- Dec 27, 2009
- 11,846
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- Judaism
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I always wonder about "lawful" executions and capital punishment in general. We do not have it here which may be why I find it hard to wrap my head around it.
Do people see it as moral or ethical? I have heard reports of communities in the US celebrating over how many people have been executed under capital punishment laws. This seems a risky way to carry out justice in my point of view. If you make a mistake and execute an innocent party, you cannot undo it. How is that right? And who decides which crimes are punishable by death?
I am guilty of execution, I have shot a few people and blown up others with handgrenades, all in hasty thoughts, the kind that rush through the mind and then have gone as quickly as they came.
After careful consideration it does not alarm me, instead I see it as the ultimate test, the test is about selfserving or serving others,
to put it this way, to do acts of goodness and kindness is good and should increase, but, is it only because it will make me feel good inside, selfserving,
or, is it because it is the right thing to do?
If it is the right thing to do then it must be good, to do the ultimate good must then be, Go help those I do not want to help, that is the test between selfserving and serving others.
It may appear to have nothing to do with thread, but, knowing what I myself am capable of, this is all I can come up with.
I need not have commented at all, but I have, we have our struggles.
So to your question, "Who decides which crimes are punishable by Death?"
I am not qualified to answer.
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And he didn't want the treatment. But as property of the state he had no choice.