<sigh> If you want me to - no problem.Sherlockmom said:>Interesting - but I disagree. I think we've both communicated our points of view though, so I'll leave it there.<
Okay I understand and you have a right to believe what you want to. I haven't run across anyone who has been able to defend the eagle egg thing either![]()
OK, the problem with destroying an eagle egg is that we're trying to breed more eagles - as an animal whose opinions we do not consult in any way - not that we consider an eagle egg to be equal to a full grown eagle. So - this is perfectly consistient with considering both an embreo and an eagle egg not the same thing as a baby human or a baby eagle.In the state of WI it is illegal to destroy an eagle egg or eggs of any migrating bird. Yet it is not illegal to destroy an unborn child. This is situational ethics. One unborn life (that of an eagle) is valued more than another (that of a human child). An adherent to situational ethics could say well, I think it is okay to destroy a human embryo if for example the mother was raped, or the unborn child was deformed or damaged or if the embryo could benefit another like being used for stem cell research. They would believe that since the result or ends was for a more loving good then it would be okay.
I knew you'd do this - but I still gave it a try. OK.Sherlockmom said:>OK, the problem with destroying an eagle egg is that we're trying to breed more eagles - as an animal whose opinions we do not consult in any way - not that we consider an eagle egg to be equal to a full grown eagle. So - this is perfectly consistient with considering both an embreo and an eagle egg not the same thing as a baby human or a baby eagle.
But for the situation - it's not the same. An eagle egg doesn't injure or kill people, just by it's existience. An embreo or fetus can and does.<
Oh my. I just picked my jaw off the floor. So in other words, we aren't trying to breed more humans so it's okay to kill them before they are born because we are just trying to pre-empt them possibly killing or injuring someone in the future. This is what we call situational ethics. You explained it perfectly.
Interesting use of pretzel logic. I didn't think there was much left that could shock me. I guess I was wrong.
Thanks.
There is a huge difference for YOU. But YOU are smarter than the av-er-age bear (to quote Yogi!) Think of gang members - "Your third cousin killed my in law's nephew, so someone in your gang has to die." Same with racists - "That white policeman killed a black boy in Miami, so I'm going to kill a cop to get his back." or the flipside "Black man raped a white girl, so I need to kill a black man in revenge. Don't even think that just because I didn't get the grammar and accent right that this is a rare frame of mind.julianne said:But seriously, though, I can honestly say I disagree with you about family members wanting punishment in either situation. If my family member was killed because he/she ran a red light, I wouldn't expect or even want any punishment put on the person who my family member collided with. The other person wouldn't be charged with involuntary manslaughter because it would have been MY family member who ran the red light. Now, if someone else ran a red light killing my family member, sure I would expect some sort of punishment. Even though the end result is death, there is a HUGE difference between involuntary manslaughter and cold blooded murder.
My rue of thumb with serial cases, is anytime we see 5 or more victims you can usually add another 3-7 victims.Did anyone consider that Rollings might have been the Houston Decapitator in the summer of 1979? Where five people were murdered in a similar fashion to Rollings killing in Gainesville? Rollings would’ve been 25 years old in 1979 and was living in Louisiana the murders are eerily similar so i think he could’ve done it.
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Horrific killings in 1979 left bodies headless
Thousands of people fleeing crumbling Rust Belt economies were pouring into the Bayou...www.chron.com
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The Houston Decapitator — Trace Evidence
In the summer of 1979 Houston, Texas was under siege. Crime was rising, murder numbers were off the charts and a violent and brutal killer emerged, slashing through five victims in just a few months leaving behind horrifying crime scenes and shattered families.www.trace-evidence.com