Retrospectively, I feel that my previous threads on this subject were destined to fail also, because I was placing the ‘cart before the horse’. People can’t objectively consider an alternate form of justice, while they still wrongly believe the current law is working. I’ve been accused of using ‘twisted’ logic and ‘circular’ answers to questions, but my ‘straight’ discussion only seems so to you—because it’s unlike the ‘warped’ view of law that you still believe is ‘on the level’.
Here are some examples of your ‘obtuse’ opinions on The Law.
1. While firmly asserting that you are ‘free’, you allow law to treat you as a ‘slave’ with rules and punishments.
2. While trusting in the law ‘protecting’ people, you’re willing to turn a blind eye to law only really protecting its own sanctity.
3. Amid the growing unrest, increasing violence, and rising crime, you desperately trust in the law’s ability to reverse the trend—when it hasn’t even able to keep lawlessness in check in the first place.
4. You devotedly espouse the law’s illogical theory by downplaying how effective the human conscience might be if enabled (by a form of justice other than Law).
This thread is entitled ‘Why law WILL fail’ and I assure you that law will collapse—but good riddance when it goes.
1. People in general are becoming ever more disdainful of the police, the authority, and the law. You may refuse to examine my cited cause as being because of the ‘serfdom’ inherent in the law’s theory, but what other possible causes are there?
2. Sociopaths (or lawopaths) now amount to 5% of the population (according to Beer_Wench and I’m not quibbling). Under the law, trying to ‘crack down’ on these can only be accomplished by installing sterner law enforcement on the other 95% as well. That will only cause the percentage to increase as the police state shoves more people over the lawopathic brink.
3. Law has encouraged and supported a world where the greedy are making life to expensive for the needy to live in (non-law justice would reverse that by putting people first). Law has enabled an unjust court system where money buys the verdicts and people will reach a boiling point. Remember the Rodney King case?
4. Law is like the emperor’s invisible clothing. It’s only there because you think it is and when a few more people realize that, the rule-of-law WILL be consigned to a museum of dark ages folklore where it belongs.
5. Most (or all) people DON’T feel that the law applies to them (hence the opinion that they aren’t a slave to it). Many support the law only in hopes that it applies to OTHER PEOPLE, and because it allows society to punish—whereas they don’t have that right singularly.
Julius Cesar crossed the Rubicon, though he knew it was breaking the law. There are times when previously accepted concepts must be questioned and this is one of them. To address our social ills and move into our future, justice must cross the Rubicon.
Here are some examples of your ‘obtuse’ opinions on The Law.
1. While firmly asserting that you are ‘free’, you allow law to treat you as a ‘slave’ with rules and punishments.
2. While trusting in the law ‘protecting’ people, you’re willing to turn a blind eye to law only really protecting its own sanctity.
3. Amid the growing unrest, increasing violence, and rising crime, you desperately trust in the law’s ability to reverse the trend—when it hasn’t even able to keep lawlessness in check in the first place.
4. You devotedly espouse the law’s illogical theory by downplaying how effective the human conscience might be if enabled (by a form of justice other than Law).
This thread is entitled ‘Why law WILL fail’ and I assure you that law will collapse—but good riddance when it goes.
1. People in general are becoming ever more disdainful of the police, the authority, and the law. You may refuse to examine my cited cause as being because of the ‘serfdom’ inherent in the law’s theory, but what other possible causes are there?
2. Sociopaths (or lawopaths) now amount to 5% of the population (according to Beer_Wench and I’m not quibbling). Under the law, trying to ‘crack down’ on these can only be accomplished by installing sterner law enforcement on the other 95% as well. That will only cause the percentage to increase as the police state shoves more people over the lawopathic brink.
3. Law has encouraged and supported a world where the greedy are making life to expensive for the needy to live in (non-law justice would reverse that by putting people first). Law has enabled an unjust court system where money buys the verdicts and people will reach a boiling point. Remember the Rodney King case?
4. Law is like the emperor’s invisible clothing. It’s only there because you think it is and when a few more people realize that, the rule-of-law WILL be consigned to a museum of dark ages folklore where it belongs.
5. Most (or all) people DON’T feel that the law applies to them (hence the opinion that they aren’t a slave to it). Many support the law only in hopes that it applies to OTHER PEOPLE, and because it allows society to punish—whereas they don’t have that right singularly.
Julius Cesar crossed the Rubicon, though he knew it was breaking the law. There are times when previously accepted concepts must be questioned and this is one of them. To address our social ills and move into our future, justice must cross the Rubicon.