The Colorado movie theater shooting guy escapes the death penalty while THIS GUY is set to be executed on 16 of this month?Are they that sure of what is he accused of or is it that those two group of people need to talk to each other?
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Monday, August 10, 2015
Before I see that here, it did not occur to me that being anti guns and for death penalty for killers could be divided into two opposing camps. Things like these always constructed one whole to me and would feel contradicted otherwise.
Also until I paid attention to that here, the only thing that was coming to my mind as the reason for having or not having a death penalty is the possibility of killing an innocent person. The point which some make regarding the sacredness of life of someone who himself took the life of another person unjustly is to me so unacceptable mentally that it cannot sit in peace even with mere comprehension of existence.
Sunday, August 9, 2015
Wasn't that a joke? Why even bother to have a death penalty if it is not applied even on a case like that in Colorado? What more was needed?
I on the other hand was thinking if it would be just to keep medically reviving the guy while shooting him until he got shot as much as he shot those people then leave him to die at the end.
Those who oppose the death penalty on killers are more for human life than those who do not as much as those who take into account the value of a variable only on one side of the equation are the better mathematicians.
Friday, August 7, 2015
The Colorado movie theater shooting guy got life in prison penalty despite actively shooting all those people. The marathon bomber, on the other hand who less actively participated and killed much less people got the death penalty. Although I think that all criminal killers should be killed, I thought from the beginning that different application for discrimination and/or identity complex caused the difference in the marathon case but waited for this ruling to test that.
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
I just don't understand why some states that have the death penalty try to force some new chemical methods on everybody that its work cannot be seen from outside ? Are they trying to apply the eye for an eye principle? Of course not. They are most probably trying to come with a less painful way of killing. So why don't they offer that as an option? How hard is it to have classic methods of execution, like hanging, available? If the condemned person himself say he doesn't want your "better" way of execution why force it on him?
Although I am speaking about an if situation for the death penalty, I still would want to say that, of course, is with assumption of certainty because the only thing that has a higher priority than executing a guilty killer is not executing an innocent person. But things like that movie theater shooting in Colorado, does anyone, or even the accused shooter himself have any doubt that he shot those people? If not, then letting him stay alive absent forgiveness of those who have the right to forgive in that shooting is a joke not justice.
Thursday, June 25, 2015
I was not trying to argue against seeing the issue as significant by those affected by it or in denial to the level of toleration in living with it all those years. I was just objecting to the use of it to divert attention from what happened in that church and the ease with which the lives of nine people were taken by one person.
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Monday, June 22, 2015
DOUBLE THE CRAZINESS
And if one thinks he saw it all with the outrageousness of that empowerment to kill and little care about taken lives, he may gets shocked again by discovering that his vision probably reached only halfway of that path of craziness. That is because if instead of being a victim, a person was the one who, for sure, committed a killing or even a mass shooting, you would see the valuation for his life suddenly reverses course and reaches the high level of being over the value of not even just one or two but a big number of his victim lives.
One normally expects that if there is disregard or less than sufficient care for life somewhere then it would at least apply equally to both the victim and the guilty. Here on the other hand, instead of just passive carelessness about the victim, the guilty gets empowered to very easily take the life of the victim then the life of the guilty gets treated as if it has much more value.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?!
There can hardly be a situation deserving the question Dr Phil keeps repeating , "WHAT WERE YOU THINKING?!" than this. It needs to be screamed through bullhorns all over the country. They easily give that power to take life with just a small movement of a finger and do that repeatedly then wonder what went wrong every time a mass murder happens.
Although hate and/or discrimination seems to be the reason behind that mass killing in that church on its face, regardless of the question of right and wrong, does it look like that the "suspect" has that kind of depth in that believe? Or does it look more like a shallow thing strengthened by the power to act on it? Does it look like that absent the convenience of a gun he would still have attacked that church to make whatever point he supposedly wanted to make?
And the acting like being in a playful state was even clearer with that shooting in Colorado where the "suspect" suddenly substituted himself for an action movie, with a title stating that the main character "Rises", in a movie theater and started shooting the attendees. Even if we want to ignore that, for close to three years now, did anyone hear any reason for that attack?
So, we should be careful and not pretend that we confuse actions where belief makes use of power with actions where power makes use of apparent believe.
Friday, June 19, 2015
Something about premeditation
In addition to already having difficulties accepting all these first and second and the like of murder classes, I just noticed this about the premeditation requirement for a first degree murder charge.
Is the absence of what fits the premeditation requirement always makes the crime deserves better response for the guilty? What if the reason for the absence of that legal premeditation was being in a careless state? Should the premeditation be taken into consideration when there is a proven absence of what could have caused a momentarily decision? Why would killing with careless/playful mind set deserves less than the maximum punishment? Is there not enough signs for the system being abused because of not taking account of that?
It already was very far from justice to punish a killer with less than being killed just because he killed his victim in anger. So what does doing that for killing with a careless/playful state of mind take things?
How can things get better with these kind of laws that allow escaping responsibility for one's own action and shifting it on the victim instead. Why do laws here compensate the guilty and punish the victim?
I spoke about this earlier. From the beginning solutions were not necessarily all or nothing. For example, why should a firearm intended for home protection be small and light weight? In addition, current technology and science, could make a huge difference here. For example, firearms could be made or altered so that, with the use of satellite and/or a remote control technology, are operable only within a specific limited locality or make a warning sound and visual signal out of those localities. Or at least they can be made trackable by satellite so that appropriate devices installed at public or gathering areas like supermarkets, schools, churches, movie theaters and the like can detect them.
But nothing of that can be done unless people are released from the bondage of the so so long ago expired second amendment.
The Real Patriotism
Real patriotism shows itself not with the raising of flags but with someone throughout decades and decades ago looking at the consequences or potential consequences of this mess and says we need to get rid of this. To me letting the country I live in be in this mess is as repugnant as accepting to live with the content of the septic tank inside my home.
One may think that people could fail to manage things properly and choose the right path only with matters that apply differently on them. But how could an obviously necessary path where the justice and the need are in a unity like this be ignored like this? The question of life and death is like that of winning or losing lottery for something that is entirely man made and superimposed in this country but still they seem to have no problem with that neither for themselves nor for their moral principles.
Monday, May 25, 2015
Especially cruel crimes
Last week I saw on TV someone who killed his mother smashing her head by hitting it repeatedly with a sledgehammer. I think that even if the principle of an eye for an eye is not applied generally, making a federal law that mandates its application when a crime reaches such level of cruelty is an idea that needs consideration.
Thursday, May 7, 2015
"cruel and unusual" 7
An analogy to that is when someone says that he has a long list to do using the word "long" instead of the word "big" to project serializing or sequencing for the purpose of emphasizing himself being a single executor even if most of those tasks can be overlapped and carried out concurrently except that the amendment projects serializing or sequencing in order to suggest the status of being new for those processes.
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
"cruel and unusual" 6
Using "cut processes" in the last part of the post below the previous was unnecessary and probably wrong. Instead one could have expressed that part stating:
Using a single process to represent the whole suggests an intention to separate the processes and that here seems to serve a purpose if it was a separation in time. That suggests creation more than application because it suggests, through the sequencing, the status of being new .
Monday, May 4, 2015
"cruel and unusual" 5
Even if the part about punishments in the eighth amendment had came in a separate amendment of its own, that would still have not made me any close to understand it to mean forcing the overriding of clear rules of justice like those mandated by the an eye for an eye principle.
I think that if the framers had such intention, they would have put more effort to state that in order to counteract the deeply rooted sense of obligation to justice inside human beings. On the other hand as much as deeply rooted that sense of obligation to justice is, as much as it could make it hard to imagine such understanding is probable or even possible on correct grounds.
To me it is hard to imagine it being further away from telling the government you cannot execute a killer. Instead, I see it telling the government you cannot, for example, execute someone who had failed to pay his taxes. But for the blood of another human being, how does it even occur to some here that it is imposing such a restriction on justice?
But I never really liked all the talk I see here about "love" while skipping over the question of justice.That could be behind a confusing here in seeing an intention to override justice in what is not only lacked such intention but was probably in itself intended to secure avoiding injustice and take it as being the ultimate objective in itself.
Sunday, May 3, 2015
"cruel and unusual" 4
First, one may notice how making a penalty imply dealing with new matter which imply facing the matter and thinking about it for the first time and that fits with how the amendment stated things in the sequence of "bail", "fines" then "punishments". Then one may also notice how unlike the later two words, "bail" was in the singular form. Combining the two notes above and considering the fact that there is one bail for an accused person regardless of the number of fines or punishments in question, the view per completed process rather than individual persons as a group with cut processes would seem more evident and that support the claim that the amendment is about the making of rules and not applying them (in the sense pointed out in the post below).
"cruel and unusual" 3
So, as much as, for example, a book about the making of cars can still talk about or refer to driving them as a consequence to the ways of manufacturing them and despite that the ultimate purpose being driving them may still be described as being just about the making of cars not driving them, it appears that the eighth amendment was about the making of penalties not applying them. Therefore it does not apply on what is directly mandated by the eye for an eye principle because that comes naturally and doesn't need to be made.
Saturday, May 2, 2015
"cruel and unusual" 2
Whether people deviated from the eye for an eye principle or not, the fact remains it comes naurally from the most basic level of sensing justice inside a human being. With that in mind, one may also express the last point in the post below saying that combining and preceeding the "cruel and unusual punishment" with two things requiring a making process ("bail" and "fines") suggests strongly that it was not meant to apply on what is mandated by the eye for an eye principle because it comes naturally and requires no making.
That of course is in addition to how the use of the word "punishment" here may by itself suggest something that involve a creation process. That is because of how much that word can be used to refer to the creation of a reaction to the crime. For example googling "punishment vs. penalty" brought the Phrase " death penalty and capital punishment".
Moreover, those who oppose the death penalty on the "cruel and unusual" ground are not only opposing the equality in the process of making the injury between the dead victim and the criminal as mandated by the eye for an eye principle but also the end result of that process
Friday, May 1, 2015
"cruel and unusual"
In case the mess of guns was not enough by itself it was combined with the mess of punishment. Starting from the constitution, the death penalty in general was not only debated but was decided for a while to be a "cruel and unusual" punishment. Are you kidding me? If you want to abolish the death penalty because of the possibility of executing an innocent person then that is a different question. But to think that the "cruel and unusual" phrase in the constitution was intended to apply on the death penalty for a killer makes guys holding such a view here sound as if they came from a different galaxy. Not only for the question of executing a killer but I don't think that phrase was intended to apply on the eye for an eye type of punishment in general. Unlike what some seem to take that phrase, the purpose behind it could have been to establish a line not to be crossed for punishment to actions were the just punishment is not clear rather than to replace justice. Notice how that understanding is supported by grouping that phrase with actions related to fines and bails each of which has no clear direct just measure.
Monday, April 6, 2015
Yesterday I read something from a gun guy speaking about how killing someone who breaks into your home at night could leave you troubled morally for the rest of your life. I personally could kill a number of those who break into my home by choice and still not be troubled morally anywhere near as much as I would be for just being part of an acceptance by the society for the killing of one person without a choice given to him or her like that school or the movie theater shooting as part of normal life. I don't see how it is possible to tolerate in any amount the absence of a choice to that level.
Another thing I saw recently that seems like a denial to the consequences of the gun situation we live in, is the level of regulation imposed by at least one state on , believe it or not, stun guns. This also reminds me of how those firearms commercials seem to generally advertise "gun and knife" not "guns" alone as if they are in anyway comparable.
Friday, March 27, 2015
A little clarification 3
Even without that, any contradiction between purchasing a firearm during our current time and any future laws against the spreading and empowering the capability to kill by them is limited to how the type of purchased weapon and the intended use for which it was purchased can fit any future restrictions by such laws. For example, the basic shotgun can be required to be much heavier than what it is and be the size of a washing machine and it can still be sufficient for the home defense purpose for which it was purchased. It can also be required to be made inoperable outside a very limited range of fixed location physical or wireless connection and it can still be sufficient for that purpose.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
A little clarification 2
Although I am not responsible for reckless or careless understanding to my position, here is what I said in the past and it shows how what I wrote in the post below is not something new to my position.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
A little clarification
I mentioned this when I was posting in a discussion board. My general position regarding firearms ownership is about the system not the individual. It generally has nothing to do with the individual choosing to have or not have a firearm as long as the law still allows that.
In addition, for my second amendment interpretation argument, which I have been concentrating on for sometime, I could even be the most believer in having laws allowing such ownership but still believe that the second amendment does not impose that.
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