The poor lions- I read about some tribe- maybe in Kenya- poisoning a
dead steer to attract a pride of lions to their own demise and wasn't
some taco joint serving lion meat last week? Between encroachment,
trophies and illegal hunting, I fear the larger animals are doomed to
zoos or extinction. I suppose the arguments always will favor the
humans for sport, survival or a deemed necessity. Are we stewards of
creation? Do you think animals serve a purpose besides our needs or
entertainments? Do you think their instincts rise to the level of
thought and planning?

An important factor in punishments is the broader picture of the
society/culture and its beliefs-religion or superstitions. Justice may
be imperfect or outsiders may not understand the basis for judgements.
Reading 19th C. history, I have shuddered over the tactics of the
British though their ruthlessness was apparent in previous centuries
yet many look to Britain as the epitome of law and culture. Maybe luck
has a good deal with coping with the "rules" during a lifetime and the
ability to accept injustice or unfairness in one's society. Are there
universal laws or do major powers set the rules? Maybe we would have
to observe what other beasts do to cleanse the group of a bad seed-
one who commits a heinous crime. Usually, the strongest win- even
Alexander understood that notion.

The Opium War of the mid-1800's was immoral, imo. Do trade and profit
trump ethics? The Empress of India- Victoria- certainly presents a
divided soul and not a very dainty empire in her policies. And we- the
USA- are still coping with the reaction and rejection.

On Jan 25, 11:16 am, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Jan 18, 4:26 pm, wizard_47_cpp <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Recently i was thinking about murder. I was wondering if this,
> > sometimes, could be the best solution to many important problems (i
> > obvious exclude personal and economical ones). There are some people
> > who we think should die, because they damage the society, the world
> > and other people. So, do we have the right to kill this individuals?
> > I'm some kind of atheist (exaclty i don't believe in an antropomorphic
> > god, endowed with an human-like will), so i don't think, like
> > somebody, only god has the right to kill humans.
> > My thought is we have this right, but it needs valid motivations.
> > But now the questions are: does valid motivations really exist? can
> > human understand wich are them?
> > The topic can become wider with the last one, it implicates the
> > understanding of an absolute truth.
>
> > Sorry for my english
>
> No worries about the English!!  Obviously lions, for example, have the
> ability to kill humans, but, most would only do so for tfood or self-
> defence.  Neither of those 'reasons' are murderous.  Murder is the
> needless killing of an individual.  Life sometimes presents us with
> situations where killing other humans is required.  Self-defence is
> the obvious one.  The death-penalty CAN be viewed as a societal self-
> defence and it can hardly be seen as anything other than self-
> protection, perhaps coupled with ultimate prevention of further crimes
> by the individual so-disposed.  Killing is different from murder.
> There are even situations (plane crashes is mountainous areas) where
> an individual may decide to kill another for food so that they can
> live long enough to be saved and, thus, live long enough to never have
> to kill a human for food again.  There are many 'reasons' for what
> some may call murder, but the true murder is a killing that is
> 'without requirement'.

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