On Virginia Giuffre

And here’s that tweet with its date:

December 10, 2019.

So about a month and a half after Epstein’s suicide. (And yes, I still firmly believe Epstein did kill himself.) Yet, as we see in the above screenshot, like with Epstein, many are basically saying that suicide is impossible with Virginia Giuffre.

Anyone familiar with the psychological dynamics of suicidality – on which I have… first-hand experience – will say that someone who says they aren’t suicidal can become suicidal in a shockingly short amount of time – even as short as a few months depending on life events and environment simply because… the human brain is very, very strange. That’s the whole “driving someone to suicide” thing, on which people have been successfully prosecuted – though such prosecutions are difficult.

And if you’re going to change your tune and say “Okay, she committed suicide, but [insert person you wish to accuse] drove her to it!” you’d better have plenty of evidence at the ready that isn’t just speculation or circumstantial.

Even someone who is suicidal or going through suicidal ideation can lie and say they aren’t suicidal. Suicide doesn’t play out how it’s portrayed in media. Someone who is suicidal can look surprisingly calm and collected, even “normal”. It’s one of the reasons the survivors of someone who committed suicide often have a hard time accepting the death is suicide – with “They didn’t seem suicidal” or “I didn’t realize they were suicidal” reactions not being uncommon – even when all the evidence points to it.

Like with Epstein, many so desperately want this to be a homicide. That her death cannot possibly be suicide, as if God himself is somehow making it impossible for her to kill herself… but that requires the kind of mental gymnastics that are characteristic of… leftists. Showing they’re little different from them in how they think, only different in what thoughts they hold.