Hojo's actions are even more random than usual, as far as I can tell he
1) Goes into a blind rage, upon hearing his really comfortable office chair files are being burned. 2) He immediately stops the rage, realizing he has to go save the papers. 3) He leaves the room 4) He stays at the door way and listens to them badmouth him 5) He gets all rampage-y about them insulting him 6) He storms back in the room and... sits down at his desk 7) Julia vomits all over his paperwork 8) He does absolutely nothing to stop her.
Unless I'm missing something, he never actually went down to floor 66?
Also, when did she set it on fire? She was in the room the entire time.
She tore free the steely sliding metal door, and launched it at Hojo, hard, but mostly out of self- defense.
Ignoring how painful the sentence is, this is not self-defense. Hojo hasn't actually moved yet, he doesn't start his charge until after she throws the door. A pre-emptive strike can be considered self-defense (technically it's justified hommicide), this does not fall into this situation.
Even if she had waited for his charge, this would be hardly considered self-defense, since she just baited him into the attack.
I think he does go down there, because when he comes back his lab coat is burned and dirty. He comes back in a matter of seconds, though... maybe he teleported below, saw that everything was on fire and beyond rescue and came back?
1) Goes into a blind rage, upon hearing his really comfortable office chair files are being burned.
2) He immediately stops the rage, realizing he has to go save the papers.
3) He leaves the room
4) He stays at the door way and listens to them badmouth him
5) He gets all rampage-y about them insulting him
6) He storms back in the room and... sits down at his desk
7) Julia vomits all over his paperwork
8) He does absolutely nothing to stop her.
Unless I'm missing something, he never actually went down to floor 66?
Also, when did she set it on fire? She was in the room the entire time.
She tore free the steely sliding metal door, and launched it at Hojo, hard, but mostly out of self- defense.
Ignoring how painful the sentence is, this is not self-defense. Hojo hasn't actually moved yet, he doesn't start his charge until after she throws the door. A pre-emptive strike can be considered self-defense (technically it's justified hommicide), this does not fall into this situation.
Even if she had waited for his charge, this would be hardly considered self-defense, since she just baited him into the attack.
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