Reasonableness of punishment and punishability
This biblical view of the perception of punishment to punish sin is regrettable, a view present in Judaism, Buddhism, and Shintoism through the place of suffering in the spiritual penitentiary called hell by Christians. In Deuteronomy chapter 28, the uselessness of punishment is exhaustively exemplified in a metaphorical way.
Let me quote Deuteronomy: "If you do not follow what I command you, then your vineyard will be cursed with plagues, the mother will devour her own children, you will be a slave to other peoples, in short, all misfortune and curses will fall for more than a thousand generations on your children and your children's children."
Imagine a reading that allows us to conclude that no life sentence, or death sentence, or intergenerational sentence will bring back to life Nardone's murdered daughter, or Richthofen's murdered parents, all punishment is useless, it does not restore life, it does not restore lost time, it does not return to the past to redo the facts, it does not bring compensation, I do not want to ask for justice for a murdered son, no penalty or sentence or fine or compensation returns a lost asset because of the variable time, which does not go back, nor can life be restored, after all we still have to deceive ourselves that the punishment was fair, no punishment compensates, I prefer my children alive than to wait for the murderers to be torn apart, it is not worth the pain.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário