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I think the one thing we will agree on is the hope neither of us or our loved ones is put in the situation. I for one would rather this remain a hypothetical situation.
In principle, we agree.
I would support complete castration also as a penalty, just so you know.
I would also point out that your advocacy of "optimal harm" is a severe legal liability, because it is an admission that you looked past the offense to apply your own standard of retribution upon the perpetrator. You are then making a calculated judgement - premeditation - on just how much damage you should inflict on them. If I was a prosecuting attorney, this is motive and premeditation for intentional harm. At a minimum I could get you for battery, and I could even go so far as to argue that it would constitute torture because you are inflicting pain with the intent to make them suffer. Yes, you are going to have mitigating circumstances, but legally and morally, the course of action you propose is far more fraught with legal peril.
Just look at your last statement: I never said anything about letting the abuser initiate force. I'm not playing such a game; I can only ask that you try harder to hear what I have said.
I view murder (pre-meditated) to be an act worthy of capital punishment because it takes a life and all of its productivity away from family and society. Such acts inflict extreme emotional duress even on the survivors - for the rest of their lives. Murder hurts more than just the one murdered, and so can not be tolerated in a society which values life.
In my view, sexual abuse is nearly as bad, only the victim is still alive to deal with their ordeal. It will still haunt them for their entire lives - even with good counseling. And it will affect anyone who has a relationship with that person - especially a spouse or children. That person's offspring will be affected, poisoning the well so to speak for all of society. An act with such a long-lasting and broad reaching effect can not be handled so casually as you imply without risking the debasement and devaluation of quality of life itself - second only to life. How is one supposed to pursue happiness in life with such a spectre hanging over them?
No. In my opinion, the damage is worthy of capital punishment - even from my Christian perspective. For an Objectivist, this should be even more clear-cut.
But it is always difficult to get a point across when the listening is having the emotions get in the way of listening.
You do not want to debate or discuss you want to make pronouncements...
So yes Troll You are irrelevant...your favorite adjective
Buh bye Troll
Question is irrelevant. Just stick to the fact that one should do what is necessary, not more without significant repercussions.
Define it if you can
Have you ever been in a situation where you had to defend yourself from severe physical harm or death?
Or think rationally and just do optimal harm.
If I caught anyone abusing any of my kids, my 1911 would have words with that individual right there, right then.
And serving on a jury is WAY harder than voting. remember that a jury decision has to be unanimous. That means twelve "angry men" (pardon to Henry Fonda) from various walks of life all have to agree. And I absolutely object to the idea that we can't execute 99 guilty people because we might get 1 who is innocent. That's the sort of mentality that liberals use to crowd the prisons and petition for emotional pleas.
The argument presented by murder and its punishment is what the appropriate penalty is. The act is very clear - it is the violation of the most primal, basic right of another - the right to life. In my opinion, the punishment for pre-meditated murder should be the forfeiture of life of the murderer. The state only carries out the punishment agreed upon by its empowerment: it is an agent - not an arbiter. That is what some people get confused. They view the law as the originator of punishment, rather than the agent. If we accept natural law, we accept that the punishment is affixed independently of the agent, but that it exists nonetheless.
Now THAT's an extreme view of the right of self defense.
Haven't you ever heard of the concept of the Paladin? The one who comes to the aid of the helpless facing an aggressor? Does that concept have no weight or meaning for you?
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