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- Atania Kenobi
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In my opinion, the death penalty is blasphemy in the sense that we have no right to kill another living being. What is your opinion on this matter? I would like to know!
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”People are like flowers. We follow the way of heliotropism: the following and turning away from the light. From this, there is a diversity in the flowers some are large and small, tall and short, putrid and fragrant, yet in the end they bloom in their own time and in their own ways. Beauty in diversity and in yourself is for you alone to experience and to cherish.
”
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I can agree that someone is a horrible person and the world is better off without them, but I also think I would rather blind someone than kill them, which in most cases removes their ability to hurt others.
rugadd
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"Evil is always possible. And goodness is eternally difficult."
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- Atania Kenobi
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I watched this video in Adult living today, and the checklist of how you know your values hit me. So I thought I would share this with you too!
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”People are like flowers. We follow the way of heliotropism: the following and turning away from the light. From this, there is a diversity in the flowers some are large and small, tall and short, putrid and fragrant, yet in the end they bloom in their own time and in their own ways. Beauty in diversity and in yourself is for you alone to experience and to cherish.
”
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- Wescli Wardest
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I think that it partly depends on one’s views of the penal system. Is it punishment or a place to rehabilitate? If rehabilitation is the goal we have done a sad job over the years on whole. If it is punishment… still not working. And one can see that by the amount of repeat offenders.
In my opinion, the sad reality is that the penal system is just someplace to store people during an interim we call justice so that society as a whole doesn’t have to deal with them. But that is beside the point I think.
If the penal system is there to rehabilitate, it should be a pretty forgone conclusion that a dead man can learn nothing. If for punishment, then I have no issue with the death penalty so long as it is 100% certain the person is the guilty party.
Life is sacred. Each life embodies a connection to the eternal. The spirit, which resides in each life is not secular but rather dedicated to its own existence and maybe even the eternal force which it is bound to and a part of. This life, being a part of the eternal, is bound by the universal laws, principles and doctrine rather we realize/accept it or not. Nowhere is it written that the body cannot die or be destroyed. The part that is sacred returns to the whole, the eternal. All the death sentence does is end the corporeal existence, the life. It does not destroy what is sacred. And by that, I have no issue with the death sentence as a means of punishment so long as it is confirmed well beyond reason that the guilty party bares the guilt.
All that said, just because I have no issue with under the right circumstances does not mean that I endorse the implementation of it in all the current circumstances. Furthermore, just because I do not believe in the widespread use of the death penalty does not give me right to enforce my beliefs over those that would govern themselves and make their own laws and punishments to abide by.
I could go one and on but I figure I’ll leave it at this and give others a chance to get riled up LOL :laugh:
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For all the freedom United States shouts about, it is quite a violent country compared to more liberal - humane - countries. For instance, Netherlands: because they take care of their population they have lower crime, low prison population, and prisoners are treated like human beings instead of animals.
The prison system in America (for instance) is not about fixing the problem or lowering crime. It is about using people who society has decided are too much of a problem to care about. In America, "if they do crime they deserve the miserable time" ... which makes the criminal worse and crimes more frequent as they go in and out of the system that labels them for life.
Capital punishment, in the American eye (not all Americans, obviously) is the same ... killers deserve to die after being miserable and abused in the system for a while. We create the problem and then 'fix' it with extreme measures. So, for me, Capital Punishment is cruel and inhumane and unnecessary.
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- OB1Shinobi
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I wont give examples unless i have to but please, unless you really want to have your feelings hurt by learning about some horrible, real life events, please don't argue with me on the point that there are people who have inflicted such torturous suffering upon others that they have forfeited their right to another chance. There is a point where someone should die for what they have done. Civilians cannot be allowed to take that sort of justice into their own hands. Thats why we have a death penalty.
People are complicated.
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With that said ... at this point I do not think things can be fixed. We live in a world where PTSD and mental illness and abuses of various kinds are passed on from generation to generation. Millions grow up to reflect what they have been taught about life when younger. Some come out quite angry about life and find the only relief is hurting other people. Mass shooters come to mind when I think about this and about capital punishment. It's a hard line to walk and say "let's help this person who just shot up a school", and "put them out of society's misery". I am not a god to make that decision on that person's life decisions.
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And perhaps if she hadn't worn a short skirt on that night, things would have gone differently for her.dwagoonie wrote: ... what I believe about all this is that if people were taken care of in the first place, they would not resort to such crimes.
As much as I agree that in general a sufficiently tame society would do well to grow in such a way as to not drive a vast fraction of her people into the sort of desperation that might push them to commit atrocities, I am struggling to interpret blaming the actions of an individual on said society as anything less or better than victim blaming, even if we are ready to acknowledge that the perpetrators in question are themselves victims of a grossly flawed system that left them with their sickness brewing inside of them well past boiling point. No matter how rosy things get, there are miserable and desperate and sick people everywhere and most of them live and die without leaving much of a mark on history. The few who do went out of their way to acquire the means and to carry through their awful deed.
While, again, it is fair and necessary to ask just what drove them and what the rest of us can do better in future, it is also acceptable, in my humble opinion, to place some, if not a majority of the blame, on them, too.
That being said, however, this is all assuming that finding whom to blame or not to is a reasonable use of our time. It is entirely possible, so I assert, to ponder what could be done to make things better in future without first asking whose fault any incident must have been. And on the outset capital punishment is not all that obviously unhelpful in this regard. There wouldn't be much of a debate around it if a case couldn't be made either way, and I think this much we can appreciate even if our own stance is firmly on one side of that issue and not the other.
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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I blame no one, and yet the criminal and the society are both to "blame".
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- Wescli Wardest
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OB1Shinobi wrote: At what point is revenge justifiable?
Revenge is not the way of the Jedi. Or a Knight.
We should seek justice and balance. If your emotions will not allow you to do that then it might be best to let someone else handle the matter.
That said... for all my efforts I am only human. Fallible and flawed. I can not guaranty that if someone hurt my daughter I would or could let others deal with the situation. :evil:
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Of course, if you don't practice...
rugadd
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rugadd
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- Atania Kenobi
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Knight of the Order
My Journals- IP / Apprentice / Personal
House of Orion
Teaching Master- Zero
”People are like flowers. We follow the way of heliotropism: the following and turning away from the light. From this, there is a diversity in the flowers some are large and small, tall and short, putrid and fragrant, yet in the end they bloom in their own time and in their own ways. Beauty in diversity and in yourself is for you alone to experience and to cherish.
”
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- Atania Kenobi
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- Posts: 136
Knight of the Order
My Journals- IP / Apprentice / Personal
House of Orion
Teaching Master- Zero
”People are like flowers. We follow the way of heliotropism: the following and turning away from the light. From this, there is a diversity in the flowers some are large and small, tall and short, putrid and fragrant, yet in the end they bloom in their own time and in their own ways. Beauty in diversity and in yourself is for you alone to experience and to cherish.
”
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And 2020 happed to everyone world round. It hasn't been an easy year. But it too shall pass.
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Fun idea though, here is me;
1974->1978: 360° (-02°) = 358mag
1979->1979: 005° (+12°) = 017mag
1980->1981: 340° (+12°) = 355mag
1982->1985: 345° (+12°) = 357mag
1986->1988: 290° (+11°) = 301mag
1989->1992: 090° (+11°) = 101mag
1993->1996: 360° (+11°) = 011mag
1998->2002: 300° (+13°) = 313mag
2002->2003: 270° (+11°) = 281mag
2003->2005: 175° (+11°) = 186mag
2005->2006: 240° (+11°) = 251mag
2006->2008: 120° (+11°) = 131mag
2008->2009: 240° (+11°) = 251mag
2010->2019: 160° (+11°) = 171mag
2020->: 177° (+11°) = 189mag
Skipped a couple of years where I moved a few too many times.
In regards to justice, a system term to represent appropriate placement (of perp) within that system and in this context security to that system. Victims might want revenge, but things like that are subjective variables, too undefined for the establishment to legislate. The decisions made by bodies within the judiciary have to balance the interests of all involved to asses what will be deemed as 'appropriate', be it reaching that threshold of the burden of proof or an amount of remediation etc. You can't go back and rewrite the past, so associations of blame have to carefully mapped to direct cause and effect on one hand, and proof on the other. I think they are the things balanced out.... not necessarily the arguments or suffering of two parties.
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No. Not unless they are some kind of non-natural benefits that at the same time do depend on your body's position but then also have nothing to do with your body. Otherwise they can't have an impact strong enough that you'd have noticed and also weak enough to entirely evade experimental detection. With or without astrology - Indian or otherwise - what is going on inside your head is, essentially, chemistry. We know this well enough that we can manipulate it in various ways by strictly chemical means. Now, yes, sure enough, things like the coriolis effect and the Earth's magnetic field do in principle have a measurable impact on the motion of particles on large enough scales where short-ranged influences are averaged away, but these are conditions that are very far from met inside our bodies. The forces between two ions inside your brain are many orders of magnitude stronger than almost anything the sun, the moon, the stars, or the Earth can do to either of them. Heck, I reckon even how much sugar you put in your evening tea has more of an impact on how you rest that night than whether you lie down facing east or west. For that matter, so can other things, as Adder points out, like airflow, noise sources, and lighting, have an influence. Not enough to mess with your brain directly, but enough to provide stimuli to your senses, directing your attention, perhaps. If however the direction with respect to Earth's spin or magnetic field was any kind of important, a compass would be in any chemist's tool kit for the same reason, while us regular folk could at least roughly tell which direction a bed faces without consulting one (or the sky, for that matter).Atania Kenobi wrote: "Does the direction of your head( North, East, South, or West) while sleeping has its benefits?"
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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I mean, if we map out our space cognitively in anyway at all then there is an argument for where we 'face' when we sleep having a potential to play a role in how much awareness we have on things in that direction be it from ones history or current events locally or globally. I'd venture that could play into dream content potentially, last thoughts before going to sleep, or initial thoughts upon waking in some instances depending on the sensitivity of those memories. These things could impact ones experience of sleep.
Might be worth noting the role in ones posture during sleep, does your face pull around to face the door, or the foot of the bed when you lay in a comfortable position, is it a good posture or bad posture, or do you contort, or lay squif to avoid a sharp edge on a nearby bedstand.
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