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| Yes | 84% | 151 votes | Total: 179 votes | |
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Yes
Created on: August 16, 2010
Defending Family vs. the Murder Victim
I understand that ethics and morals differ between individuals. With that being said, society has done one thing right by condemning murder. Whether or not you believe murder to be right or wrong doesn't matter because when it comes to the life of a human being, nobody and nothing has the right to take that away aside from nature. Society backs up this statement rightfully so.
In the unsettling event that you know about a murder, obviously it is your civil and ethical duty to inform law enforcement of what you know. Remember, murder is against the law. But it complicates things when the murder was performed by someone with the same blood as you, who comes from the same mother as you. What do you do when your brother has committed a murder and you know about it?
Shoving ethics aside for a moment, stop and think about the position YOU are in. Murder being against the law and you withholding information about that murder, regardless of your relationship with the murderer, makes you an accessory to murder. Do you want to go to jail for something that someone else did? I don't.
Back to ethics. When someone has taken the life of someone else, provided it's for a reason other than self-defense, it's wrong and should result in punishment. If the murderer is your brother, what's the difference? He has broken the law and if you are the only one who knows about it, it's your ethical responsibility to bring justice to that victim and their family. Otherwise, you're just as guilty.
In the event that you're brother is killed, you would expect ANYONE (even the family members) who knows anything about the murder to step up and tell what they know. What makes you and your family any different? Nothing makes you and your family any different. Nothing at all. When someone does something wrong, they need to be punished.
It's just the nature of the world. More importantly, it's the law. A law that has every right to be enacted and enforced. So if you want to perform your ethical duty, you must protect nobody from the consequences they DESERVE (deserve being the key word). Nobody wants a family member going to jail, being sentenced to death, or anything of the sort but when it serves justice, it's the right thing to do.
Turn in your family, your friend, your acquaintance, or the complete stranger when needed. It doesn't make you a tattle tale, it makes you a responsible and ethical citizen helping to make the world a safer place to live and prosper.
Learn more about this author, Cameron Savage.
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No
Created on: May 03, 2010
In the third grade, I'd push my skinny legs into the line for the football game with the neighborhood boys; I prized the fierceness of the sport. I remember this kid Matt decided to shove his judgment down my throat and tease me while I was waiting to be picked for team, I talked back, and this kid got in my space, and right as he raised up his fist, my older brother clocked him in the face.
High school came along somewhere down that line, I would sneak out the back gate when I wasn't allowed to a party, my mom, however would somehow always find out where I was. Before she’d drive down and yank me into humiliation, I’d be saved by whom else but big brother in his 97’ Toyota Ranger; he always gave me a heads up and an escape route.
And when college came around and I had my heart shattered by the first boy I truly loved, who was there but my big brother, to talk to me whenever I'd cry about it...not to mention scare the crap out the next couple of guys I dated so they would never think to lay a hand on me.
Is it ethical, you ask, to turn your brother in for murder? The man who has the same blood as mine running through his veins, the boy who's walked with me through childhood, the man whom I see as my guardian angel in my past, present, and future? No, of course not; how could I ever? How could anyone ever disregard the circumstances of your family member’s situation and throw him to the dogs on a count of some deranged sociological code of ethics?
Who is to say what is right and what is wrong, even when it comes to murder? Just flat you stating that you’d turn him in save no room for his part of the story to be heard, therefore no leniency, this is much to cold to do to someone you’ve grown up with…I’m sure you’ve all heard the saying, “two wrongs don’t make a right.”
Some may argue that the fate of a criminal is out of his or her hands once they decide to make the decision for another’s. I ask, who are you to be the higher power? You’re no Jesus. We’ve all been beasts of burden, we should think twice about condemning someone for something we may have done in his or her situation.
It is expected of the keeper of such a secret to feel guilty for disobeying the public opinion of what is right and what is wrong. But there is no guilt to be found in keeping your hands out of someone else’s business. The real guilt would come from living the rest of your life as a snitch, as a traitor to your own blood, who holds your love and gives it in return.
It isn’t ethical to turn in your brother for murder, simply because it’s unethical not to know how to think for yourself. The choice should be unattached to any moral structure before giving the push to hammer the gavel, and the fate of that sound should be made by God almighty, not Bruce.
Learn more about this author, Brittany Murrietta.
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