Ana the Ist
Aggressively serene!
- Feb 21, 2012
- 39,990
- 12,573
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Atheist
- Marital Status
- Married
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Sure, without going into a crazy amount of detail, there was a stalking case which comes to mind. It was a young man stalking a young woman...harassing her, threatening her life, breaking into her home....constant surveillance...awful stuff.
She ends up moving back in with her parents, changing almost everything about her life to get away from this guy. Her and her family had gone to police multiple times...but beyond a restraining order and a cruiser driving by daily, there wasn't a lot they could do or prove.
They were at the point where they basically had to hope they were ready for when this guy attacked so they could legally defend themselves. Of course, they weren't, and eventually he kidnapped and killed her.
So, basically, after exhausting all other possible options....if her father had decided to simply go out to his car one of the times he was sitting on the street watching them, and shot this guy in the head, I'd be morally satisfied that he had done the right thing.
Legally though, he would certainly be charged with murder.
My problem: I asked you what you thought the baby's opinion of getting killed might be, and instead of answering that directly, you responded like "well I'm sure he would listen to reason if I just explained all the facts, etc.". So I assume you already agree that the baby wouldn't care for the idea of being killed, since your first instinct seems to be giving him a sales pitch on why it's necessary.![]()
If we remove all context and understanding from the situation...whether it's a person being killed in self-defense, wartime, a criminal execution, or euthanizing a terminal cancer patient, or killing an unborn child....sure, I guess everyone would object.
No offense, but that's a rather stupid question...and it doesn't really have any bearing on morality in real life.
Just that everyone knows wrong, whether they are the victim or the perpetrator.
Everyone has a concept of "wrong"...but no two people have the same concept nor agree on those concepts.
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