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<blockquote data-quote="saralynn" data-source="post: 71226467" data-attributes="member: 290188"><p>No, I don't know anything about Dietrich's last sermon, but I am very excited and now I want to read it right away. All I read were his letters (or his journal?) and did so because I was under a lot of stress at the time and I needed to read something stirring by a person who REALLY endured tragic circumstances and remained faithful to his ideals. </p><p></p><p>No, I never heard of Wassili Korkorin and can't find anything about him on Google.</p><p></p><p>I always claim not to believe in "evil", and prefer to describe the perpetrators of hideous crimes as mentally ill, but, sometimes I wonder. It seems that once someone chooses (if you believe in free will) to behave with willful cruelty, the urge to do so again and again becomes more powerful.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="saralynn, post: 71226467, member: 290188"] No, I don't know anything about Dietrich's last sermon, but I am very excited and now I want to read it right away. All I read were his letters (or his journal?) and did so because I was under a lot of stress at the time and I needed to read something stirring by a person who REALLY endured tragic circumstances and remained faithful to his ideals. No, I never heard of Wassili Korkorin and can't find anything about him on Google. I always claim not to believe in "evil", and prefer to describe the perpetrators of hideous crimes as mentally ill, but, sometimes I wonder. It seems that once someone chooses (if you believe in free will) to behave with willful cruelty, the urge to do so again and again becomes more powerful. [/QUOTE]
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