Yor Ryeter

[1: 390 of 10,000] Penalty: Death

In Question on October 5, 2011 at 10:39 AM

Asking the questions:

  1. Do you agree with the death penalty?
  2. Is it ever right to kill? And under what circumstances?
  3. Is it worth the risks of being wrong?

Makes me answer with yet my own series of questions:

  1. Are we sure it is the right criminal being charged of death?
  2. Are sinners not capable of change?
  3. Are prison cells and funds for their daily basic survival no longer enough to keep them secluded yet alive?
  4. Is forgiveness irrelevant?
  5. Why does a criminal kill in the first place? Isn’t he mentally sick that needs great minds to heal him?
  6. Why do some needs to repay someone with exactly the same thing? Can’t we be more generous and surprisingly kind?
  7. What does it mean when we read from the 10 Commandments of God “Thou shalt not kill”? Who is the best judge to say that a man deserved to die? If the man who is to be killed is a good man like Jesus, why then was it permitted by God the Father? Is it really right to think that there are exceptions to the rule?
  8. Is life worth not living if everything a man does is unforgivable? But who is to judge what is forgivable?

Straight answer, where do I stand?

I don’t agree for death penalty. Why will I answer someone’s brutality with yet another brutality? The criminals have problems and we need to help them get healed. It is easy to just say give up and end it but bloodshed is yet another excuse to run away from the real problem. Get with the root of the issue, get involved, care and act for solution. Is someone really born as pure evil? I’ve always believed all men have goodness inside him and it will make the whole difference.

  1. In Europe is no death penalty. But in some Arabian nations – and in the USA. Same level of cultures?

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