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| uk.legal (Legal Issues in the UK) (uk.legal) An unmoderated forum to discuss all aspects of legal issues within the UK. |
| Tags: eye |
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#1
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This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm |
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#2
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On Nov 28, 8:26*pm, Tar Baby wrote:
This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm ------------------- As long as we're completely sure that he's the one who did it, I can't argue with this. |
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#3
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"Tar Baby" wrote in message ... This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm Would you feel happier if he did 40 hours 'community service' instead? |
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#4
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"Tar Baby" wrote in message ... This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm As despicable & unforgivable the act was, I could not subscribe to such a punishment. Not least because he was ordered to pay compensation to his victim, but if he was not disabled by being blinded then surely it's not beyond the wit of man to ensure that he was severely taxed* for the rest of his life & that money used to compensate the victim. Such amount would surely amount to far greater compensation than he is presumably able to provide at his present age. * Into penury would be just fine by me. -- Joe Lee |
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#5
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On 29 Nov, 01:50, "Joe Lee" wrote:
"Tar Baby" wrote in ... This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm As despicable & unforgivable the act was, I could not subscribe to such a punishment. ================= Well, when Moses, Mohammed, etc. formulated these laws, they were attempting to incorporate the Oriental concept of *karma* into practical arrangements.... in other words, doing God's work for him..... The concept of karma is an echo of a proven law of physics: *to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction* , and so life "reflects" back into our lives the exact equivalent of what we give to other beings' lives [sometimes expressed as "what goes around comes around"]. If you look at the world you will see this principle operating, but usually in a half-sublte manner. For example, my parents both died very painful and slow deaths, and my sister has had a hell of a life, and I know the explanation. That is why I have no argument with the sentence in that case, as long as there is absolutely no doubt that he is the one who committed that crime. |
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#6
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On Nov 28, 11:39*pm, Special Care
wrote: On 29 Nov, 01:50, "Joe Lee" wrote: "Tar Baby" wrote in ... This is real justice. Iranian court orders that a man be blinded. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/7754756.stm As despicable & unforgivable the act was, I could not subscribe to such a punishment. ================= Well, when Moses, Mohammed, etc. formulated these laws, they were attempting to incorporate the Oriental concept of *karma* into practical arrangements.... in other words, doing God's work for him..... The concept of karma is an echo of a proven law of physics: *to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction* , and so life "reflects" back into our lives the exact equivalent of what we give to other beings' lives [sometimes expressed as "what goes around comes around"]. If you look at the world you will see this principle operating, but usually in a half-sublte manner. For example, my parents both died very painful and slow deaths, and my sister has had a hell of a life, and I know the explanation. That is why I have no argument with the sentence in that case, as long as there is absolutely no doubt that he is the one who committed that crime. I do not agree with the concept of "karma" - there are a lot of very good people in the world that have horrible things done to them, and then there are very bad people who do nasty things to other people and get off scott free! That's why I prefer to take the Christian approach of, "Do unto others as you would have done to yourself." Think about it, Peter. P.S. My ex-father-in law died of prostrate cancer when he was in his 70s. Towards the end he was in a great deal of pain - but he was the nicest man in the world (nicer than my ex-husband). And yet, his wife (my ex-mother-in-law) died just last year - mid 80's - quite suddenly - had a stroke - no pain or suffereing at all, and yet she made so many people around her suffer because of her evil nature. Explain that one to me, Pete! |
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#7
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On 30 Nov, 03:31, Meta wrote:
On Nov 28, 11:39*pm, Special Care ..... The concept of karma is an echo of a proven law of physics: *to every action there is an equal and opposite reaction* , and so life "reflects" back into our lives the exact equivalent of what we give to other beings' lives [sometimes expressed as "what goes around comes around"]. If you look at the world you will see this principle operating, but usually in a half-sublte manner. That is why I have no argument with the sentence in that case, as long as there is absolutely no doubt that he is the one who committed that crime. I do not agree with the concept of "karma" - there are a lot of very good people in the world that have horrible things done to them, and then there are very bad people who do nasty things to other people and get off scott free! *That's why I prefer to take the Christian approach of, "Do unto others as you would have done to yourself." Think about it, Peter. P.S. *My ex-father-in law died of prostrate cancer when he was in his 70s. Towards the end he was in a great deal of pain - but he was the nicest man in the world (nicer than my ex-husband). *And yet, his wife (my ex-mother-in-law) died just last year - mid 80's - quite suddenly - had a stroke - no pain or suffereing at all, and yet she made so many people around her suffer because of her evil nature. *Explain that one to me, Pete!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - ===================== It's complex. If there are a lot of good people in the world, the question is - why are they so good.... and sadly, the answer usually is that we only learn to be good people from adverse and painful experiences, which in turn are reactions to our unethical behaviour in the past...... so when you see a good person, for example, being arrested and tortured for opposing an evil regime, as in Zimbabwe today, it could be a case of finally "balancing the books," in the sense that these people did something like that to others in a past incarnation. If you know God exists, and I don't *believe* it, I *know* it , then you know justice exists too, in the final analysis. The concept of one lifetime followed by heaven or hell/purgatory/limbo doesn't stand up to scrutiny, because we all are badly flawed now, and when we die, we still contain those imperfections, so how can we go to heaven, carrying with us the same character flaws that are in us when we die? It can't be. Only slow progress toward perfection through innumerable incarnations makes sense. And there's no chosen race and there are no self-righteous few who are "saved" while all others are damned. Salvation is for all. Even Hitler and Pol Pot and Bob Mugabe will be perfected or "saved" after many, many more hard experiences in future incarnations. |
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