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Originally Posted by jonathan lall
My belief is this: Paul and Karla hit close to home and commited much more brutal, personal crimes. Saddam commited very detached crimes in a much greater magnitude, but we as a whole can hardly relate with the goings-on of the Arab world. Likewise, Saddam only recently started being tried, in a questionable court on the other side of the world; he exists as an icon to the West, but we really know little of him. As some have already pointed out in this thread, the reason they are questioning the motive behind burning Osama's effigy is that doing so is less a statement of disapproval for the crime as it is a childish political statement. As such, I think this could also be an important distinction that is being made, rather than a double-standard.
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True, the Homolka/Bernardo connection hit eerily close to home for some(he grew up on the 60 yards away from one of my best friends). But so did the September 11th attacks. Over 2,900 people died that day, mainly from the city of New York. If you play a little game of six degrees, and assume each of those people was close with 100 people, eliminating a hardy amount of duplications (about 19 million or so) you see that at least 10 million people were only a mere two degrees from someone who died in the attacks. It's natural that's going to be an extreme amount of anger.
I understand completely the dangers and error of responding out of vengeance and anger. Yet, I will never fault someone for doing so. I cannot claim to grasp the anger felt when one loses a loved one to something as horrifying as murder. If people are angry, let them be angry. If their anger is limited to blowing up effigies, that's great. It's better than their anger being taken out in some other, more destructive way. (Blowing up effigies = good, blowing up look-a-likes = bad)
Taking that all into account, it is the responsibility of cooler heads, and those not directly involved to behave in a less vengeful manner. I would never ever, want punishments (I'm firmly against the death penalty) or foreign policies created out of anger. It's why we have impartial juries and judges.
I just think that telling people who may have been impacted by such horrible events, that they really shouldn't burn Bin Laden's face because it might upset people in other parts of the world, is being a tad bit unrealistic. I know how'd I react if someone told me to show some respect for someone who had killed my mother, for the sake of keeping up foreign relations.