"Kidnapping and impregnating some young girl is worse than B&E even with a loaded weapon."
Yeah... So? That's just common sense.
However, it doesn't make their action right. They knew, indeed, that breaking into someone's house (especially in usa where anyone can have a firearm home) comes with potential risks and consequences. That's it.
Of course, his response was irrational and, even prior to that, he had done terrible thins. By the end of the day, he's the worse of the two sides.
But worse doesn't mean that their action becomes magically good.
Your logic would really flaw if put into a realife situation. Let's pretend there is a X guy (who you don't know anything about), and that the said Mr.X murdered someone in cold blood. Horrendous crime, nothing redeemable. This mysterious fella has a brand new car, one he bought with his money. And then, there's you, who randomly walk, spot the car (without even knowing who's car it is) and all you think is "this rich fuck can afford it and I can't, let's burn it". So you decide to burn the car, despite the fact that what you do is called vandalism and is highly illegal. You decide to do it anyways. Now, we can't rely on the fact that you did the right thing and punished a murderer because as you had seen it was pure hateful and envious crime. You were not aware of the guy's background so the idea of doing good wasn't even in your deepest mind.
So now... Is your crime right because the X person (whose's personal property had been destroyed by you because of your anger issues) coincidentally happened to be a murderer?
If you say that "yes" it would justify your crime, then you're an idiot who's not ready for the real world.
"Please don't breed."
You can follow that advice as well. With a few lines you stroke me as a bitter dumbass.
reply
share