SuiNeko wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
No, actually you're not necessarily screwed up, and I don't think you're at all qualified to say that people who decide that way need mental help, or are sociopathic. You're saying that because they idea is personally unacceptable to you, but there is no real reason why a different person, who is completely healthy, couldn't make that decision.
Whether you agree with it or not, a position that "a human life (even that of a criminal) is worth more than a few hundred bucks, and therefore killing someone to protect a few hundred bucks worth of property is wrong" seems reasonable and consistent, not irrationally knee jerk or emotional.
I didn't say it wasn't reasonable and consistent. However, the position that it is ok to shoot someone who considers their own life worth no more than the few hundred bucks of property they are trying to steal is
also reasonable and consistent. What's knee-jerk and emotional is thinking a person who makes a different decision in that regard is a sociopath or in need of mental help.
Quote:
Clearly there are edge cases, some of which Xeq included; if life is in danger, or even if that danger is in question. Others might be if the 'few hundred bucks' object is something of critical necessity; medical supplies, food, the ability to keep a roof over your families head in a freezing winter, etc - but at that point the decision is really less about the loss of property, and more about the loss of (life providing attribute the property was providing)
Those are all factors in the personal decision, but the bottom line is that it is a personal decision about what you are willing and able to do and willing and able to live with. Some people cannot bring themselves to pull the trigger even when being shot at themselves; for that reason those people should not be police officers or soldiers.
More importantly, even in those cases where it is about "a few hundred dollars of property", it usually
isn't just about that. Someone breaking into your home is violating your private place of safety; this can be psychologically devastating to a family to the point where some people can no longer feel safe in a home that's been burglarized and have to move. Someone robbing you of your wallet is violating your person, and threatening your personal safety. Someone shoplifting from you is attacking your livelyhood.
Stealing of property is a
very severe crime, not just because of the value of the theft but because of the violation of the person who is the victim. Often, the victim cannot know if they will be personally harmed in the process, and cases where they do know they aren't personally threatened are really a rare exception. Unfortunately in the modern age we've seen a great deal of attempting to reduce it to "a few hundred dollars..." and ignore the less tangible but often severe consequences, frequently by people who are looking for reasons for gun control. I notice this attitude is very common among Europeans, especially when addressing Americans on the issue, but it really is a case of the tail wagging the dog.
So yes, it
seems reasonable and consistent to say property is worth less than the life of a criminal, but it is also perfectly reasonable and consistent to say that the overall well-being of a citizen is worth more than the life of a criminal; the criminal, after all, chose that course of action.