Agreed. I hope someone out there cries for him - no one, not even as ethically disgusting as he was should be left completely unmourned - but it sure as hell isn't going to be me.
I must admit my first gut response upon reading of his death was profound relief.
I don't mourn him, but I grieve for those he hurt.
I think an appropriate hell for him and those of his ilk would be stuck in a room alone, unable to communicate with anyone, with NPR broadcasting 24/7.
Your version of hell for him is certainly appropriate, especially the "unable to communicate" part. He was so obviously addicted to praise that not having access to that would probably be worse for him than almost anything else.
Comments 8
Reply
Reply
Reply
Reply
I don't mourn him, but I grieve for those he hurt.
I think an appropriate hell for him and those of his ilk would be stuck in a room alone, unable to communicate with anyone, with NPR broadcasting 24/7.
Reply
And he did hurt so very many people, didn't he?
Your version of hell for him is certainly appropriate, especially the "unable to communicate" part. He was so obviously addicted to praise that not having access to that would probably be worse for him than almost anything else.
Reply
Leave a comment