| > You can't respect someone's freedom to murder without approving of said murder. Sorry, but I disagree. > You actually do not believe what you are saying or are being intentionally obtuse. No, I just have a viewpoint that you apparently can't understand. > Your implementation of that forced choice is currently handled by the law. This is obvious nonsense since having a law against murder does not prevent someone from committing a murder. It just imposes a punishment on them afterwards. > In the future, it might be before they are even able to generate a murderous impulse. Which is very, very different from the current scheme of law we have now. And, as I have said elsewhere in this discussion, to me looks like tyranny worse than the worst tyrannies in history. |
I understand it fine. It's objectively wrong.
Imposing a punishment is PRIMARILY a preventative action. The threat of being thrown in jail or even executed is not to retroactively deal with the situation, but to give people an incentive to not murder. If it didn't discourage murder, then people would find a different way to dissuade people from murdering.
How is it tyranny to curb a person's ability to murder? Or you trying to argue that allowing people to murder others is a net gain for society?