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I remain intensely curious as to how you arrived at your original position, especially since you appear to have asserted it with some measure of confidence by claiming there were "many" such examples. Is it now reasonable to conclude your assertion was not based in fact? What is your best guess for why you nevertheless adopted this belief? I think these are relatively straightforward questions so I don't understand your apparent reluctance in answering.
I have already told you that I accept that you are a better lawyer than I am; if I try to play along you can likely twist me in knots. Your tactics are effective, if not original; making a new top post when a few too many inconvenient objections appeared on your older one was a nice touch. If I may engage in a similar sort of thing you are trying here, it appears that your reasons for posting these sorts of things are to put forth the notion that the January 6 rioters were not treated in an unusually harsh way, particularly compared to BLM rioters, that they deserved what they got, and to spread some doubt upon some of the obvious indicia that this is not the case.
I don't have any superpowers. There's nothing Herculean about saying "Yes my original position was based on false premises, I adopted those false premises because of X, Y, & Z". I don't get why you're so resistant, as you're not even challenging the premise of my question. Neither you nor anyone else has tried to defend the original "many" claim with fact, so why not just admit it was wrong? It's not a personal failing. I too sometimes hold erroneous beliefs, and it's ok when people call me out on it.
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