Violence just always seemed like an ineffective tool of punishment. It causes physical pain, yes, but what is physical pain? Well, in a lot of cases, it's something one can't actually remember. I can't call back the pain I felt when my arm was broken. Or the second time. If I smacked my head into a wall, I know it hurt, but I don't remember the hurting itself. It's something that isn't hard to put behind you, in terms of your actual pain.Agayek said:That's more or less what I was driving at under "discuss", so yea sure.Cavouku said:I'm willing to totally agree, but we can extend that to; the problem also comes when people with different beliefs or no beliefs are not being civil towards people with certain beliefs, right?
Edit: To clarify a response to your second quote of me, I am in fact promoting violence against those who initiate violence. Violence is a tool, and just like any other, it has its place. Defending you and yours is the most widely acknowledged of such, but it also extends to the realm of punishment. I'm a firm believer in personal responsibility and accepting punishment for wrongdoing, 'tis one of the reasons I support the death penalty and whatnot.
If someone is willing to commit violence, they implicitly accept the responsibility for that choice, and should therefore have violence committed unto them for doing so.
Violence is an act that is more often than not, emotionally charged, especially as punishment. To hurt someone who caused you pain is to be vengeful, to be unable to let go. True action is in education, to try and break through the emotions that caused the other's violence, and to get to the reasonable person that almost everyone is capable of being.
Failing that, one is better to let go. They are their own problem. If they harass your person, or any other persons further, they should be condemned into a situation where they cannot do so anymore. There are two options - incarceration, or death.
Incarceration I've also always felt is ineffective, time consuming, expensive, and wholly uneducational. There's no opportunity to learn from what you did, or develop empathy for those who you've hurt. I don't yet know the best ways to put these into practice, but I like to believe prisons in the future will truly be a place of emotional rehabilitation. If not, then it would be best to put these people to some sort of work, as cruel as it sounds. Their being there is a detriment, and that would best be compensated for by labours or services rendered.
However, I think that should be choice. Refusing that choice, and refusing the choice to not harass others, death... is really the most ideal outcome. We can't let them hurt others, we can't let them rot away time and money, and the choose to do nothing to better either of these. A death that is not emotionally charged, but merely death...
*sigh*, sorry, got somber there. I understand if you're emotional about this, and disagree, but try and look and see if you disagree because you're emotional about this. If so, I ask that you don't respond to me until you feel more relaxed. I'm not so much arguing with you as trying to bring in a viewpoint that I'd appreciate you examining.