I mean - I'm not claiming we should overhaul the justice system according to my own neanderthal tendencies. My point is that if a 14 year old schizo who doesn't understand right from wrong decides to kill a mother of 4 - who gives a shit whether they knew right from wrong? They've destroyed a family and I don't care about their rehabilitation. You get one chance at this.
Your dragged me back into this, you monster. But you can't answer those questions substantively for a reason - there isn't much of an answer. Where does someone miserable supposedly encounter the line where they shoudl think "I should never have kids," there's not a bright light rule. And of course there isn't.
You said he should get snipped. BUt his life changed when he was a dad. He wasn't a dad, then he busted a nut, and the process began. So when should he, the depressed person, thought about being snipped.
I'm literally testing the statements and applying them to real world situations. I just had the 'pleasure' of moonwalking all over Buff's...'thoughts' to prove a point/s -which I laid out originally.
Instead of going 'what monster couldn't love his kids and be so selfish,' the actual question to ask is 'what could make someone who loves their kids end their own life?'
And unsurprisingly, at least to me, the answer is a mental sickness so severe. It's technically circular logic. But humans aren't really all that logical. I suspect that if we could 'transfer' the state of minds from people to people no one in this thread would judge the man.
I suspect that if we knew the details of his life, we could see where someone could stumble.
I've shown that people can be in states of mind where they're not actually intentionally truly doing anything. I would posit that getting made at someone for being illogical when they're in a state where they can't be logical is like yelling at the fire for burning down your house.
What about soldiers that choose to keep soldiering after they have kids and volunteer to go on deployments, then get killed.
They are selfish too
He had 6 kids King. 6.
Double post.
it seems like some people have depressive episodes and get over them. others are chronically depressed.
I think we are misrepresenting the choice a suicidal person actually had.
All we are at any one time is the sum of our brain chemistry. When that is outside of acceptable norms..... Perception is altered, and when things get so bad.... All the kids in the world won't matter
I am capable of empathy and I'm sure the guy was facing demons that I've never faced but I just don't agree with the path he chose. There are always other options. I mean he was supposedly good friends with Cornell.
Someone show me that Chester did everything in his power to overcome his depression and simply couldn't and I could change my stance in this instance.
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