I’m confused by Hanson’s perspective on this – he seems to think the result is actually “good/fine” instead of “horrifying and sad.” I’m not really sure what it is Hanson actually cares about.
I think partly, he just doesn’t think that it was realistic to hope for anything substantially different this kind of outcome. It doesn’t feel like a loss to him, it just feels like how things were always going to go.
I think partly, he just doesn’t think that it was realistic to hope for anything substantially different this kind of outcome. It doesn’t feel like a loss to him, it just feels like how things were always going to go.
This is not a full explanation though.