Yes, the forehead is one of the more frailer parts of the skull and with enough forward momentum and a sharp knife he could do it. Pretty hardcore though. Laugh at my idiocy, the very top of the skull is the softest.
Obviously he has an impervium knife pair of underwear. Just strong enough to hold up his balls to do a stunt of that hardcoracy
personally i believe that the only way to properly end this scuffle is to first come to power via using the jewish population as a scapegoat with which to build a propaganda machine off of and swing public support in our favor before committing a bevy of horrific and ruthless crimes against them including confining them to the warsaw ghetto and shipping them off to aushwitz in order to face death by either starvation, disease, or personal execution via gas chamber, that is the lucky ones who aren't picked for much less painless ways including being used as human guinea pigs by the likes of dr. josef mengele, the extent of the crimes would only be compounded by the fact that much of the western world would stay oblivious to the crimes for the duration of the war, only coming across the brunt of concentration camps years after the war had ended and the captives had lost their lives, the holocaust leaves a permanent blemish on germany and has been the cause for rabid anti-german sentiment not only immediately following the war but to this day still there i made it unfunny, now shut the fuck up
Kwon Hyok, a former head of security at Camp 22, described laboratories equipped with gas chambers for suffocation gas experiments, in which three or four people, normally a family, are the experimental subjects. After undergoing medical checks, the chambers are sealed and poison is injected through a tube, while scientists observe from above through glass. In a report reminiscent of an earlier account of a family of seven, Kwon claims to have watched one family of two parents, a son and a daughter die from suffocating gas, with the parents trying to save the children using mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for as long as they had the strength. Kwon's testimony was supported by documents from Camp 22 describing the transfer of prisoners designated for the experiments. The documents were identified as genuine by Kim Sang Hun, a London based expert on Korea and human rights activist. A press conference in Pyongyang, organized by North Korean authorities, denounced this.