I agree the courts are better than the internet. That doesn't mean the courts always get it right. Juror bias is just as great as the bias of internet denizens.
And jurors look at a different standard, anyway.
If all of them thought he was most likely guilty but couldn't say this with
absolute certainty, that gets a "not guilty" verdict.
@Shaul would have us believe that this jury all decided that Rittenhouse did nothing wrong. Unless he was in that deliberation room, he's talking out of his butt.
Courts don't declare people "innocent," despite the narrative
@Shaul is selling. The jury only answered one question:
considering only the evidence and arguments presented in this courtroom, is it clear beyond a reasonable doubt that Rittenhouse was guilty of the specific crimes for which he was charged? Yes or no.
Inferring the answers to other questions from this verdict (e.g. that Rittenhouse is
innocent of the crimes he was charged with, or that he has no
moral culpability for what he did) is unjustified.