Kyle's entire saga has been so incredible that if it weren't real, it feels like something you'd see in a story or cartoon with a Gary Stu (overly perfect) protagonist.
Young hero under 18 goes to help out at a community under attack by a hostile horde of, essentially, murderous thieving bandits. He's not even there to seek out & fight them specifically, just to protect the townspeople and their property and also clean up the damage where he can.
The hero is attacked by said murderous thieving bandits when he tries to stop them from blowing up a gas station with a flaming dumpster, then razing a mechanic shop belonging to an auto dealership they had targeted in the previous past nights of rioting.
He proceeds to flawlessly defeat three of his attackers, despite all of them being prison-hardened adult convicts while he's a minor with zero real combat experience AFAIK, and sends the rest running for the hills. The days that follow are completely peaceful for Kenosha.
All three of the people he shoots are/were felons, and cartoonishly evil ones at that: a pedophile, a domestic abuser, and a burglar who tried to shoot him after feigning surrender. Yet Kyle only kills the first two, letting Grosskreutz (the burglar, whose record doesn't seem to have been as bad as that of Pedo Rosenbaum and Wifebeater Huber) live.
Even better, he shoots the worst of the three - the child diddler - in the dick.
He turns himself in to the Kenosha cops, but they're so stunned by his heroics and/or in a hurry to assess the casualties that they let him go. Nevertheless, the do-gooder turns himself in again when he gets back home.
There are so many coincidental twists, all of which made Kyle look great and his '''''victims''''' look like complete pieces of shit, that I'm firmly convinced this guy was divinely guided.
Kyle's entire saga has been so incredible that if it weren't real, it feels like something you'd see in a story or cartoon with a Gary Stu (overly perfect) protagonist.
Young hero under 18 goes to help out at a community under attack by a hostile horde of, essentially, murderous thieving bandits. He's not even there to seek out & fight them specifically, just to protect the townspeople and their property and also clean up the damage where he can.
The hero is attacked by said murderous thieving bandits when he tries to stop them from blowing up a gas station with a flaming dumpster, then razing a mechanic shop belonging to an auto dealership they had targeted in the previous past nights of rioting.
He proceeds to flawlessly defeat three of his attackers, despite all of them being prison-hardened adult convicts while he's a minor with zero real combat experience AFAIK, and sends the rest running for the hills. The days that follow are completely peaceful for Kenosha.
All three of the people he shoots are/were felons, and cartoonishly evil ones at that: a pedophile, a domestic abuser, and a burglar who tried to shoot him after feigning surrender. Yet Kyle only kills the first two, letting Grosskreutz (the burglar, whose record doesn't seem to have been as bad as that of Pedo Rosenbaum and Wifebeater Huber) live.
Even better, he shoots the worst of the three - the child diddler - in the dick.
He turns himself in to the Kenosha cops, but they're so stunned by his heroics and/or in a hurry to assess the casualties that they let him go. Nevertheless, the do-gooder turns himself in again when he gets back home.
There are so many coincidental twists, all of which made Kyle look great and his '''''victims''''' look like complete pieces of shit, that I'm firmly convinced this guy was divinely guided.