The best idea that @instapundit used "Run them down" to mean "keep driving [and don't hit them]" is, in a word, RISIBLE. cc @JuliusGoathttps://twitter.com/pokergrump/status/779104070242013185 …
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Replying to @Grange95
away IS the objective;if that can't be done w/o hitting people, so be it.Assuming that's correct reading, how is it objectionable?
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Replying to @PokerGrump
2/3 not some less objectionable phrasing: "keep driving, don't aim for the protestors, but it's on them to get out of the way."
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Replying to @Grange95 @PokerGrump
3/3 The phrase "run them down" carries connotation of reckless/intentional action. Only fair reading is he meant exactly that.
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Replying to @Grange95
criminally reckless behavior and/or intentional wanton killing? To me that seems not only unfair but implausible.
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Replying to @PokerGrump
It seems to me he chose specific words in a specific situation. He--a law professor--chose words that advocated reckless conduct
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Replying to @Grange95
It's Twitter, for cripe sakes. At least occasional mismatch between words and meaning is the norm, even for law professors.
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Odd that you, who usually prefers the literal, clutch at a self-serving, post hoc rationalization of a clear statement.
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