Juliette absolutely had very understandable reasons for attacking Adalind. The problem occurs with her openly threatening her in a police station and everyone can see Adalind's pregnant belly. It would make Juliette a prime suspect if anything ever happened to Adalind. Threatening anyone in a police station is stupid which is why Nick was an idiot for fighting the captain there.
Nick pulled a gun on Juliette after she shook the entire spice shop and tossed Rosalee across the room. It wasn't smart but Juliette made the first act of aggression. Shaking the shop shouldn't be taken lightly. Juliette deciding to shake the building with everyone inside certainly is threatening. I assume it's this instance you speak of rather than when she revealed her woged face to him and he thought she was Adalind.
I don't care what the bible says aside from the interesting language. That's never been my stance and I went to Sunday School, which I never cared for. It doesn't justify anything as far I'm concerned.
If we're going to be technical, the acts Juliette committed can be classified as understandable rather than right. It's like when Nick framed Kenneth then took him to an undisclosed location and killed. It's perfectly understandable, which is why I don't mind that or even some of the things Juliette did being a part of the narrative, but it's not exactly right.
Nick pulled a gun on Juliette after she shook the entire spice shop and tossed Rosalee across the room. It wasn't smart but Juliette made the first act of aggression. Shaking the shop shouldn't be taken lightly. Juliette deciding to shake the building with everyone inside certainly is threatening. I assume it's this instance you speak of rather than when she revealed her woged face to him and he thought she was Adalind.
I don't care what the bible says aside from the interesting language. That's never been my stance and I went to Sunday School, which I never cared for. It doesn't justify anything as far I'm concerned.
If we're going to be technical, the acts Juliette committed can be classified as understandable rather than right. It's like when Nick framed Kenneth then took him to an undisclosed location and killed. It's perfectly understandable, which is why I don't mind that or even some of the things Juliette did being a part of the narrative, but it's not exactly right.