"Jim Doyle" wrote in
:
"Jim Yanik" wrote in message
.. .
"Jim Doyle" wrote in
:
No, the life of a criminal of the type you describe is worthless.
Genuinely. Yet there is a distinction between him and some random
hard-up opportunist burglar with a family to feed. Granted, he's in
the wrong - but not deserving of a death sentence.
But it's the CRIMINAL'S risk.
OTOH,you would rather have the ODC bear the risks.
'ODC' - surely that would indicate a responsibility to preserve life?
You seem to have this thing that life is SO precious that one should suffer
to have violent criminals loose in one's society.
And once again,getting shot is NOT always a "death sentence".
Nice try at emotionalizing the issue,though.
The act of shooting at a person may result in their death. Luck of the
draw if it's not fatal, but the intention is to kill, is it not?
No,it's to stop the assault.If one were intent on killing,one would walk up
to the wounded person and give them a head shot at close range.THAT would
be acting as judge,jury,and executioner,and would be criminal.
But if it is fatal,well,no great loss.One less criminal to worry about.
Otherwise you'd pursue a non-lethal method of self-protection.
Which has a much higher chance of NOT WORKING,thus increasing the risk to
the ordinary decent citizen.Even the police have not managed to reliably
achieve this "non-lethal" stuff yet. You'd have people relying on less-than
reliable methods of self-defense,just to make YOU feel good.
Sorry,no thanks.
So yes, you are engaging a person who could die as a result of your
actions, and according to you they deserve to die for the situation in
which you both find yourselves - that's as good as sentencing them to
death. In fact - it is.
Hey,it's THEY who would be sticking their neck into the guillotine,and thus
their choice to risk themselves.
OTOH,you would rather the ODCs bear the risks of being harmed,in the search
for some imaginary sense of security.You would rather that everyone suffer
the costs of crime,just because you believe criminal's lives are somehow
precious.
--
Jim Yanik
jyanik-at-kua.net
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