Chapter Twenty Two: What is Murder?
Now, the Columbusian is crawling from the original flesh he was controlling several months ago, and unto the next one. Although his physical manifestation in itself is unknown, his substance can be felt quite considerably despite his invisible qualities. He has never been more alive than before, and the thought of the prospect of the next murder excited him even further.
But, what exactly is murder and why is it a big deal? Murder is simply taking the life of someone who isn't deserving to live any more years and terminate his life, maybe because a higher being allowed them to die for this reason, or they did something wrong to other people in the past, and the universe has a way of upholding the law of karma. What goes around comes around, right? Everybody ultimately gets what he deserve.
Well, that isn't exactly so. There is a general rule that applies to the numerous concepts in a philosophical basis, and the only way to allow some form of the killing of a human life is for the interest of justice; however, even the concept of justice itself is generally flawed and imperfect.
Which now points the academic discussion to the definition of the sin of murder as a direct function of the urges of revenge, and revenge is what constitutes an unforgiving heart. Although not all murders can be attributed to the unforgiveness that can be found in all painful circumstances, some of these senseless acts have also come from all forms that constitute deceit, robbery, envy, jealousy, among many others that can be enumerated.
Yet, whether these sins are valid or not, aside from it is an established biological rule that all humans will die some time in the future; still, murder is encapsulated as a mortal sin that cannot be committed, and then to be justified by reason other than an established penalty for serious felony; some also consider euthanasia as permissible. Murder is not an acceptable way of responding to stimuli, as much as society condemns those that carry out any harm to their peers or to those that disturb the peace of their surroundings.
The pretext of death penalty is not what constitutes a murder, both in intent and purposes. Albeit it is true that both methods will eventually take someone else's life, a person condemned with a penalty of death, for example, will die because of the intensity of the way he perpetuated the slaughter of a victim's life, while committing a murder springs from violating something of a moral value, and, of course, the many acts forbidden by law in the exercise of the authority of the state. Innocence is always preserved, not desecrated.
But, the many reasons cited for the argument whatsoever; he is the Columbusian, after all. He is the sovereign, and he can do whatever it is that his heart desires. Unlike God who is patiently waiting for the conversion of the world before every corrupted creation will ultimately be destroyed by the same sins that condemned it, the destructive nature of the inhabitants who have seen this certain divine favor (i.e., grace) will, nevertheless, confront such careful judgment in fully unexpected ways.
Ridding the world of evil bureaucrats is a fun way of empowering a noble cause for him, the great Columbia as he is sometimes called, and this job description has hovered through his mind many thousand times as a form of sincere calling, and he cannot back down from the core of persuasion, which is, for him, the bitter acceptance of the incisions to be made to the greedy and heartless, of the same cruelty of the poisonous fangs of death.
Not at all a murderer, or a rebel to some extent, but a sovereign in deed. A rightful owner of the past and its authoritarian crimes. He is the ultimate punisher, and nobody can stop it.
x---------x
The Chapter is sponsored by Dolce & Gabbana.
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
.jpeg)
Comments
Post a Comment