My electrical system has been freed of the cruel shackles of Isabel, and I am now free to inflict obscure philosospam upon the world once more, so I thought I'd give it a whirl.
A certain other thread(the mods seem to get twitchy about referring to other threads and I'm not sure why so I'll play it safe and zip me lip) got me thinking about the concept of justification by desire, which I do not believe in personally but which makes sense to others. In case you have no idea what I'm gibbering about, I'm talking about the concept that certain activities which might otherwise have been considered wrong are condoned given that the people who do them are under sufficient emotional pressure to do so. I'm not dumb enough to cite any of the examples that actually brought this idea to mind, as that would be just begging for a threadjack, but let's apply the "is it okay for a man to steal bread to feed his starving kids" cliche, which is an extreme but loosely applicable example. I would say no in this case, simply because I believe the idea of theft is repugnant in and of itself, and the fact that innocent people were helped by the proceeds of the activity does not make it right. I could understand showing mercy in sentencing or just looking the other way for the greater good, but in absolute, black-and-white terms, I call crime crime and leave it at that. Partly this is because I'm one of the few people on this board who believes in black-and-white absolutes (has anyone else ever noticed how hard it is to make personal attacks on someone who's already made them for you?
), but aside from that, how does everyone else look at this? What should the law say, and where should it draw the line between "pardonable" and "just making excuses to dodge accountability"?
A certain other thread(the mods seem to get twitchy about referring to other threads and I'm not sure why so I'll play it safe and zip me lip) got me thinking about the concept of justification by desire, which I do not believe in personally but which makes sense to others. In case you have no idea what I'm gibbering about, I'm talking about the concept that certain activities which might otherwise have been considered wrong are condoned given that the people who do them are under sufficient emotional pressure to do so. I'm not dumb enough to cite any of the examples that actually brought this idea to mind, as that would be just begging for a threadjack, but let's apply the "is it okay for a man to steal bread to feed his starving kids" cliche, which is an extreme but loosely applicable example. I would say no in this case, simply because I believe the idea of theft is repugnant in and of itself, and the fact that innocent people were helped by the proceeds of the activity does not make it right. I could understand showing mercy in sentencing or just looking the other way for the greater good, but in absolute, black-and-white terms, I call crime crime and leave it at that. Partly this is because I'm one of the few people on this board who believes in black-and-white absolutes (has anyone else ever noticed how hard it is to make personal attacks on someone who's already made them for you?

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