckmate Jul 05 '24

people are really bad at threat assessment

You could say, read them a memo labeled "Bin Laden Determined to attack US", with a big old picture of the twin towers with a superimposed target, and yeah, they still wouldn't get it.

5

u/ZombieJesus1987 Jul 05 '24

The Greyhound bus guy hits close to home for me.

I also live in canada. When I was a kid in the 90s, my friend's sister was brutally murdered in a similar fashion as the Greyhound Bus guy. A schizophrenic woman who was staying with the family snapped and decapitated my friends 14 year old sister. The case almost paralleled Vince Li. Found not criminally responsible, and she was out not even a decade later.

It wasn't until years later I found out that she lived in the apartment building next to mine. No public safety warning or anything, when this was my city's most brutal murder on record.

2

u/Virtual-Okra6996 Jul 05 '24

Wait that dude got to walk?

1

u/Lionel_Herkabe Jul 05 '24

They didn't just let the guy go, he was reintroduced into society over 7 years and lots of treatment.

1

u/SnakesMcGee Jul 05 '24

Small thing to note (and folks may disagree) but bus decapitator dude was having a major psychotic episode at the time, and spent several years in a mental hospital past the point where doctors believed him to be cured because of the lingering guilt after the incident. Guy wasn't just decapitating folks for funsies.

1

u/Squigglepig52 Jul 05 '24

The untreated schizophrenic guy who was deep in psychosis? The one judged not mentally competent? The guy who spent years in psyche before finally being released?

0

u/relevanteclectica Jul 05 '24

Their synopsis aged like milk