Intriguing
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- Aug 11, 2012
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MidWest Mama - yep my Act 1 is a little shaky. It's coloured a touch by not wanting to think that a child could deliberately enact harm upon their sibling - much as Patsy commented 'what child could to this to another child!' However, I'll try and grasp the nettle in due course - still think it involved Burke though.
KoldKase, I fully appreciate what you say about the legal system and your sense of inequality it creates, predicated by financial resources, as well as others' feelings of integrity etc. I felt the same way for a long period. However, as all those cop movies trot out time after time, once you make it personal your judgement can become clouded...or something like that!
I thought the same way about the Madeleine McCann case - indeed it appears to me to be very similar. Yet, here's my take on it. IF Burke did it, accidentally or otherwise, during those first few frantic hours, I doubt they would have been questioning his intent. They would have assumed a terrible accident. If that was the case, then any lawyer advising the Ramseys would be 'ethically' motivated, as well as financially, to go into damage limitation. Sure, the Ramseys were financially fortunate to be able to afford such assistance but what parent wouldn't exhaust every avenue to protect a child, even in a circumstance so extreme that another child has died.
What if someone high up in the local DA's office had been aware and convinced that it was an accident? Surely, the ethical decision some individuals would take would be to cover it up. One child is dead, why destroy another child's life?
No one could have predicted that the media would have entered the fray with such ferocity and from there on in, it is impossible to balance or counter the prevailing, sensationalist tone.
A very mild analogy - I have, on occasion, made the decision to lie to someone solely for the purpose of protecting them (mainly from themselves!). An instinctual reaction made at source. Consequently, the person I have tried to protect from themselves has gone on to villify me under different circumstances. Even then, I smiled sweetly and thought their wellbeing more important than my character assassination as I knew untruths couldn't systemically hurt me whereas the awful truth would wound them. And so, the first lie is compounded with another lie to keep the first well-meaning lie intact and so it goes on. Eventually, you are boxed into a corner by a tissue of ever-more ridiculous subterfuge, all designed to protect someone. By that stage, it's impossible to retract or explain your innocent reasoning, as you would be branded a liar and anything you say deemed untrustworthy. That might have happened in this case to either the Ramseys, their legal team, the investigating officers, Fleet White etc etc.
KoldKase, I fully appreciate what you say about the legal system and your sense of inequality it creates, predicated by financial resources, as well as others' feelings of integrity etc. I felt the same way for a long period. However, as all those cop movies trot out time after time, once you make it personal your judgement can become clouded...or something like that!
I thought the same way about the Madeleine McCann case - indeed it appears to me to be very similar. Yet, here's my take on it. IF Burke did it, accidentally or otherwise, during those first few frantic hours, I doubt they would have been questioning his intent. They would have assumed a terrible accident. If that was the case, then any lawyer advising the Ramseys would be 'ethically' motivated, as well as financially, to go into damage limitation. Sure, the Ramseys were financially fortunate to be able to afford such assistance but what parent wouldn't exhaust every avenue to protect a child, even in a circumstance so extreme that another child has died.
What if someone high up in the local DA's office had been aware and convinced that it was an accident? Surely, the ethical decision some individuals would take would be to cover it up. One child is dead, why destroy another child's life?
No one could have predicted that the media would have entered the fray with such ferocity and from there on in, it is impossible to balance or counter the prevailing, sensationalist tone.
A very mild analogy - I have, on occasion, made the decision to lie to someone solely for the purpose of protecting them (mainly from themselves!). An instinctual reaction made at source. Consequently, the person I have tried to protect from themselves has gone on to villify me under different circumstances. Even then, I smiled sweetly and thought their wellbeing more important than my character assassination as I knew untruths couldn't systemically hurt me whereas the awful truth would wound them. And so, the first lie is compounded with another lie to keep the first well-meaning lie intact and so it goes on. Eventually, you are boxed into a corner by a tissue of ever-more ridiculous subterfuge, all designed to protect someone. By that stage, it's impossible to retract or explain your innocent reasoning, as you would be branded a liar and anything you say deemed untrustworthy. That might have happened in this case to either the Ramseys, their legal team, the investigating officers, Fleet White etc etc.