Very far, but to be fair I am an idealistic person. Simply put anyone with mal intent is to blame according to my values. With that in mind: 1a: Yes, person should not have stolen the money as it was not his to take, stupity on your part does not resolve the malicious intent of the thief. Opportunity does not excuse cruelty. 1b: Same answer no matter what the amount. My friend also said would I steal money on the table if it was a million dollars? I said it's still not mine so no. 1c: Again same answer for the bike, personally given the area I wouldn't blame you but I wouldn't be upset if others called you stupid for doing it. 1d: This is more gray but still the same answer, If you gave it and expected it back that person should have given it back to you. Oh so long as you communicated that clearly to him of course. If you did and he doesn't It shows how dishonest that person is. If you didn't and he did well then there you go I would blame you but for not commicating that clearly enough for that person. I would also question why you would do that in the first place as that is a very far out there situation. 1e: Hard to say, probably if you were in a situation were someone wouldn't try to screw you over just because (like half of that last question). Self harm without another person maybe? Your guess is as good as mine over what kind of situation that would be.one squirrel said:I have some questions for everyone who is saying that only the thief is to blame, and the person leaving the car unlocked is 100% blameless:
1.: How far are you willing to take that line of thinking: If I leave my wallet unattended on the table at the bar, while I go to the restroom, and it gets stolen, would you still say that I am blameless? What if I leave my 5000? bike unlocked on the street for a couple of hours in the worst part of the city? What if I gave 50000? of my savings to a complete stranger and expect it to get back? At what point would you call me an unresponsible moron and that I am to blame for my loss?
No, because no incident has taken place yet so there is no victim. I see it instead as good advice. If they don't take that advice and someone brakes into their house well, I'd quicker blame the thief and sorry for the home owner for their folly. The thief impeded on the rights of someone else and so committed the crime. Nothing would have happened if the homeowner didn't lock the door and the thief did nothing.2.: Is telling someone to lock their houses doors victim blaming?
Thanks for your extensive response. Seems like you are willing to bite the bullet and really stick to the "only the thief is to blame" for all my examples. I cannot imagine how one would apply that amount of leniency in real life, but I'll take you at your word there.Story said:Sure, I'll bite.
Very far, but to be fair I am an idealistic person. Simply put anyone with mal intent is to blame according to my values. With that in mind: 1a: Yes, person should not have stolen the money as it was not his to take, stupity on your part does not resolve the malicious intent of the thief. Opportunity does not excuse cruelty. 1b: Same answer no matter what the amount. My friend also said would I steal money on the table if it was a million dollars? I said it's still not mine so no. 1c: Again same answer for the bike, personally given the area I wouldn't blame you but I wouldn't be upset if others called you stupid for doing it. 1d: This is more gray but still the same answer, If you gave it and expected it back that person should have given it back to you. It shows how dishonest that person is. 1e: Hard to say, probably if you were in a situation were someone wouldn't try to screw you over just because. Self harm without another person maybe? Your guess is as good as mine over what kind of situation that would be.one squirrel said:I have some questions for everyone who is saying that only the thief is to blame, and the person leaving the car unlocked is 100% blameless:
1.: How far are you willing to take that line of thinking: If I leave my wallet unattended on the table at the bar, while I go to the restroom, and it gets stolen, would you still say that I am blameless? What if I leave my 5000? bike unlocked on the street for a couple of hours in the worst part of the city? What if I gave 50000? of my savings to a complete stranger and expect it to get back? At what point would you call me an unresponsible moron and that I am to blame for my loss?
No, because no incident has taken place yet so there is no victim. I see it instead as good advice. If they don't take that advice and someone brakes into their house well, I'd quicker blame the thief and sorry for the home owner for their folly. The thief impeded on the rights of someone else and so committed the crime. Nothing would have happened if the homeowner didn't lock the door and the thief did nothing.2.: Is telling someone to lock their houses doors victim blaming?
I guess it's obvious I'm a sucker but eh whatever. I like being empathic.
You're welcome. Those were interesting questions. I'm actually really happy with all the responses on this as I love a little debate now and then. I would actually boil at least some of these answers down to personalities. I told you I'm an empathic idealist I should mention too that my friend is more of an realistic pessimist (and we are both analytical) so we each looked at the situation in absolutes which is probably a mistake in and of itself.one squirrel said:Thanks for your extensive response. Seems like you are willing to bite the bullet and really stick to the "only the thief is to blame" for all my examples. I cannot imagine how one would apply that amount of leniency in real life, but I'll take you at your word there.Story said:Sure, I'll bite.
Very far, but to be fair I am an idealistic person. Simply put anyone with mal intent is to blame according to my values. With that in mind: 1a: Yes, person should not have stolen the money as it was not his to take, stupity on your part does not resolve the malicious intent of the thief. Opportunity does not excuse cruelty. 1b: Same answer no matter what the amount. My friend also said would I steal money on the table if it was a million dollars? I said it's still not mine so no. 1c: Again same answer for the bike, personally given the area I wouldn't blame you but I wouldn't be upset if others called you stupid for doing it. 1d: This is more gray but still the same answer, If you gave it and expected it back that person should have given it back to you. It shows how dishonest that person is. 1e: Hard to say, probably if you were in a situation were someone wouldn't try to screw you over just because. Self harm without another person maybe? Your guess is as good as mine over what kind of situation that would be.one squirrel said:I have some questions for everyone who is saying that only the thief is to blame, and the person leaving the car unlocked is 100% blameless:
1.: How far are you willing to take that line of thinking: If I leave my wallet unattended on the table at the bar, while I go to the restroom, and it gets stolen, would you still say that I am blameless? What if I leave my 5000? bike unlocked on the street for a couple of hours in the worst part of the city? What if I gave 50000? of my savings to a complete stranger and expect it to get back? At what point would you call me an unresponsible moron and that I am to blame for my loss?
No, because no incident has taken place yet so there is no victim. I see it instead as good advice. If they don't take that advice and someone brakes into their house well, I'd quicker blame the thief and sorry for the home owner for their folly. The thief impeded on the rights of someone else and so committed the crime. Nothing would have happened if the homeowner didn't lock the door and the thief did nothing.2.: Is telling someone to lock their houses doors victim blaming?
I guess it's obvious I'm a sucker but eh whatever. I like being empathic.
Your stance on the topic of rape seems to be quite reasonable, so I am not inclined to attack you unduly, but would you consider telling a women not to get too drunk in order to avoid a possible rape victim blaming?
I think the logic is sound. People are what they do, not what they think. We do not punish thought crimes.BeetleManiac said:It does seem like the kind of quote for people who believe that everyone but them is a shithead. The rape apologists especially never make any sense. "She got drink at a party, she shouldn't have been so stupid!" To paraphrase Winston Churchill, in the morning the victim will be sober and the rapist will still be a fucking rapist.Tanis said:Isn't it a bit like blaming the rape victim because s/he was drunk/wearing a short skirt?
Sure, doing something stupid (like getting drunk without your friends or leaving your car unlocked) is...well...stupid.
BUT...it ISN'T ILLEGAL.
There's an old saying that goes 'locks are there to keep honest men honest'.
I NEVER liked that saying because it's so fucking cynical about honest/decent people.
:/
I'll take it all the way. At the point of giving $50000 to a complete stranger and expecting it back, I'd say that you're not the smartest tool in the shed, but if they take the money and run, that is entirely their fault, and you deserve that money back if they are caught. Being dumb doesn't mean you deserve bad things to happen to you. You might be irresponsible and a moron, but at the end of the day, the guy who took your money is the one that gets arrested.one squirrel said:I have some questions for everyone who is saying that only the thief is to blame, and the person leaving the car unlocked is 100% blameless:
1.: How far are you willing to take that line of thinking: If I leave my wallet unattended on the table at the bar, while I go to the restroom, and it gets stolen, would you still say that I am blameless? What if I leave my 5000? bike unlocked on the street for a couple of hours in the worst part of the city? What if I gave 50000? of my savings to a complete stranger and expect it to get back? At what point would you call me an unresponsible moron and that I am to blame for my loss?
2.: Is telling someone to lock their houses doors victim blaming?
How do you extrapolate that I think that someone that is blatantly irresponsible should be found criminally liable from what I said? Or that the crime itself is entirely the victim's fault?Smithnikov said:Sonmi said:Also, both are to blame. The thief for being a thief, and the car owner for being careless. Obviously you shouldn't steal cars, but it's also your responsibility to look out for your stuff. Don't leave your doors unlocked, don't leave your wallet alone, don't leave your young children unsupervised. The victim is still a victim, granted, but it doesn't absolve him of being irresponsible.
If they are at fault for the crime, what should be the charge against them? Sentence if found guilty?
Isn't Wall street doing this all the time?Catnip1024 said:Well, by that logic, if I steal candy from a baby, then it's the babies fault for not fighting back harder.
It's not acceptable to commit crimes against people on the grounds that they are stupid. I remember learning this in primary school, come on people...
Exactly, if they are responsible, should they not be held liable criminally for their part in a criminal act?Sonmi said:How do you extrapolate that I think that someone that is blatantly irresponsible should be found criminally liable from what I said? Or that the crime itself is entirely the victim's fault?
Personal responsibility is also a thing, you know?
1: Yes, you are blameless. If that is not the case and you are to blame for your loss, should we not charge you with bike theft as you just said it's your fault the theft happened?one squirrel said:I have some questions for everyone who is saying that only the thief is to blame, and the person leaving the car unlocked is 100% blameless:
1.: How far are you willing to take that line of thinking: If I leave my wallet unattended on the table at the bar, while I go to the restroom, and it gets stolen, would you still say that I am blameless? What if I leave my 5000? bike unlocked on the street for a couple of hours in the worst part of the city? What if I gave 50000? of my savings to a complete stranger and expect it to get back? At what point would you call me an unresponsible moron and that I am to blame for my loss?
But you do deserve dumb things happening to you. And there's a point where something can be both and sometimes the onlooker loses empathy. Depends on the person, I'm guessing, and we're seeing a whole spectrum of people along with their opinions on the matter in this thread, aren't we?lacktheknack said:Being dumb doesn't mean you deserve bad things to happen to you.
Criminal responsibility and personal responsibility are not the same, you're making a false equivalence.Smithnikov said:Exactly, if they are responsible, should they not be held liable criminally for their part in a criminal act?Sonmi said:How do you extrapolate that I think that someone that is blatantly irresponsible should be found criminally liable from what I said? Or that the crime itself is entirely the victim's fault?
Personal responsibility is also a thing, you know?
How so? Is criminal responsibility not based in personal responsibility? If not, then what is it based on?Sonmi said:Criminal responsibility and personal responsibility are not the same, you're making a false equivalence.