Board Thread:General Grimm Discussion/@comment-25875828-20150512091124/@comment-26398345-20150514092147

Wasn't Adeline the one who killed Nicks Aunt or was responsible for having her killed?

People keep saying Juliette is acting immoral for no good reason. I don't feel like any of you really understand the nature of hexenbeasts. They are by nature vindictive and self serviing. Just like Adeline, and just like her mother and all the others. Nick enjoys his powers the same way Juliette does, but while Nick was accepted, Juliette has been shunned even before she was doing bad things.

Additionally you can see Juliette struggling against the wesen side in little things she does. She doesn't kill anyone, even though we all know she could have. It's in little things you see she does. You get little glimpses of remorse here and there. When she walks into the bedroom her hand lingers on the dresser. It wasn't until the Prince reminded her of the infidelity that she becomes vindictive again.

Likewise, when he reminded her of memories, her first thoughts weren't of the bad stuff, but the sweet ones. In the same way Renaurd has earned his forgiveness, Juliette has already put in the effort to earn forgiveness for what she's doing now. She stood by Nick when she found out he was a Grimm, even thought it's almost cost her life on multiple occasions.

Juliette has been giving and giving for 3 seasons and suddenly after six episodes everyone is calling for her blood. I think most of the people doing that never really liked Juliette or always saw her as a third wheel. I've said this a bunch, but I would never want anyone calling for Juliette's death to be my friend because god forbid something happened to me that changed me, they'd bail and that's not what I consider or call a friend.

If Juliette dies Nick is going to follow down a dark path as well. I can't say that I'd be interested in watching if they kill off Juliette. It's just too much betrayal. Juliette has a reason she's acting out. She's struggling with forces that are beyond her control, with no one to help her. The rest of them completely know what it means to be outcast and unaccepted, and yet despite all the evidence in the past that shows just how important acceptance is, they're ignoring it.