Cash, I'm very much with you there. Sometimes, I don't even offer my own opinion because I'm too interested in the discourse that others are contributing to. I'm one of those people who is very wishy-washy. I can see both sides of the story so well, that I often have a hard time taking a firm stance of my own. I'll end up saying "what they said" to both sides and then people get pissy with me (I'm thinking my daughter here, no one on the board :).) In this instance, I'ma say "what Jessica said" because I've served on a jury, also, and I know how totally subjective the jury can be in its decision making. I was unprepared for that and found myself going along with the majority because I had no confidence that any of them would listen to what I had to say anymore than what they'd heard out in the courtroom. I do think we made the right decision, but for all the wrong reasons.
Oz ,'Beneath You'
Spike's Bitches 27: I'm Embarrassed for Our Kind.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
It wasn't quite a kerfuffle. It was more like a two-step. One step up on a hot issue, and one step back.
I still have no problem with the guy who kidnapped and raped the teenaed girl and cut off her arms being executed. Or the guy who kidnapped Polly Klaas. There's no doubt about their guilt in either instance, and they're evil, unfixable humans who committed cruel, sadistic and vicious crimes. The two guys who rode around in their vans and tortured women and taped it? Also should be very dead.
But there just aren't a whole lot of instances like that where you have obviously monstrous people who are unambiguously caught.
I'm working on my book pitch this weekend, along with going into work.
JZ being more virtuous, got up and out the door by 7:30 on a Saturday morning to go down to Perkins' house and get Julianna's room ready for her.
Has anyone else read James Alan Gardners' League of Peoples books?
In his 'verse, the League of Peoples is controlled by an alien cabal of beings so highly evolved that nobody knows anything about then, except that their requirement for sentience (and membership in the League) is that you, as a species, agree to stop killing other sentient beings. Anyone who commits murder is declared a "dangerous nonsentient" and dies instantly if they try to leave their planet. The humans in this universe are naturally suspicious of the League rulers, but nobody's ever caught them making a mistake, and anyway, it's still better to join them than have your entire species declared nonsentient.
Anyway, they're very good books.
The humans in this universe are naturally suspicious of the League rulers, but nobody's ever caught them making a mistake, and anyway, it's still better to join them than have your entire species declared nonsentient.
That's an interesting premise. The comic book Nexus had a more twisted presmise. An ancient, supremely powerful alien race gave one man horrible visions of evil murderers and the power to hunt them down and kill them. Sometimes these were tyrants and despots who were safe on their own planets. Sometimes savage kid psychopaths that Nexus would hunt down on the streets and kill in front of people who had no way of knowing the kid was evil.
The writer, Mike Baron, created the character starting from the notion "People like characters who kill. How can I justify that?"
Of course, later Nexus finally meets his last surviving alien power giver and finds out he's completely mad. Still 100% correct in finding killers, but insane.
That's what you get for trusting alien justice!
That's what you get for trusting alien justice!
Big Blue Justice = always better.
Intellectually, I think the death penalty is barbaric and wrong. Intellectually, I *want* to believe that no one is beyond rehabilitation. And the justice system is fucked in a big way. Our jails, as they exist now, are entirely non-conducive to rehabilitation. Want to make a criminal even worse? Throw him in jail.
That said, I'm also incredibly vengeful, and if anyone I loved were raped or murdered, I'd go vigilante and kill the fucker myself.
So. I'm a bundle of contradictions.
Oh, and also -- anyone who misuses quotation marks and apostrophes gets whacked, too. Because that's the only way people will learn.
According to everything I've ever read about how the human brain and memory works, eyewitness testimony's just about the least reliable form of evidence ever. People make things up all the time and they don't even know it.
I think that's so interesting and I wonder why it is. When I was attacked, the police called me when I got home from the hospital and said, "write it all down, now, while it's fresh."
And I found that things were jumbled in my head, so I called a friend who is very good at interviewing people and she asked me questions about the sequence of events. I didn't realize it at the time but they were all non-leading sorts of things. What did you see? What did he smell like? What did he say? What street were you on? Why did you take a left, there?
And we wrote it all out like an essay, and even then, months later, something would occur to me and I didn't know if it really happened or if my memory was filling in the nooks with nonsense spackle. I can remember the sequence of events very clearly, but I can't remember at all how I felt during it. It was just an overwhelming calm, no fear, no anger, just my mind checking off a list of how to get out of this. Like the world around just started moving in slow motion.
I think a lot of things would have disappeared if I hadn't written them down. Like taking notes in a class, the act of physically writing it out helps to cement things, at least in a sequence.
I wonder why the brain chooses to color outside the lines when it comes to memory. What's the benefit?
Oh, and also -- anyone who misuses quotation marks and apostrophes gets whacked, too. Because that's the only way people will learn.
By coming back as grammar-ghosts and haunting people into correct punctuation usage?
Oh, and also -- anyone who misuses quotation marks and apostrophes gets whacked, too. Because that's the only way people will learn.
By coming back as grammar-ghosts and haunting people into correct punctuation usage?
Nah -- if you know you could die for writing "I have no room for all these book's in my house!", then I think you'd learn proper punctuation real damn fast.
(This, of course, is why I'm not a teacher.)
Can i tell you how weird it feels to post in Bitches? I feel like a stranger who crashed a party. I have no idea why.
That's kind of how I feel about Natter, Allyson. I think part of it is that both threads are so fast moving that if you don't come in on a daily basis, you feel kind of lost. Like you're at a play without a program. It doesn't totally take away from the play, but you lose some of the significant bits.