Recently, much controversy has been raised over the release of "Lockerbie bomber" Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi. He was convicted of murder and was to serve a life sentence. After serving approx. 8 years, he was released on compassionate grounds because he was diagnosed of prostate cancer and had a life expectancy of 3 months. This has raised much outrage in the United States and mixed reactions from the United Kingdom.
Releasing Megrahi has been seen as a merciful and just decision by many. After, he was given only 3 months to live. It was stated that though the conspirators of the bombings were unjust and cruel to others, it did not mean that they could be repaid with injustice. However, what does being merciful and just warrant? It may not justify releasing Megrahi, assuming that he waas the perpetrator of this crime. True, being just and merciful, even to those that have harmed others, is correct and important, but how far do we have to go to fufil these? Releasing Megrahi may have nothing to do with being merciful to him. Assuming that he was the perpetrator, he should be serving much more than a life sentence. Therefore, I think Megrahi shouldn't be released.
Welcome to my blog. I had an academic obligation to write every now and then in 2010, but now there's no more pressure, so it'll be much harder to get myself to to write regularly. -- On the right are navigation links. Home is pretty self-explanatory. Fiction is a page dedicated to narrative passages that I write, fiction or not. -- Any comments can be posted on my blog or emailed to s-unit052@hotmail.com. --Thanks. |
23.8.09
6.8.09
Conflict in the classroom (and also on my C-box)
Posted by
SeraphC
,
22:20
Well, conflict in 1I1 (and in groups of people around my age) is caused mainly by the mentality that one has to "be on top" or appear cooler, in a sense, that the people around one. Which is why one pointed comment in my class can spark off a whole chain of angry replies. And it doesn't stop in the classroom. My newly-decorated c-box is evidence for that. Of course, as time goes by, this mentality that afflicts us tends to (hopefully) fade away, and remains in only the most primitive form (adults can sometimes act as immature and childish as me). Of course, this mentality sometimes remains as strong and as compulsive as it was when this abnormal case was thirteen. And some abnormal cases have this mentality as strong as it was when they were 7. Anyway, that's saying something.
Forgive me if I'm typing crap. It's 10 and I want to go to sleep.
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