T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
4.1 | I'll play by my rules, thank you. | POTARU::QUODLING | It works for me.... | Sat May 10 1986 21:43 | 7 |
| If I were to fight in a war, it would probably for preservation
of the life style that I like. i.e. Capitalism as opposed to
communism. Then again if the computer industry gets boring,
I might just do it for profit. :-)
q
|
4.2 | | ACOMA::JBADER | Janet Bader @ABO | Sun May 11 1986 11:51 | 9 |
| I cannot defend the reasons listed,
I never knew men to give those reasons...my father explained to
me that he was fighting for freedom. He spent two tours in Viet
Nam, he didn't come home from the second tour, but I always had
a good understanding of why he volunteered to return to a country
where so many lost their lives.
-sunny-
|
4.3 | Going over the same ground | NY1MM::SWEENEY | Pat Sweeney | Sun May 11 1986 22:13 | 8 |
| One reason why it's so criminal to shut down old conferences is that
we're constantly going over the same ground ie "Are there things worth
dying for" was the title of a similar topic in SOAPBOX.
Here goes: I'd place myself in the position of being killed in order to
defend the life and liberty of others. As a consequence being in such
a position I would not waive my right to defend myself. This applies to
street crime and to organized killing called war.
|
4.4 | We've got a long way to go. | EXODUS::EINES | Wind 'em up and let 'em go! | Thu May 15 1986 15:45 | 17 |
| One reason you didn't hear, and won't hear, it probably the most
likely; "I like it.".
Face it, we're animals, two-footed beasts. Let's not get too impressed
with our "civilization"; our economic system(s), our VAXNOTES. I'm
a bit of an amateur animal behaviorist, and I see nothing about
the human species that qualifies us as superior to our fellow creatures.
At least, animals kill mostly for survival. We do it for sport.
For that reason I suspect that we must have a common ancestor with
felines, another vicious killer.
Please don't get me wrong, I believe there is hope. However, we're
still in the jungle. We'd be wise to remember that when trying
to understand why there are so many horrors in the world today.
Fred
|
4.5 | No, we're very *clever* animals... | RAINBO::HARDY | | Fri May 16 1986 01:35 | 45 |
|
I must disagree with your assessment, Fred. We are not nearly so
close to felines; we are primates. That means, among other things,
that we have to be socialized to recognize each other. Animals
in which a larger fraction of behavior is "instinctual" or "hard
wired" automatically do so, and certain behavioral controls on
intraspecies conflict are keyed to this. (Most animals that battle
for territory have some method of signaling defeat, and this signal
seems to inhibit the winner from further injuring the loser.)
For primates learning is necessary, and always weaker than instinct.
We know this to be so from the famous experiments involving orphan
monkeys, who grew to maturity but were, behaviorally speaking,
hardly monkeys at all.
One aspect of being human is that we can use language to modify
our perceptions, and that of other humans, without little "real"
input to justify the change. For a cat, another cat is always
recognizable as a cat. But for we clever primates, another
primate may be a slime, a snake, a sheep, a wolf, a worm, a
monster of any kind you can name or invent...and such is the
nature of our symbolizing capacity, SO SHALL IT BE. The person
designated unperson will not evoke any sympathy (which may be a
faint echo of the former instinctual recognition).
The primate that kills for sport is probably running on a
script that says this activity is attractive or status-building
among other primates. I acknowlege that some may have other
motives; we cannot fully fathom each others' motives because of
the degree to which we learn to be human.
Likewise, because we can conceive of the future, we spend a lot
of time reacting to imaginary threats (Yes, Nicaragua is just
a scant two-hour drive from the US border!) along with the
real ones. Thus humans appear to behave viciously, when in
fact they are reacting to threats that do not exist in the
here and now.
I point this out because humans are descended from vegetarian
apes, which diverged from the carnivores way back. It is more
reasonable to attribute our nasty behavior to pride and mob
psychology (both seen in apes) amplified by language.
Pat Hardy
|
4.6 | You can't fool mother nature. | EXODUS::EINES | Wind 'em up and let 'em go! | Wed May 21 1986 16:58 | 23 |
| Your points are very well stated, Pat. Obviously we are closer
to primates than felines, but I'm not sure if that makes us more
likely to be peaceful vegetarians. After all, look at our incisors,
and other killing abilities/attributes.
I'm not sure if conditioning plays as major a role as you state.
I think man's natural instinct is more towards the aggressive than
the peaceful, much like the baboon. The world condition seems very
similar to the experiments done to colonies of mice. As the population
gets larger, incidences of hostility and aggressiveness increase
dramatically. The mice form gangs(no joke), and engage in other
forms of aberant behavior.
Really, I don't even know if the comparisons are valid. Certainly
one could argue that we're generally peaceful creatures, or violent
by nature. The thing that DOES set us apart from every other living
creature may be our undoing; we have the unique ability to destroy
not only ourselves, but the entire planet. After all, killing is
a natural phenomenon which has always existed. It's undesireable,
but at least it is limited. Hopefully our self preservation instincts
will triumph in the long run.
Fred
|
4.7 | Nature+Nurture .ne. Nature vs. Nurture | RAINBO::HARDY | | Wed May 21 1986 20:05 | 24 |
| I don't think I used the word "conditioning" in my response.
Nor did I deny genetic and instinctual factors, and I certainly
did not imply that our root nature was that of peaceful
vegetarians! (Language is amazing!)
I agree all these terms are of doubtful validity. It's meaningless
to say that the mice in the overcrowding studies were agressive,
or peaceful; the situation just got to them, as it gets to people.
Again, unlike mice, we can sustain reactions to things that do not
exist in the here and now. Our "natural" reactions, whatever they
might be, are being played out in a world we are *making* -- where
religions that guide our worldview have been founded by terribly abused
people, and every injustice that ever occured is *still* remembered,
frozen in myth and song. I agree that all this bad karma is stressful
in an animal with teeth and claws, but damn near suicidal for an animal
with thermonuclear weapons.
By the way, I suspect the baboon's agressive behavior is an
adaptation to living on the ground with the leopard. No single
baboon can defeat a leopard, but four or five can drive the cat
off. This is almost certainly the origin of the "gang" in human
society.
|
4.8 | Honor The Life Spent | REX::MERRILL | Glyph it up! | Fri May 30 1986 15:38 | 18 |
| Some of the highest ideals of mankind are epitomized in the words
"Duty, Honor, Country", the motto of West Point Military Accadamy.
Why are such ideals needed? So that some will unshelfishly put
their lives on the line so that the survivors may retain their "life,
liberty, and [their] pursuit of happiness."
On this Memorial Day the country has long honored those whose duty
cost them their lives.
The phrase "laying down" one's life is a poor euphemism for dying
in the course of doing your duty. It is nevertheless a phrase that
should be honored, never demeaned. Many, many have died defending
the rights that we enjoy today. Hopefully when we too shall die
we shall have left the world a bit better and a bit safer place
for those who follow.
Rick Merrill
|
4.9 | And the Judge said "You got two choices, son" | ATFAB::REDDEN | | Fri Aug 22 1986 09:37 | 14 |
| A while back, it was not uncommon for young men in trouble to be
given a choice of joining the Army or going to jail. Generalizing
this a bit, the mind of a young man could conclude that killing
in a war was positive behavior compared to getting drunk and negative
behavior compared to getting married. The minds of younger brothers/
sisters/cousins/neighbors might conclude that "wastin' gooks" was a rite
of passage. I think this attitude is still prevalent in the judiciary,
and may still be perpetuating the view that killing for your country
can somehow compensate for social maladjustment.
Disclaimer - I am ABSOLUTELY not suggesting that all/most military service
is motivated in this way or that military service suggests ANYTHING
negative about an individual.
|
4.10 | You can have anything you want ... | JON::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Aug 25 1986 16:51 | 17 |
| By "A while back" you must be going way, way back. In the U.S. if
you are convicted of a felony you are not eligible for military
service. Think back to Arlow Gunthry sitting on the group W bench
in Alice's Restaurant with all the "mother stabers and father rapers".
>Generalizing this a bit, the mind of a young man could conclude that
>killing in a war was positive behavior compared to getting drunk and
>negative behavior compared to getting married.
Both joining the military and getting drunk involve the possibility
of killing someone. In the military there is a chance that it is done
in self defense. When the English used the practice of drafting people
from jail into the British Navy, Napoleon and the French Army was a
real threat to their survival. A lot more Englishmen would have been
killed if Napoleon had been able to cross the Channel.
George
|
4.11 | this is why | GAYNES::WHITMAN | boves::whitman MRO1 297-4898 | Tue Aug 26 1986 09:39 | 34 |
| re- 4.0
Today is my first look at this NOTES file, however not being
shy and having the isolation of the electronic media let's try a response to
one of my HOT BUTTONS.
<HYPOTHETICAL SCENARIO>
What must I do to provoke you into killing me?( if a policeman kills me
or a soldier kills me, they are your mercenaries.)
Statement: I am unwilling to be taken, I will die before capture.
For instance:
will raping your wife and daughter aggravate you enough?
will stealing all your possesions provoke you?
will burning your house with your family inside?
will torturing your mother and sister push you that far?
will denying your freedom be adequate?
I assume you are willing to die, therefore I won't ask you if the threat
of killing you will be enough.
<END of HYPOTHETICAL SCENARIO>
I strongly believe that nearly every person has a line which when
crossed will spur them into action. Where that line is drawn varies with the
individual. For some it takes very little to provoke violent behavior, others
can not be provoked. You maybe a pacifist to the point where you will not
defend yourself, but will you stand by and watch those who are helpless be
ravaged?
This is HONOR, this is COUNTRY.
There is no glory.
|
4.13 | Simple. | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Wed Aug 27 1986 13:25 | 6 |
|
Why people kill each other:
"You have what I want."
|
4.14 | Let us count the ways... | CASV04::DEVI | | Fri Sep 05 1986 14:14 | 11 |
| People kill each other when killing:
defends the helpless (children, women, unarmed...)
prevents people from being killed themselves (self-defense...)
seems the appropriate revenge for an emotional situation (cheating...)
increases the killer's sense of power/possession (wars, gangs...)
done by somebody else seems unjust (executions...)
keeps the economy going (wars, alcohol/drug/tobacco industries...)
is made to seem reversable,impermanent,funny (cartoons,movies...)
seems ok to do to animals and other living things...
|
4.15 | Yikes! | JUNIPR::DMCLURE | Vaxnote your way to ubiquity | Fri Sep 05 1986 15:05 | 18 |
| re: -1,
> seems the appropriate revenge for an emotional situation (cheating...)
This one caught my eye as being relevant to the "Cheating" note,
maybe it's time we disscussed what constitutes an "emotional situation"?
This also relates to my "Well, Burst My Bubble" note, because I have a
feeling that some network fantasies might be construed as "emotional
situations" and I'd hate to see the wrong person get this impression
(i.e. a potentially homocidal sort of sod).
I guess the only way to really discuss this particular phenomenon
(i.e. an "emotional situation") is to start up a new note, right? I'd
sort-of rather incorporate it into one of our existing notes somehow to
avoid too much fragmentation, so I'll await the general consensus before
starting a new note just yet.
-davo
|
4.16 | A poetic treat(ment) | RANI::HOFFMAN | | Sat Sep 13 1986 21:07 | 25 |
|
> seems the appropriate revenge for an emotional situation (cheating...)
... I suddenly knew
What a hunted thought quickened his step
And why he looked upon the garish day
With such a wistful eye:
The man had killed the thing he loved,
And so - he had to die.
Yet each man kills the thing he loves
By all let this be heard...
... The coward does it with a smile,
The brave man - with a sword.
This is not exactly the way Oscar Wilde wrote it (the Ballad of
Reading Gaol), but it's been over twenty years since I read it
last and memory is no longer what it used to be...
For the interested: dear old Oscar devoted a good 100 pages (or
so), trying to explain how the "appropriate revenge for an
emotional situation" led a man to "kill the thing he loved".
Not very convincing, but very well expressed.
-- Ron
|
4.17 | | NMGV07::STEUR | | Mon Sep 22 1986 04:03 | 4 |
|
|
4.18 | Complex Behaviors Are Learned | VAXUUM::DYER | The Weird Turn Pro | Wed Oct 15 1986 02:39 | 22 |
| The "humans are animals" argument overlooks the trend that animals do
not generally kill their peers. They may fight and injure each other,
but a fight to the death among adult members of the same species is
quite rare.
One of the things that differentiates humans from other animals is that
we learn practically everything we know; we aren't born with many in-
stincts. To the point, we aren't born with a predisposition to kill.
Killing is a complex action. It takes a lot to kill somebody! We
have to learn how to do it.
While it's a complex action, it seems to be a simple solution. The
motive for killing is almost always a conflict of wills. Killing is
a very simple approach to resolving the conflict: eliminate the
other's will!
Why do humans kill? Because most of the ones in power don't know other
means of conflict resolution. Nonviolent conflict resolution is com-
plex and detailed, and most of us aren't even adequate at the first
step (communication).
<_Jym_>
|
4.20 | Killing systems not= killing people | ATFAB::REDDEN | impeccably yours | Wed Oct 15 1986 19:53 | 10 |
| re:. 19 Killing is simple
I don't think people kill people because they want to. People kill
targets because it is socially desirable behavior. Understanding
that the things that are killed are people makes it *VERY* difficult.
War requires artifice to protect warriors from this reality. Further,
discovering that the things that one killed were people leaves one
in a fundamentally different state than before that discovery.
BTW, my exposure to this was 66-68, 5th Spcl Forces Grp, III Corp-RVN
|
4.22 | Killing in war | RANI::HOFFMAN | | Wed Oct 22 1986 00:04 | 27 |
|
RE:.19
Yea, I've been to war, three times; two of which kind of actively.
The good part is, I was never killed. Not even once.
Did I kill anyone? I don't think I killed anyone. But, I don't know.
For instance, one night we kept shooting at things that moved out
there in the dark. There were bodies all over the field in the evening.
There were bodies all over the field in the morning. There was shooting
all through the night. No one counted bodies either before or after. I
have no idea whether I killed anyone.
Which brings me to the real answer. In war, killing is different.
It's different morally - the guy out there is after you, better get
him first, in self defense. It's different psychologically - it's
not a crime, it's positively patriotic. Even the implemetation is
unlike the civilian variety - you do it in the open and you are not
ashamed (just scared silly).
The subject is "why people kill". Well, in war they kill because so
many miles behind them there are a mother, a wife, two kids. And, if
you don't kill, they will be hurt. So, you do your best to kill.
-- Ron
|
4.23 | Moderator - if tangential, please delete | ATFAB::REDDEN | Listening slowly | Wed Oct 22 1986 07:33 | 21 |
| Re: .22 Killing in War
> Which brings me to the real answer. In war, killing is different.
>It's different morally - the guy out there is after you, better get
>him first, in self defense. It's different psychologically - it's
>not a crime, it's positively patriotic. Even the implemetation is
>unlike the civilian variety - you do it in the open and you are not
>ashamed (just scared silly).
While I am in strong agreement with the above, I think our society
has made this hard to believe by our own confusion about Viet Nam.
The vast majority of men in combat roles in that war volunteered
because of the above beliefs, but were labeled as "baby killers"
and other vile epitaths upon their return. Our society has finally
erected large rocks in memoriam, but it is also not uncommon for a news
broadcast to note that some criminal was a Viet Nam veteran. If
I was 15 years old, I would be *VERY* confused about whether I would
be willing to die for my country in war.
|
4.24 | ex | ARMORY::CHARBONND | | Wed Nov 19 1986 09:31 | 7 |
| May I suggest a good book on the subject?
Try "Starship Troopers" by Robert Heinlein.
It may help, or at least give you more to
argue about. Dana
|
4.25 | Self-Defense | ZEKE::FARR | | Mon Dec 28 1987 05:46 | 15 |
| I know it has been awhile since this note has been read but I just
found it.
KILLING for the safety of yourself, your family,
or your lifestyle is something that is, I consider, neccessary.
I have a .357 Magnum loaded with 125 grain JHP within seconds
grasp of my bed. If someone enters my home and threatens the lives
of my wife or son or myself I will, without problems, unload my
weapon through the business end into the intruders chest.
The intruder knows the inherent danger of his selected profession.
I'm merely putting a hole in his statistical table, as well as his
chest. This may seem cold hearted but someone who enters your home,
country, or business for the purpose of taking something away from
you is not doing it with glad tidings and a warm heart, someone
must pay for something someone else gets for free. The criminal
should pay not the victim.
|
4.26 | Alternative Protection | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Mon Dec 28 1987 07:45 | 14 |
| And what if in your sleepiness, or in the darkness you make an
assumption there is an intruder and it is actually a member of
your family?
And if you have the presence of mind to wait until you have clear
view of the intruder your decision might be to late and you could
be on the receiving end of a similar weapon.
And what about your son...if the weapon is loaded and within seconds
grasp of your bed it is also within the curiosity of the child.
I would suggest that a state of the art security system might provide
the same functionality with less risk.
|
4.28 | Freedom Has It's Price | FROST::WHEEL | Master Card, Excite Me! | Tue Dec 29 1987 14:20 | 23 |
|
re: .27
how does the saying go?
"If guns were outlawed, only outlaws would have guns"?
It's not so much what people were killed by, as it is the crazy
people that do the killing. What about the drunk drivers with
the weapon they hold in their hands???
There is a proposal, though, that is in the works in Vermont that
makes sense to me is that (if passed) when a person goes to purchase
a firearm there will be a 10 day waiting period before the purchase
is made. This could put a better hold on "spur of the moment" suicides
and temporary insanity where someone has the urge to take a life.
Nothing is 100% guaranteed. Especially what goes on in the minds
of the temporary insane.
For what it's worth...
Dan
|
4.29 | | GUCCI::MHILL | Life's a mystery & I have a few clues. | Tue Dec 29 1987 15:32 | 4 |
| re .27
I think some of victms were stabbed and bludgoned
|
4.30 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | the Gort | Tue Dec 29 1987 20:19 | 28 |
| re.27
DAMN good right to keep and bear arms. I keep and bear mine!
The gun dident kill those people the fool that shot them did.
The gun only does what it was designed for. You would have a whole
lot less rights than you currently enjoy if there were no guns.
<FLAME ON>
I assume your comment was one of pro gun control and if so you need
to be less emotional and get the facts straight. Gun control has
it sights on taking guns away from law abiding citizens leaving
only criminals with guns. This should really make things better
as we wont have to worry about some innocent bystander killed by
your average citizen while protecting his family. The criminal will
only have to show his gun and do as he pleases as you wont have
the right to own one to defend yourself. <- i'm joking
The right for every citizen(except felons,drug addicts) to own guns
was given to each of us by the founders of this country to even
think of taking away those rights would be going against the very
concept that made america great. Gun control was the first thing
Hitler did before he killed thousands of Jews and others.
I hold the very idea of gun control as communist.
Protect your rights folks there wolves in sheeps clothing out there
that would con you into believing they are looking out for the good
of all. What happens if the russians invade(non nuke) and we dont
have guns? We start speaking russian!
<flame off>
-j
|
4.31 | Import the Citrus | BSS::BLAZEK | A new moon, a warm sum... | Tue Dec 29 1987 20:30 | 8 |
| I see pros and cons to this debate, but I can only tell you
one thing:
I will never go to Florida.
Carla
|
4.33 | | FIDDLE::LAVOIE | Who said I have to work for a living? | Wed Dec 30 1987 11:05 | 16 |
| Back to the original topic...
The man who killed 14 people and buried them inhas been put into
custody (about damn time) and family members are going to try and
identify the remains of the decomposed bodies. An account regarding
this jerk is that he is a "abused his wife, sexually assaulted his
children, beat his kids, and was basically a bomb waiting to explode,
which he did" I believe that quote is verbatim by the way. If
not many apologies.
He is in desperate need of psychiatric help and should be put away
and not let out for a very long time, if ever.
Debbi
|
4.34 | | 2B::ZAHAREE | This buffer ain't big enough for the both of us! | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:02 | 14 |
| re: .32
> Given a few years, almost all guns will disappear from the hands of
> criminals. Some will still be able to afford the outragous price a hot
> firearm will command, most small time criminals (the majority of all
> armed robberies and armed assaults) will be unable to get one.
An assumption on your part?
re: .31
Why is that?
- M
|
4.35 | The experts agree | TWINS::CORTIS | | Wed Dec 30 1987 12:34 | 16 |
|
But the experts egree that gn control works!!
who are these experts -
Hitler
Castro
Khadafy
Stalin
Dukakis
|
4.36 | Please stay on topic | VAXRT::CANNOY | There are no fnords in the ads. | Wed Dec 30 1987 13:12 | 6 |
| I do not want this note to degenerate into a gun control debate.
There is an enormous one in SOAPBOX already. Please keep to the
topic of what brings one person to kill another, and do not argue
whether the particular means should be available.
Tamzen, co-moderator
|
4.38 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Wed Dec 30 1987 16:07 | 4 |
| Oh, come on, do we *have* to discuss this? The moderators have already
complained once.
Jon
|
4.39 | crimes of passion? | MPGS::MCCLURE | Why Me??? | Thu Dec 31 1987 11:38 | 8 |
| I guess we're talking about instances other than war, self defense.
That still leaves lots of reasons. No witnesses to a crime etc.
Why does an investor feel the need to kill his stockbroker when
the market crashes? Why does an engineer thats frustrated at his
job go home and wipe out his family and himself? Its all crazy!
And that is the answer. Rational thought has ceased.
Bob Mc
|
4.41 | where they get their guns | COMET::PAPA | | Fri Jan 29 1988 11:01 | 9 |
| I read an article a few months ago on a servey that was done on
whear convicted criminals got their guns. the survey was conducted
on over 1000 convicted criminals. I dont rember the exact numbers
but as near as i can remember it said that 70% of the guns used
in crime were stolen or obtained from family members. about 20%
were purchased off the street as hot guns. the other 10% were leagly
purchased.
|
4.42 | | 2B::ZAHAREE | I *HATE* Notes! | Sat Jan 30 1988 19:10 | 261 |
| Dr. James Wright is a professor of sociology and director of the Social and
Demographic Research Institute (SADRI) at the University of Massachusetts,
an expert on survey research, and a reformed advocate of harsh gun laws.
In a 1975 article entitled, "The Ownership of the Means of Destruction:
Weapons in the United States," Wright attacked the NRA and gun ownership.
In 1979, Prof. Wright joined with Peter Rossi- also from SADRI at U. Mass.,
and a former president of the American Sociological Association- in
studying the gun issue more thoroughly. This has caused a dramatic shift
in their views.
The Armed Criminal In America
by Dr. Paul H. Blackman
Fear of the armed citizen and the threat of tough punishment for using a
gun (or other weapons) in committing a violent crime are significant
factors in both reducing and deterring crime, according to the results of a
survey of imprisoned felons conducted by Professors James D. Wright and
Peter H. Rossi.
Through in-depth interviews with 1,874 imprisoned felons conducted between
August, 1982 and January, 1983, the government-funded researchers delved
into the deep-seated attitudes of criminals on the questions of weapons
choice, deterrence, attitudes towards "gun control", criminal history and
firearms acquisition. The prisoners, studied under a grant from the
National Institute of Justice of the U.S. Justice Department, were
incarcerated in Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nevada and Oklahoma.
Although some of the survey and its authors conclusions have been released
piecemeal for the past few years, the government-issued Wright-Rossi
analysis will soon be released in it's entirety by the Justice Department.
Complete data tapes were made available to the public on June 7, and now
provide criminologists with extensive views into the mind of the criminal.
The officially released analysis will likely be edited by Justice
bureaucrats seeking to minimize its pro-gun conclusions. The data,
however, confirm policies espoused not only by the pro-gun fraternity for
the past two decades but by others concerned with the trend toward judicial
leniency in America. Based on characteristics such as age, race, education,
marital status, and conviction offense, as reported in other surveys of
state prisoner population, the experiences and attitudes of the adult male
prisoners studied by Wright and Rossi appear to be fairly representative of
the entire adult prison population, and of adult male criminals generally.
Wright-Rossi divided violators into the following categories corresponding
to their use of weapons in committing crimes: unarmed felons, improvisers,
knife-wielding criminals, one-time gun abusers, periodic or sporadic gun
abusers, and handgun and shotgun predators. The last group commits a wide
variety of crimes, using a host of weapons and with disproportionate
frequency. For most purposes, interest centers on criminals who have used
guns at least once in crime, although Wright notes that the predatory
group, one fifth of the total sample, accounts for half of the crimes
admitted to by the imprisoned felons.
For the impact of mandatory penalties, however, it is the unarmed or
non-gun criminals whose responses may be more instructive. The study show
a full 69% of respondents who did not carry firearms, but used knives,
razors, brass knuckles, or clubs, said that "stiffer sentences" was a "very
important or "somewhat important" reason for their not carrying a gun. The
fear of "stiffer sentences" was even greater for wholly unarmed felons,
with 79% citing tougher punishment as "very" or "somewhat important" reason
for not being armed.
Mandatory sentencing and other sentence enhancements help incapacitate
repeat, predatory criminals and also work to discourage their less
committed comrades from using a gun to commit a crime. The Wright-Rossi
survey reemphasizes the need for expanding career criminal programs and for
reducing the prosecutorial and judicial leniency, particularly with active
or predatory weapons-wielding criminals. Wright has noted, "It's only
simple justice to punish criminals who prey on people with such
intimidating weapons."
The Wright-Rossi survey shows clearly that gun laws affect only the
law-abiding, and that criminals know it. Eighty-two percent of the sample
agreed that "Gun laws only effect law-abiding citizens; criminals will
always be able to get guns," and 88% agreed that "A criminal who wants a
handgun is going to get one, no matter how much it costs." To this Wright
adds, "The more deeply we delve into our analyses of the illicit firearms
market, the more confident we become that these opinions are essentially
correct ones."
In states with widespread gun ownership and tough punishment for gun
misuse, criminals surveyed were often unarmed: 54% in Oklahoma, 62% in
Georgia, 40% in Maryland, 43% in Missouri, and 35% in Florida. In
Massachusetts, however, only 29% of the felon-respondants were unarmed. In
that state, it is difficult lawfully to acquire a firearm, and the illegal
carrying of a firearm, rather than the criminal misuse of a gun, is subject
to the mandatory penalty. The survey data indicate that the criminals'
fear of an armed victim relates directly to the severity of gun laws in the
state surveyed. Where gun laws are less restrictive, such as Georgia and
Maryland, criminals think twice before running the risk of facing an armed
victim; the are much less concerned in Massachusetts.
Fifty-six percent of the felons surveyed agreed that "A criminal is not
going to mess around with a victim he knows is armed with a gun;" 74%
agreed that "One reason burglars avoid houses when people are at home is
that they fear being shot."
A 57% majority agreed that "Most criminals are more worried about meeting
an armed victim than they are about running into the police." In asking
felons what the personally thought about while committing crimes, 34%
indicated that they thought about getting "shot at by police" or "shot by
victim."
The data suggest that criminals may be a little more concerned about being
caught by police and imprisoned than about being shot, but meeting the
armed citizen clearly elicited fears of being shot. That deterrent effect
of citizen gun ownership appeared in their responses to questions about
actual encounters. Although 37% of those surveyed admitted that they
personally had "run into a victim who was armed with a gun," that figure
surpassed the 50% mark for armed criminals, an experience shared by 57% of
the active gun predators. And 34% of the sample admitted to having been
"scared off, shot at, wounded, or captured by an armed victim."
Significantly, almost 40% said there was at least one time when the
criminal "decided not to do a crime because [he] knew or believed that the
victim was carrying a gun." Clearly, armed citizens represent a real
threat to criminals, a threat with which large numbers a personally
familiar, or familiar with through the shared experiences of their fellow
outlaws.
Other surveys, taken of law-abiding gun owners, suggest that handguns are
used for protection about 350,000 times each year in America. The data
from the Wright-Rossi felon survey, based on the number of crimes each
felon has committed, and the number of times the criminals acknowledge
being deterred or scared off- some a few or even many times- lends support
to that figure. And it would appear form the survey data and police data
that a criminal is much more likely to be driven off from a particular
crime by an armed victim than to be imprisoned for it by the criminal
justice system.
The criminal's physical condition also favors the armed citizens' success
in thwarting an attempted crime. Abuse of alcohol or drugs appears to be
commonplace. More than one quarter of the felons admitted to alcoholism
and/or drug addiction, and most had used a variety of hard and soft drugs.
A majority (57%) admitted to being high on drugs and/or intoxicated at the
time the committed the offense for which they were imprisoned. Drug abuse
tends to increase along with the number of crimes committed. About 80% of
the most active predators are drug abusers, compared to just over half the
whole sample surveyed.
The number of criminals committing crimes while "high" on drugs or alcohol
undermines the image, often espoused by the anti-gunners, of a victim's
inability to overcome a competent, controlled criminal. The trumped-up
charge that resistance is useless against criminal attack is proved to be
unfounded based on criminals' expressed fear of the armed citizen and
likelihood that the criminals' abilities and reflexes are dramatically
impaired by substance abuse.
The Wright-Rossi data further confirm that the widespread policy of
treating criminals under 18 years of age with kid gloves, or ignoring the
pre-adult records in determining sentencing in later years, is misguided
and mistaken. A majority of felons surveyed had, before turning 18,
committed at least one burglary and one theft, while one-third had
committed a robbery, and over one-fourth had committed an armed robbery.
The survey also refutes the oft-stated myth that criminal obtain firearms
to commit crime through legitimate business channels, such as firearms
dealers in general or pawnbrokers in particular. And the survey data thus
show the absurdity of attempting to regulate criminal access to firearms by
regulating legitimate channels. As Wright noted, criminals "obtain guns in
hard-to-regulate ways from hard-to-regulate sources. ...Swaps, purchases,
and trades among private parties (friends and family members) represent the
dominant patter of acquisition within the illicit firearms market."
The average gun-wielding criminal studied expected to have no difficulty in
obtaining a gun within a day after release from prison. Fifty percent
expected to unlawfully purchase a gun through unregulated channels; 25%
anticipated borrowing a gun, and only one-eighth expected to steal their
guns. The choices of where to obtain a handgun, among those categorized as
handgun abusers, ranged downward from friends, to the street, to fences, to
blackmarket and their drug dealers. Licensed gun dealers do not figure
high in the plans of the felons surveyed. And pawnbrokers accounted for
only 6% of the mentions of possible sources for guns. That low number
supports the finding of BATF studies showing that pawnshops were not
disproportionately used by criminals who illegally obtained firearms
through licensed dealers.
Theft certainly is a problem, but other unregulated acquisition is even
more popular with felons. Criminals are thieves, however, and guns are
clearly among the items stolen, mostly to sell rather than for personal
use. The criminals surveyed reported committing a great number of thefts,
with a large percentage stealing guns from regulated sources. Among those
who reported stealing a gun (40% of the total sample), 37% stole from
stores, 15% from a policeman, 16% from a truck shipment, and 8% from a
manufacturer.
Well-secured and well-regulated sources such as stores, shippers,
manufacturers and even police may represent a substantial percentage of the
guns stolen, indicating that theft from individuals may have been
exaggerated as a problem in the illegal commerce in firearms as
anti-gunners frequently charge. These data might suggest that a reasonable
policy conclusion would be to make theft of a firearm, especially more than
one, a felony regardless of the value of the gun or guns stolen.
The Wright-Rossi landmark study also explodes the so-called "Saturday Night
Special" myth, long propounded by anti-gun activists, that criminals prefer
small, cheap handguns and that their ban would save lives. The data
indicate that small-caliber, short barreled, or inexpensive handguns are
quite opposite the characteristics sought when criminals steal or choose to
own a handgun to commit a violent crime.
The firearm of choice, based on the handguns criminals own, is akin to
those used by law enforcement: a .38 or .357 with a 4" barrel, made by
Smith and Wesson, Colt, or Ruger with an estimated retail value of over
$150. Felons stated preferences for high quality, accurate and
easy-to-shoot guns, generally revolvers rather than semi-automatic
firearms. Only 14% of the guns owned by criminals would fit the classic
anti-gun definition of a "Saturday Night Special," combining small caliber
(.32 or less) with short barrel (3" or less). Fifty-five percent combined
a caliber of .38 or more powerful with a barrel length of at least 4".
Only 5% admitted to owning a .25, although this particular model accounts
for a 13% domestic market share in handguns purchased by U.S citizens,
according the the earlier Wright-Rossi book, 'Under the Gun.'
The survey findings give the lie to any suggestion, popular with Handgun
Control, Inc., and its Kennedy-Rodino gun gill, that a ban on small
handguns, the so-called "Saturday Night Specials," would be beneficial.
According to Wright, felons make it clear that such a law "would stimulate
a wholesale shift to bigger and more lethal weapons among predatory
felons." The same crimes would still be committed, but with potentially
more lethal firearms. Wright has characterized his findings on the possible
impact of such a ban as "uniformly dismal. If what they're saying is true,
I'd rather they carry little cheap stuff. Not that I want them to be
carrying anything, but if the don't have little guns they might buy .357
Magnums or 9mm semi-automatic pistols, and the death rates go up with
larger-caliber weapons."
The data show that an outright ban on handguns, such as is proposed by the
National Coalition to Ban Handguns, would have nightmarish consequences.
Most of the criminals who have previously used handguns- and especially
those predators who have committed many crimes using handguns- said they
would simply move to long guns which would be sawed down to concealable
size. Outlawing handguns would simply make career criminals turn to what
Wright describes as bigger more lethal weapons.
If a ban on handguns was enacted, 64% of the criminal respondents said they
would shift from a handgun to sawed-off rifles and shotguns. That finding
was elicited from three-fourths of "handgun predators" and five-eighths of
those who had used a handgun more than once in crime. Wright says, "We
would do well, by the way, to take this response seriously: most of the
predators who said they would substitute the sawed-off shotgun also told us
elsewhere in the questionnaire that the had in fact sawed off a shotgun at
some time in their lives and that it would be 'very easy' for them to do so
again. The possibility that even a few of the men who presently prowl the
streets with handguns would, in the face of a handgun ban, prowl with
sawed-off shotguns instead is itself good reason to think twice about the
advisability of such a ban. That as many as three-quarters of them might
do so causes one to tremble." Wright argues, then, that there are
"sensible and humane" reasons for opposing a handgun ban.
The policy implications of the Wright-Rossi survey should give lawmakers
pause before inflicting restrictive gun laws on the law-abiding gun owner
who plays a significant, proven role in curbing violent crime. This policy
implication is especially significant, coming as it does, from a man who
admits to having taking for granted- before five years of studying guns,
crime, and violence in America- that "gun control" laws would be
beneficial. Today, Wright concurs with the National Rifle Association
members in saying, "They oppose gun regulation because they don't believe
it will help control crime, and so do I."
|
4.43 | Sources ??? | WCSM::PURMAL | Chance favors the prepared mind | Fri Feb 05 1988 11:56 | 6 |
| re: .42
I'd like the source of the article. Was their any bibliography
with the article?
ASP
|
4.44 | | 2B::ZAHAREE | I *HATE* Notes! | Mon Feb 08 1988 09:36 | 5 |
| Borrowed, without permission, from The American Rifleman. The file I
placed that in is dated June 86, so I suspect it was an April or May
issue. Let me see if I still have it somewhere at home.
- M
|
4.45 | NO HARD QUESTIONS PLEASE!!! | PIGGY::BELEVICK | | Wed Aug 24 1988 17:37 | 33 |
| THIS IS IN RESPONSE TO QUITE A FEW REPLIES ON THE "TOPIC(S)" HERE.
FROM THE VERY BEGINNING OF THE FILE, JUST A NOTE TO BEAR IN MIND...A
FELINE IS A VICIOUS KILLER? WHAT? THAT IS REALLY AN IGNORANT REMARK.
TRY FINDING A BIT OUT ABOUT THE ANIMALS. FOR ONE: THEY KILL TO
EAT, FOR ANOTHER, WHEN THEY KILL TO EAT IT IS WITH THE UTTMOST CARE
IN KILLING THEIR PREY QUICKLY SO AS NOT TO "MAKE THE ANIMAL SUFFER".
READ UP ON THE SUBJECT A BIT. ALSO, I WOULD SAY THAT HUMANS ARE
VERY CAPABLE OF BEING THE OFFENDERS OF BEING VICIOUS KILLERS, HOW
ABOUT THOSE WHO WOULD SHOOT AN INTRUDER IN THE CHEST TO KILL, RATHER
THAN SAY SERIOUSLY MAMING THEM. IN FACT MAMING THEM MIGHT BE A
BETTER ALTERNATIVE IF YOU REALLY WANT THE JOB DONE RIGHT. THEY'LL
LIVE WITH IT FOR THE REST OF THEIR LIVES WITH SOMETHING TO THINK
ABOUT. CONSIDERING HEATED DEBATE ON THE LEGAL SYSTEM DOING ANYTHING
CONSTRUCTIVE ABOUT SUCH CRIMES, YOU COULD DO ALL SORTS OF VICIOUS
THINGS TO GET THE EVIL DOERS BACK NOW COULDN'T YOU.
GUNS...ANOTHER GOOD SUBJECT...THEY ONLY DO WHAT YOU MAKE THEM DO,
I HAVEN'T SEEN ONE GET UP AND LOAD ITSELF AND HEAD RIGHT TO THE
NEAREST PERSON OR ANIMAL IT DECIDED TO OBLITERATE YET! HAVE ANY
OF YOU?
ANOTHER GOOD WEAPON...CARS...THAT'S THE BEST ONE YET...THOSE LIKE
THE GUNS ARE ONLY WEAPONS...THEY CAN'T DO ANYTHING WITHOUT US "PEOPLE".
WAR...WAR ALWAYS WAS, WILL ALWAYS BE...QUESTIONING WHY WE HAVE WAR
IS LIKE QUESTIONING WHY WE ARE ALL HERE. VERY, VERY TIME CONSUMING
AND THERE REALLY ISN'T AN ANSWER THAT WE KNOW OF IS THERE? WE CAN
ALL HAVE OUR OPINION...SUCH AS THIS REPLY, BUT WHNE YOU THINK OF
IT, WHAT WOULD WE TALK ABOUT IF EVERYTHING WAS EASILY EXPLAINABLE
AND DOCILE, CORRECT, HAPPY, ETC...THINK ABOUT IT!!
FOOD FOR THOUGHT!
|
4.46 | batting 1000 | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching the Clouds for Rainbows | Thu Aug 25 1988 02:45 | 6 |
| "THEY KILL TO EAT, FOR ANOTHER, WHEN THEY KILL TO EAT IT IS WITH THE UTTMOST
CARE IN KILLING THEIR PREY QUICKLY SO AS NOT TO "MAKE THE ANIMAL SUFFER"."
Obviously you have never seen a cat playing with a mouse...
Jim.
|
4.47 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, 293-5358, VAX Architecture | Thu Aug 25 1988 08:31 | 10 |
| Re .46:
Correct. Both of my cats catch mice. Then let them go and chase them
all over again. Catch them, pick them up and throw them into the air.
When they land, chase them again. When the mouse is worn out, the cats
bat them with their paws until they run again and can be chased. The
mice die by being played to death, and then are not eaten. This isn't
just the behavior of domesticated cats either. I've seen nature
programs of wild (and mature) cats doing exactly the same thing. My
cats aren't kittens; one is 8, the other is 14.
|
4.48 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Great Caesar calls (he's such a tyrant!) | Thu Aug 25 1988 13:34 | 3 |
|
My cat doesn't waste time jiving about with her dinner.
She kills and eats quickly... even small rabbits.
|
4.49 | sorry dad...the captain told me to shoot ya... | SALEM::SAWYER | Alien. On MY planet we reason! | Mon Aug 29 1988 19:01 | 10 |
|
some people kill each other cus they are angry
and some cus they weren't careful and caused a deadly accident
but most people kill other people because someone sitting in
a nice warm comfortable cosy and very safe large mansion protected
and defended by hundreds/thousands of little boy with big guns and
no mind told them to.....so they did.....
|
4.50 | | NAMBE::RMOORE | | Mon Mar 18 1991 08:38 | 11 |
|
People kill each other, mainly cause of pride. As long there is
sin in this world it is very difficult for people to be at peace
with each other.
Murder is hate ripened into deed. C. Spurgeon
RM
|
4.51 | like it or not | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Tue Mar 19 1991 00:34 | 3 |
|
Killing is a part of Nature. Killing is natural.
|
4.52 | birth of the golden rule | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Wed Mar 20 1991 13:19 | 16 |
|
>
>
> Killing is part of nature. Killing is natural.
>
>
>
Ah, but fearing death and striving to survive is part of nature too.
And when it occurs to a member of a species that *another* member might
also fear death and strive to survive...
|
4.53 | no problem with that point, if it was one | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Thu Mar 21 1991 03:16 | 5 |
| -1
I don't disagree with that. It goes hand in hand, and as a result,
makes killing more natural.
|
4.54 | | NOPROB::JOLLIMORE | musta bin a hunert 'n tin | Thu Mar 21 1991 07:31 | 5 |
| imo...
there is nothing natural about people killing people.
Jay
|
4.55 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Thu Mar 21 1991 12:56 | 18 |
| Hmmmmmm.....
In nature when an animal kills it's for food. Seldom will a speices
kill it's own speices.... (I know.... there are exceptions but in those
cases, provisions are made in either a high birth number so only the
strongest survive and such).
When man kills man... its with a knowledge of what he is doing....
(excluding accidental deaths) the beasts in nature to awaken one
morning and say "I'm gonna kill all my family members today" or "I'm
gonna kill the guy in the territory next to mine because I like it
better" He tends to do it out of a reaction to stimuli.
Man on the other hand is a different story.... he allows himself to be
placed in situations to kill or be killed KNOWINGLY. He plots to kill
or be killed KNOWINGLY.... this isn't natural.
Skip
|
4.56 | can't be disproved | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Mon Mar 25 1991 05:52 | 12 |
| > Man on the other hand is a different story.... he allows himself to be
> placed in situations to kill or be killed KNOWINGLY. He plots to kill
> or be killed KNOWINGLY.... this isn't natural.
Oh? Think about. I believe based on your own quote that it is.
If he has allowed these things from the beginning of time, then one might
conclude that it is quite natural.
Also, animals don't always fight/kill for food. They also claim territory.
db
|
4.57 | people killing people... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:25 | 3 |
| Nope. There's nothing "natural" about it.
Karen
|
4.58 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Mon Mar 25 1991 15:56 | 16 |
|
Re: 4.57 by CARTUN::BERGGREN,
> -< people killing people... >-
>
> Nope. There's nothing "natural" about it.
I'm afraid your are ignoring the facts. Look through the history of
mankind. From day one, human societies did it, groups did it and
individuals did it.
It's OK to implore it, but the fact is, killing **IS** natural to
humans.
-- Ron
|
4.59 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Mon Mar 25 1991 16:26 | 13 |
| Ron .58,
I'm afraid you are ignoring the "facts." If we could somehow look
through the history of humankind and determine how many people have
lived (through adulthood) and of those numbers determine the percentage
of those who actually killed another person, I believe we'd find the
number to be EXTREMELY low.
Imo, you are over-generalizing your hypothesis. Or perhaps we just
have different notions of what constitutes "natural" behavior in human
beings.
Karen
|
4.60 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Mon Mar 25 1991 22:29 | 18 |
|
Re: .59 by CARTUN::BERGGREN,
> Or perhaps we just
> have different notions of what constitutes "natural" behavior in human
> beings.
Guess so. Just to set the record straight, I define 'natural
behaviour' as 'behaviour which stems from our nature'. You (based on
your argument that only a small percentage of us kill) seem to
define 'natural behaviour' as 'prevalent behaviour'.
Actually, most aspects of our behaviour are learned, not natural.
For example, it is natural to walk about naked, yet the percentage
of people who do that (at least, in our culture) is rather small.
-- Ron
|
4.61 | I suppose Ron put it better... | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Tue Mar 26 1991 03:24 | 5 |
|
re: .58
Exactly. That's my point.
|
4.62 | All those people were killed by somebody... | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Mar 26 1991 10:49 | 19 |
| re .59, statistics.
On the contrary, given the existing anthropological and historical
data, I would guess about half of all adult male humans ever living
killed another person during their lives.
Consider Napoleon Chagnon's data on the Yanomamo, or the fossil
evidence of early human cannibalism; consider that the history we
read is an almost unbroken sequence of wars; consider that each
little village ruler used the death penalty until recently; consider
the large fraction of men in modern times who have been in the
military.
As an example: World War II saw the death of some twenty or fourty
millions, depending on how you count. There were about that many men
and woman in the military and police forces of the combatants. On
average, that's a one-for-one ratio.
-John Bishop
|
4.63 | Not so clearly... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Tue Mar 26 1991 11:05 | 29 |
| re: .62 and .61
Well, to muddy the waters even further I suppose...
*I* would argue that while it may have been human, it might
not have been a human spiritual being...perhaps a human animal
or a human being, but not of the most highly evolved possibility.
In any case, .62, if women make up half of all the species,
(and if that has always been the case) then your argument gets
shrunken or reduced quite a bit, for very few women (relative
to the numbers...i.e., percentages) have run around killing
people, either domestically or in war. Maybe women are somehow
more naturally human beings than men are? Lots of arguments
here, huh? Also, citing what you do, more people (especially
men) have *been killed* than have actually killed. One determined
killer can ruin the lives of scads and multiples of living things
(witness Hitler, e.g., who alone was instigatorily responsible for
the death of perhaps 15 million people...only perhaps as many as
10 million others died at the hands of others during the same time
frame.)
Yes, it is something people have done. As one approaches levels
of human potential, that is, at a human spiritual potential level,
however, other ways of dealing with people become more viable and
practiced (a la Gandhi, e.g.) than by the expediency and convenience
of killing.
Stick to it, Karen.
Frederick
|
4.64 | | MINAR::BISHOP | | Tue Mar 26 1991 11:51 | 23 |
| I said "half of male humans".
Hitler did not kill 15 million people. He, personally, may not
have killed anyone. Giving orders to kill may make you just
as responsible legally as actually pulling the trigger of the
gun, but the actual killer is still a person who has killed another
person.
The largest number of victims of a single killer that I know of
would be on the order of several thousand victims claimed by the
bombadiers who dropped the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Along more traditional lines, a certain gladiator of Imperial Rome
was famous for having killed around three hundred men. Audey Murphy
was famous more recently for killing only about forty men.
I'd guess that the typical war-time killer only killed a few others.
As for "human spiritual being"--it sounds to me like you have a
conclusion you want ("highly evolved humans don't kill"), and are
defining terms until you get that conclusion.
-John Bishop
|
4.65 | a complex issue... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Tue Mar 26 1991 11:52 | 51 |
| Ron .60,
Thanks for setting the record straight. As for your
definition of natural behavior that it is
> ...'behavior which stems from our nature'.
This infers to me that all behavior is natural, since it is
difficult to imagine that any behavior would not "stem from our
nature"; and yet you seem to contradict this statement with the
following:
> Actually, most aspects of our behavior are learned, not
natural.
Contradiction aside, I agree with you, and imo killing others
is a perfect example of *learned* behavior. For if it was
natural for human beings to kill each other, how would the
species have survived as long as it has? Why all the counseling
and training for service people who are confronted with the
experience of killing the "enemy?" Which brings up another
question. If killing others is natural, why has our society
created laws against it? And although there are laws against
it, a moral dilema arises for many people when that same society
turns around and sanctions killing in other situations.
But this discussion does raise a central issue that people
have wrestled with throughout history. Many make it their
profession to define and understand human behavior. To me, what
influences and molds various facets of human behavior is a
complex web of social, economical, cultural, political,
religious, and individual influences, not easily cleaved apart
to determine what is "natural" and what is not.
But imo, just because groups of people have *allowed*
"situational" killing, that does not necessarily equate to
killing as a "natural" aspect of human behavor. The primary
concern I have about this line of reasoning and conclusion, is
that in its extreme, it tends to foster an apathetic or
denial/avoidance reaction when killing occurs. This in turn,
can override our option to invoke our more developed mental
capabilities -- those that help us to discern the moral and
spiritual implications of such actions and our ability to
transform the attitudes which source them. I think our future
and quality of life depends largely upon these attitudes and our
awareness as to how we evolve them.
Thanks Ron, I appreciate your thoughts and candor.
Karen
|
4.66 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Tue Mar 26 1991 11:57 | 7 |
|
Thanks very much for your perspective, Frederick (.64).
I agree with you. And thanks also for the encouragement.
:-)
Kdpty
|
4.67 | "Let's nuke 'em 'til they glow!" Oops, what about us? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Tue Mar 26 1991 12:39 | 46 |
| re: .64 (John)
Okay, John, I'll let the "point/counter-point" go...
Now, then, get to the "half" of humanity that doesn't
seem to have the same prediliction to killing that the other
half does. That is, why don't women kill in the same percentages?
They, as repressed as they've always been, have at least as much
reason to be angry and to displace that anger vis a vis killing
as men do; yet they don't. Why don't men value life as much
as women do though women get a much shorter end of the stick?
Actually, never mind, I can answer this myself. Because
of social pressures, because men are *physically* stronger and
women more afraid to get involved, because, because, because...
but these same social pressures should work in reverse, as Karen
has pointed out. These same social pressures should be enough
to keep us from killing in the first place.
Grunt! You hit me!
Wheeze! But you were taking my porridge!
Grunt! Yeah, well, I'll do it again, too. But for that,
I'll kill you!
Wheeze! No you won't! I'll kill you first!
Sigh...You made me spill the porridge.
Whew!...Yes, I'm sorry, but it is my porridge.
Sigh...Oh, well, I'm hungry and I don't have any but I don't
want to cause hardship.
Whew!...Look, I'll share it if you help me clean up afterwards.
Wheeze! (aside) [Damn, this person wants to fight...I better
get them before they get me!]
Grunt! (aside) [Damn, this person wants to fight...I better get
them before they get me!]
Sigh! (aside) [I don't want to fight...I might get hurt or
for sure somebody will...maybe I can avoid a fight.]
Whew! (aside) [I don't want to fight...I might get hurt or
for sure somebody will...maybe I can avoid a fight.]
Grunt! and Wheeze!--typical human animal responses...
Sigh! and Whew!--human beings who have an ability to empathize
and show compassion, to envision another alternative...
Frederick
|
4.68 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Tue Mar 26 1991 20:23 | 6 |
| re.65
When Cain killed Able in the garden who do you suggest he learned
the act of killing from? Killing is as much a part of human nature
as is our disdain for the act of killing it is not a learned behaviour.
-j
|
4.69 | bingo | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Wed Mar 27 1991 05:01 | 10 |
| Good point Jerry. Some of these notes were getting too 'war related'
and thereby creating confusion. I was thinking of cave men as I read
those notes, but you've come up with an excellent example.
Someone mentioned psychology groups and that was amusing. I guess
Cain didn't have a shrink to go to!
It's just as natural to kill as it is for little children to get angry
on the playground and push each other around.
|
4.70 | irrelevant | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Wed Mar 27 1991 05:07 | 6 |
|
>>>>If killing others is natural, why has our society created laws against it?
Man-made-laws to not govern natural behavior.
|
4.71 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Wed Mar 27 1991 09:31 | 11 |
| Frederick raised an interesting point a few notes back about which
gender does the vast majority of killing -- men.
Therefore, let me shift my perspective for a moment and ask you this:
For those of you who believe killing *is* natural behavior, would you
say it is natural MALE behavior, (as opposed to natural HUMAN behavior)?
Why or why not?
Karen
|
4.72 | "mommy, why doesn't the zoo let us feed them?" | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Wed Mar 27 1991 09:40 | 11 |
| Re: .69 & .70
As far as I'm concerned, you've simply given support to the
concept I mentioned in regards to human animals versus more evolved
states. Cain and Abel, (playing along with this bit of fiction)
would hardly qualify as evolved human spiritual beings, in my version
of that novel. Killing may be "natural" for human animals...I will
admit to that.
Frederick
|
4.73 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Wed Mar 27 1991 12:42 | 64 |
|
Re: .65 and .71,
Karen,
You make some intriguing points. For instance:
> > ...'behavior which stems from our nature'.
>
> This infers to me that all behavior is natural, since it is
> difficult to imagine that any behavior would not "stem from our
> nature"; and yet you seem to contradict this statement with the
> following:
>
> > Actually, most aspects of our behavior are learned, not
> natural.
No contradiction, since I truly do not agree that 'all behavior is
natural'. I believe that mostly, the reverse is true: most of our
prevalent behaviour is NOT natural. For instance, Homo Sapiens is
polygamous **by nature**, yet many societies dictate monogamy.
> ... killing others is a perfect example of *learned* behavior.
I think this is the crux of our difference. I believe that killing
is natural and not killing is a learned behaviour. See how we can
both use your argument to defend our opposing positions:
> If killing others is natural, why has our society created
> laws against it?
Exactly because it is natural. Otherwise, laws would not be
necessary. But to insure the survival of our culture (not the race -
it will withstand free for all **natural** killing, just like other
species do), we put in force requirements that curtail out natural
inclinations.
> Why all the counseling
> and training for service people who are confronted with the
> experience of killing the "enemy?"
Because out learned behaviour overpowers our innate natural
inclination. The same reply applies to such behaviour as cleanliness
(yes, we are dirt-inclined by nature), dressing in public, etc.
> For those of you who believe killing *is* natural behavior, would you
> say it is natural MALE behavior, (as opposed to natural HUMAN behavior)?
Frankly, I don't know. 'Psychology 101' went only this far... Let's
ask Pam Smart :-).
I would surmise that the whole idea of femininity is a societal ruse
to take advantage of the physically weaker half. In cultures where
this did not happen (not too many, I guess, but think of the
Amazons), women probably kill just as willingly as men do in
male-dominant society.
-- Ron
|
4.74 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Mar 27 1991 12:57 | 12 |
| re .59 statistics....
According to what you've said... half the human race has killed the
other half off and the only people left alive today are those who
killed. I have yet to kill another human being and doubt that many
in here ever have.... kinda blows those stats all to heck.
Besides... I learned a long time ago that statistically speaking
numbers can be made to report and prove any point you want if you
use them correctly.
Skip
|
4.75 | Balancing out the warrior tendencies... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME---as an Adventurer! | Wed Mar 27 1991 14:13 | 33 |
| re: .73 (Ron)
An interesting finding of some studies done a bunch of
years ago (I met the man who was a part of them) was that
"Goddess" oriented peoples were less violent than "God"
oriented people (this study included Margaret Mead's works
and Congressional voting records, etc.) Matriarchal
societies (and there were very few examples of this)
had no rape, long lives, no "God-fear," and were not warrior
oriented. Conversely, a look at the world as a whole today
can show us what the result of a patriarchal, "God-worshipping"
set of cultures brings us.
To carry that into a touch of depth, one could resonably
argue that women tend to reflect "Goddess energy" more than men
do (whom we could equally argue reflect more of "God energy.")
Therefore, if we were to assume that the doing energy of "God"
and the being energy of "Goddess" were put side by side, the
doing energy "wins." (Wins what? would be the most logical follow-up
question.) Voila our dear planet Earth! Men, being the resourceful
and benevolent beings that they are, in fear of losing their
aforementioned "power," can continue to dominate the corresponding
and balancing energies "out of the way."
Anyway, this is clearly headed into other areas of belief, but
if you *really* want an answer, it would behoove us to look at all
possibilities, including this. Obviously I cannot substantiate
part of this, but anthropological evidence is at hand to demonstrate
the partial validity or at least the viability of these contentions.
Learned behaviors? Yes. Does it have to do with genetics or
gender? Also a qualified (asterisked) "yes." Can these damaging
ways of viewing life be altered to produce harmony and peace? Yes.
Frederick
|
4.76 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Mar 27 1991 14:34 | 15 |
| I'd like to point out something else in the "Statistics" (that note
bugged me for a LOT of reasons)....
How many of the men that did kill became ill afterwards? If it's a
"natural" act, then why do so many of the those who have killed during
wars, etc. end up showing all the classic examples of mental stress
and illness afterwards? Everything from denial, selective amnesia, and
drug/alcohol abuse, to illness and lose of mental capacity afterwards?
In animals killing for ANY reason does not result in such behavior.
Man may have been violent and a killer once... but he is evolving in
some ways faster then any other species on earth.
Skip
|
4.77 | a multi-level issue... | CARTUN::BERGGREN | I have faith in the nights... | Wed Mar 27 1991 15:16 | 16 |
| Frederick .75,
Thanks for your thoughts about matriarcal vs. patriachal societies. I
haven't had time to respond to Ron's note, but you addressed the
general theme of my thoughts.
Skip .76,
You mentioned an important point I hadn't gotten to yet - that of the
various post-war trauma syndromes. I agree with you Skip; if killing
was natural, then why are there so many incidences of dis-ease
associated with it?
Thanks for your thoughts,
Karen
|
4.78 | what about killings on the street? | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Mon Apr 01 1991 07:59 | 32 |
| >>>If it's a "natural" act, then why do so many of the those who have killed
during wars, etc. end up showing all the classic examples of mental stress
and illness afterwards? Everything from denial, selective amnesia, and
drug/alcohol abuse, to illness and lose of mental capacity afterwards?
Many don't. But for those that do, keep in mind that as man has become
civilized, he's been taught that killing is bad, and that it is against the law
of man and of God. He has 'learned' this, therefore it's quite conceivable
that would account for your comment about those that have problems after
killing in times of war.
Also note, more people are murdered on America's streets than in any war, by
people of all ages. Even teens are killing others, sometimes for nothing more
than some silly gang nonsense. Others are murdered for a couple of dollars,
etc, etc. And you know, they ain't having the problems you mentioned. Many of
them will kill you and not blink an eye. I've seen some on talk shows say
from prison that they weren't sorry they killed, just that they got caught.
>>>In animals killing for ANY reason does not result in such behavior.
Well, they may not be seeing a shrink, or they may not be having drug/alcohol
abuse, but as for the selective amnesia... how can we prove that? Perhaps they
do suffer some mental stress. I would think that a mountain lion gets worked
up somewhat for his kill and would also have to *come down* after he has
killed. Seems natural to me. But as you can't prove they have mental stress,
I can't prove they do.
>>>Man may have been violent and a killer once... but he is evolving in some
ways faster then any other species on earth.
Thus, as I explained above, this could be the reason for some men experiencing
'guilt' after having killed. Repeat, SOME men.
|
4.79 | 5 years later and still ticking | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Sun Apr 14 1991 13:52 | 17 |
| Wow, I see this note is still going 5 years after I started it. I
remember the day I opened this note. I came to check out this new
conference; this conference started up straight after SEXETERA got
booted off the ENET. I thought I'd enter a note that was bound to
provoke discussion, I guess it has.
It seems like nothing has changed in 5 years in regard to man's
inhumanity to man (please excuse the tautology here). We still have
dictators that march into adjacent countries and kill a load of babies.
And individuals of highly industrialized countries who take great pride
in carpet bombing 10s or maybe even 100s of thousands of Iraqi humans
to death.
I wish the human race would advance to the next level of civilization
but I fear I won't see it in my lifetime.
Dave
|
4.80 | No law states that killing is wrong | WCSM::FLICK | MASTER OF ILLUSION | Tue May 07 1991 01:09 | 6 |
| There are no laws that state that Killing an individual is breaking the
law. It comes to a moral decision that everyone knows that killing is
wrong so man created laws defining the degree and type of retribution
that must be enforced on the killer.
MF
|
4.81 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue May 07 1991 15:18 | 6 |
| Re-1
And if you buy that I have a bridge in Brooklyn I'll be willing to sell
you as well.
Skip
|
4.82 | I am not wrong | GSMOKE::MFLICK | | Wed May 08 1991 02:48 | 6 |
| I am absolutly serious about this. My father is a lawyer. There are no
laws in the United States that state that Murder is illegal. The fact
is everyone knows it is wrong and the laws reflect a punisment that is
congruent to the crime.
MF
|
4.83 | | YUPPY::DAVIESA | Just the London skyline, sweetheart | Wed May 08 1991 08:57 | 30 |
|
That makes a warped kind of sense to me.
I believe that we have a scale of "morality", if you like....
At one end, there are things that are objectively true.
For example - the sun is hot.
There is no value judgement - "good" or "bad" - attached to this.
At the other end of the scale are very personal value judgements
that are subjective and "IMO" views.
In the middle there are things that society has generally agreed
to stick a "good" or "bad" label on. Society has the power to
make laws, so the law upholds these generally "agreed" views.
The fact that these may clash with your personal views, or that
these laws now enshrine what was the general opinion hundreds
of years ago (and therefore arguably irrelevant) seems to have
little bearing - I believe that it's with issues in this arena
that people get to "take things personally" and misunderstandings
frequently occur.
The other thing is that these publically enshrined moral judgements
cramp the thinking of people growing up in our society. Many people
will agree with most of them, but it makes it so easy to default
on contemporary or heated issues (IE legalising dope).
Society has agreed that killing other people is "bad" and you will
be punished for this behaviour. Personally, I support this.
'gail
|
4.84 | Perhaps..... | GRANPA::BREDDEN | bob redden @DWO DTN 372-5317 | Wed May 08 1991 09:25 | 3 |
| the appearance that we cannot agree on whether killing is bad supports
the idea that the purpose of being human is to explore such ideas. If
we were omniscient, the question would be irrelevant.
|
4.85 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Wed May 08 1991 14:09 | 14 |
|
Re: .82 by GSMOKE::MFLICK,
> There are no laws in the United States that state that Murder
> is illegal ... the laws reflect a punisment that is congruent
> to the crime
Oh, I see. The law does not prohibit murder, but imposes punishment
on murderers...
Ask your dad again.
-- Ron
|
4.86 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed May 08 1991 15:08 | 7 |
| If you want to go along those lines then there are no laws that state
ANYTHING is illegal... becasue none of them do.
That's everything from j walking to manslaughter/murder and everything
inbetween.
Skip
|
4.87 | | NOPROB::JOLLIMORE | All the world surrounds me | Fri May 10 1991 11:52 | 1 |
| If murder was illegal, wouldn't soldiers be criminals?
|
4.88 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Fri May 10 1991 12:59 | 12 |
|
Re: .87 by NOPROB::JOLLIMORE,
> If murder was illegal, wouldn't soldiers be criminals?
Murder **is** illegal. Killing by order, during a military action,
is covered under a separate code and is not defined as a crime.
Soldiers who kill on their own are, indeed, murderers and are dealt
with, rather severely, under military law.
-- Ron
|
4.89 | | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | Time, love, and tenderness | Fri May 10 1991 17:34 | 12 |
| re. -1
>>Murder **is** illegal. Killing by order, during a military action,
>>is covered under a separate code and is not defined as a crime.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
OH! *that* makes it different!!!
I'm depressed..8-\
|
4.90 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue May 14 1991 18:38 | 13 |
| You're confusing killing with murder. Murder is a crime. Killing
under military order isn't murder. That doesn't mean it isn't a crime.
But then I sit and ask about the man who went to jail for helping is
cancer inflected wife commit suicide. I watched my mother die slowly
from cancer and beleive me when she was in the last week of it, if I
could have thought of a sure way to do it, I would not have hesitated.
Unfortunatly, I was never left alone with her.
You can condemn or condone me for that, but ONLY if you've gone through
it as well. THEN you can speak of the morality of it to me.
SKip
|
4.91 | life can be so tough | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Wed May 15 1991 04:36 | 12 |
| So, I said... way back... that killing is natural. I believe that it
is.
But Skip has also surfaced another reason that people "sometimes"
kill... for passionate reasons.
Sorry you had to see your mother suffer, Skip. I know it had to have
ripped your heart apart. I could never condemn you for your feelings
on that situation. Star Trek V had Dr. McCoy face his dad with that
same kind of scenario. I wondered how I would/could deal with it. But
as you say, until you've been there... you don't know for sure.
|
4.92 | | HPSTEK::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Wed May 15 1991 13:01 | 6 |
| Is this really so complicated? Gosh after 91 plies and replies, you
fellas still haven't figured out what is right and what is wrong about
killing? I can understand that in soapbox, but here in H_R? Ya fellas
must be really bored.
Eugene
|
4.93 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed May 15 1991 16:49 | 23 |
| Eugene,
It's an interesting question, one that's plagued philosophers,
humanitarians, tacticians, poloticains, and in general the entire
human race probably back as far as when the first cave man picked up
his club and crushed another's skull.
Sometimes I think it's man's nature to kill man, other times, I think
It is not so much his nature as it is his tendency. Peace is a
beautiful concept, but until the day comes that each of us lay down
beside each other openly and completely trusting, with out envy or
desire, or need, it will always be an open ended question because its'
always going to be there, starring us in the face, every day.
Like so many other things in life, if a person doesn't explore it
within themselves and outside themselves, then they simply accept it
and we are that much worse off for it.
So much for my 2 cent lecture... for twenty cents more I'll send you
the tape version.
;-)
Skip
|
4.94 | you were entertained, eh? | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Thu May 16 1991 06:17 | 9 |
| -2
Eugene,
It wasn't so boring that you couldn't keep yourself away from reading
91 replies! Else, how would you know it wasn't really settled
somewhere....
Heck, even I didn't read'em all, though I added a few comments.
|
4.95 | | VINO::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Fri May 17 1991 02:32 | 12 |
| re .94,
Me reading all those 91 replies? You got to be kidding. Usually,
a philosophical debate is a sign of extreme bordem. Come to think of
it, what is going on here isn't even philosophy. It is totally
pointless and mindless, if you would excuse me for the expression.
How many angels can stand on the point of a needle? Now that's
interesting philosophy.
Eugene
|
4.96 | Relevance is relative | GRANPA::BREDDEN | bob redden @DWO DTN 372-5317 | Fri May 17 1991 13:09 | 13 |
| RE: -1
> Come to think of
> it, what is going on here isn't even philosophy. It is totally
> pointless and mindless, if you would excuse me for the expression.
I'm not sure whether your are referring to the base question or the
various perspective, but it might be neither pointless or mindless if
you had ever killed or even considered killing another person.
Dismissing the question might be a way of dismissing the part of
yourself that could (and might even enjoy) killing. Pontificating on
how unimaginable such acts are might be a way of denying this part of
yourself.
|
4.97 | It was called 'war' | MORO::BEELER_JE | Iacta alea est | Sun May 19 1991 17:51 | 14 |
| I have hesitated to reply to this note because, well, perhaps I don't
want to hear the answer .. however .. I'm a big boy now and can take
the bad with the good.
Background: I have killed. I have killed many times. I have killed
with my rifle and with my bayonet. I have killed from a distance (as a
sniper) and I have held a man against me while I cut his throat ...
Two rules of war: (1) people die and (2) you can't change rule #1.
Question: Am I a murderer? Tell it like it is. Don't worry, the
nightmares will continue irrespective of what you say.
Jerry
|
4.98 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon May 20 1991 14:05 | 11 |
| From personal experience, no... especially when you consider ALL the
alternatives during a war..... If you fail to fulfill your orders,
it is quiet possible tht you will be brought before a fireing squad
during periods of war. Which can also happen if you fall asleep on
watch. NO, you aren't the murderer.... you're the instrument of the
murder.... those who gave the command are the murderers and you are
nothing more then there weapon of choice.
At least that's what I keep telling myself.
Skip
|
4.99 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon May 20 1991 14:06 | 3 |
| Oh BTW, you're right.... it doesn't affect the nightmares either way.
Skip
|
4.100 | You got it!..have a wonderful day.. | ROYALT::NIKOLOFF | Time, love, and tenderness | Mon May 20 1991 14:50 | 17 |
|
re. 97 Jerry
You certainly made me sit up and take notice! NO! Jerry you are
not a murderer - You are a hurting person that society has let-down. I do
not wish to punish you anymore nor should you allow anyone else to.
Thank you for your honesty - I was really moved.
Peace,
Meredith
|
4.101 | | CSC32::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Mon May 20 1991 18:06 | 4 |
| re.97
No, not in my opinion.
-j
|
4.102 | | MR4DEC::RON | | Mon May 20 1991 18:33 | 16 |
|
Re: .100 by ROYALT::NIKOLOFF,
> NO! Jerry you are not a murderer - You are a hurting person
> that society has let-down.
Please clarify the above. Is he a not a murderer just because he is
hurting?
I have also killed during war (though I never held anyone while
cutting their throats), yet I cannot ever recall having nightmares
--or even qualms-- over it. Does that make me (and millions of
soldiers just like me) murderers?
-- Ron
|
4.103 | | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | Total Eclipse of the Heart | Mon May 20 1991 19:23 | 9 |
| I don't believe that a soldier who kills fro his country is a
murderer. There is the small percent that are killers within
this group, but they'd be that way in any situation.
Killing in the name of war sucks...but it doesn't make you a murderer.
L.J.
|
4.104 | Except for the dodo, and we nailed it already | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Of course, I'm just a cricket... | Tue Jul 02 1991 20:14 | 3 |
| Because everything else runs too fast.
Ray
|
4.105 | WHY TO KILL | LACV01::DETATA | | Thu Nov 12 1992 10:04 | 7 |
| IF PEOPLE DIDNT DEFEND THEIR HOME SOIL, IT WILL SURELY BE TAKEN FROM
THEM. KILLING IS NOT THE ANSWER, BUT WHEN ONE IS IN THE POSITION TO
FIGHT OR FLEE, FOR LOVED ONES AND WHAT IS RIGHTFULLY THEIRS, SOMETIMES
THERE IS NO CHOICE. THERE IS NO OTHER WAY. IT IS THE WAY OF LIFE ON
THIS GREAT PLANET. IT IS EITHER DEFEND OR DIE. IN NATURE, AND IN THE
SO CALLED CIVILIZED WORLD.
|
4.106 | no one answer | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Make time stop | Thu Nov 12 1992 10:39 | 15 |
| re .105, well, that doesn't answer the question as to why the first
person, who attacked the second person, forcing the 2nd person to
defend themselves, tried to kill. Everyone who kills doesn't kill in
self-defense. In order for one person to have to defend themselves,
somebody else had to attack them. Why does the attacker kill or
attempt to kill? Because they're selfish, greedy pigs who want
everything for themselves and don't care about anybody else, I guess.
So, I don't think people, in general, really kill to defend themselves,
that's just a reflex. People, in general, kill because they're
shelfish greedy bastards, I think. And, some people kill because they
are unthinking pawns (like soldiers), and some people kill because they
are mentally ill.
Lorna
|
4.107 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | conferences are like apple barrels | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:00 | 19 |
| re .-1
<People, in general, kill because they're shelfish greedy bastards, I think.
<some people kill because they are unthinking pawns (like soldiers),
<and some people kill because they are mentally ill.
Should one conclude that you do not consider that there are ANY
laudable -or at least non nasty- motivations for killing?
i.e. Were those who executed Ted Bundy
selfish greedy pigs
selfish greedy bastards
unthinking pawns
mentally ill
none of the above
I certainly would try very very hard to kill somebody if I caught him
(or her) in the act of raping one of my daughters, or my wife.
|
4.108 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | Make time stop | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:17 | 10 |
| re .107, I believe that both self-defense and getting rid of Ted
Bundy-like killers, are justifiable. But, we wouldn't have to do
either of those if somebody else hadn't already acted, and killed
somebody else. I know why people kill in self-defense and execute
murderers. To me that's not the question. The question is why do some
people choose to kill even when it's not a matter of self-defense or
ridding society of crazed killers.
Lorna
|
4.109 | Just my opinion here | ELMAGO::BENBACA | New Mexico *IS* Part of the U.S.! | Thu Nov 12 1992 23:47 | 20 |
| Easy. They have no feelings for other people. It doesn't bother them
that they ended another life. I don't even think they care if they
themselves get killed. These serial killers are the worst. I put them
right up there with terrorists.
Crimes of passion differ in the sense that the person doing the killing
is distraught or too angry to deal with people and lashes out at the
nearest person(s) and commits the crime. Still not excusable.
Then you have the gang shootings in which they only want "revenge" for
something that happened to them and they go around killing family
members related to the real person they want to get.
Then you have the good old terrorists. They think they have a cause and
stop at nothing to kill innocent people to get their point across no
matter the cost.
None of these are self defense. And none of them are excusable.
"Man" can be quite the animal sometimes.
|
4.110 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Nov 13 1992 10:30 | 18 |
| >
> Then you have the good old terrorists. They think they have a cause and
> stop at nothing to kill innocent people to get their point across no
> matter the cost.
Everyone has some cause or other. 'Innocent' is in your eyes; in their eyes
perhaps the 'victim' is not innocent (based on what they perceive the rules
to be). As an example, the gang shootings. That matches this description
as well.
> None of these are self defense. And none of them are excusable.
Nor is it really self defense for the country A to go against country B because
country B attacked/wronged/whatevered country C. However, a lot of society
views that as 'good'.
-Joe
|