Originally Posted by
Thorne
While being in the majority doesn't make one automatically right, being in the minority doesn't either. However, in our societies what is "right" is more often determined by the majority. Allowing the minority to decide what is right is tantamount to a dictatorship.
So we agree that what is right does not necessarily depend upon how many people think so
Governments and industries will frequently protect their properties with high-voltage fences, sometimes lethally high. The only reason these are considered acceptable is because they post warnings. So could you accept the idea of protecting your own property by such a system, one which might not be lethal but could be, as long as warnings are posted?
I suggest that the reason they use high voltage fences is to protect the public more than the property. Banks don't protect their safes with such things, nor do gun shops protect their stock that way. Electric fences are usually found where dangerous materials are stored. It is certainly not the intention of the government or of industry in general to eliminate intruders. That's why they post warnings
Not necessarily. You're assuming the trap is designed to kill after the theft, but I can conceive of a thief being injured while stealing the car and, perhaps, passing out while driving away, causing the destruction.
A trap designed to injure and maim indiscriminately is just as bad as a trap designed to kill, and I make no distinction.
Tell that to the War Crimes Tribunals. Criminal acts during war happen all the time. Usually only the losers are punished for them, though.
Criminal acts committed during times of war are still criminal acts. I say again, acts of war are not crimes.
A rather idealistic view. Think of Dresden, or London during the blitz, or Hiroshima, or Nanking. All acts of war which were AIMED at civilians, not at military targets.
I seem to recall some rather famous trials took place in Nuremburg. Maybe the bombing of London was not on the charge sheet. Perhaps because there were other more important charges to dispose of. Perhaps because the leaders of the Allies did not want to draw attention to their own acts of genocide.
I believe I am on record in these threads as denouncing Hiroshima and Nagasake as war crimes. I remember I have said the same about Dresden.
Sometimes it might be difficult to draw that line between a legitimate act of war and a war crime ... on which side did Blitzkrieg fall? ... but the responsibility for deciding falls on the War Crimes Tribunal, not on individuals with axes to grind.
So you're saying that only immediate threats should be acted upon? Or should we accept the methods of most police organizations and only act AFTER the fact? Can we not make a reasonable determination of a threat and act to prevent that threat, as early as possible?
If the methods being employed present a risk of death or injury, then I most certainly am saying that. Who in their right minds advocates detonating bombs at random without regard to the consequences? Terrorists. That's who.
Personally, I'll go with shooting the SOB while he's still making the bomb. Or is that too soon? After all, manufacturing a bomb is not an immediate threat, is it?
And that, Thorne, as you well know, is murder