I don't care, fuck society's institutional incentive structures. At some point you do the right thing whether or not you take heat for it.
At some point, you have to have enough moral courage and intestinal fortitude to do what is right regardless of what the potential consequences are from a limited utilitarian analysis. How else are you going to have good times with strong men, if no one's going to step in and be the strong man?
That line isn't necessarily everywhere, but that line needs to be somewhere. It should be somewhere around the public rape and molestation of an 11 25 year old.
I don't disagree with you. I'm just saying there is a logical throughline to not.
Logic and heroism are often different paths. In this case, I think there is enough clear and present evidence to send this cretin into his next life, but doing anything less than that will simply make you a criminal AND get him a lighter punishment (this is my biggest concern).
This might be a key point to my perspective. I see heroism as almost entirely defined by: "an individual taking extreme personal responsibility to change or alleviate a dire situation which has been caused by systemic and/or institutional failures."
To me, if you know the system is going to let a rapist continue to rape someone, and you stop them. That is heroic. If you simply stop him before the police get there to stop him, that is just an act of moral goodness.
In my opinion, I see heroism as directly intertwined to an individual's response to a system's actions.
Okay, so someone beats his ass.
Then they get called a racist, lose their job, we get even more riots, etc.
Nah, I'm good.
That's really it. I get what Jr. is trying to say, but we live IN A SOCIETY that literally punishes you for trying to be a hero.
So by doing anything, now there are two victims and a strong possibility the actual culprit gets less punishment by your actions.
I don't care, fuck society's institutional incentive structures. At some point you do the right thing whether or not you take heat for it.
At some point, you have to have enough moral courage and intestinal fortitude to do what is right regardless of what the potential consequences are from a limited utilitarian analysis. How else are you going to have good times with strong men, if no one's going to step in and be the strong man?
That line isn't necessarily everywhere, but that line needs to be somewhere. It should be somewhere around the public rape and molestation of an
1125 year old.I don't disagree with you. I'm just saying there is a logical throughline to not.
Logic and heroism are often different paths. In this case, I think there is enough clear and present evidence to send this cretin into his next life, but doing anything less than that will simply make you a criminal AND get him a lighter punishment (this is my biggest concern).
This might be a key point to my perspective. I see heroism as almost entirely defined by: "an individual taking extreme personal responsibility to change or alleviate a dire situation which has been caused by systemic and/or institutional failures."
To me, if you know the system is going to let a rapist continue to rape someone, and you stop them. That is heroic. If you simply stop him before the police get there to stop him, that is just an act of moral goodness.
In my opinion, I see heroism as directly intertwined to an individual's response to a system's actions.