I'd give you a Greak or a Greek even if I knew of any near where I live would would take up the offer to be one of your possesions, but alas I can not do this for you.
Um, ah, hmmm, don't even bother thinking about it!!
I'd give you a Greak or a Greek even if I knew of any near where I live would would take up the offer to be one of your possesions, but alas I can not do this for you.
Um, ah, hmmm, don't even bother thinking about it!!
This is a short Youtube clip... about 7 mins from a made for TV movie showing the murders based on Susan Atkins Grand Jury testimony.
Atkins told the grand jury that she stabbed Frykowski in the legs and that she held Tate down while Watson stabbed her. She also testified that Tate had pleaded for her life and that of her unborn child, to which Atkins replied, "Woman, I have no mercy for you."
During the sentencing phase of the trial, Atkins testified that she stabbed Tate. She candidly stated that she had stabbed Tate because she was "sick of listening to her, pleading and begging, begging and pleading"
Forensic evidence indicated that the murders were brutal. Just prior to leaving the residence, Atkins wrote "Pig" on the front door in Sharon Tate's blood.
Speaking of not thinking... if you read my post again you would realize what I said matches your own opinion of leaving her in there to rot.
Sorry I msread. I thought that "Why should thier remaining years be in more agony, just to suit Susan's sad life that she made herself? " you were referring to her family not the victim's. Apologies!
Why would one want to 'relive' the pain?? Relieve, maybe. But anyway the sentence was death in prison, so that should be the end of it.
I have no problem with the prison sentence, we must forgive our enemies but also we must insure that the enemy will not get a second chance to f uck us.
I agree. We don't have to hate or wish ill will upon the Manson family murderers 40 years after the crime. But that doesn't mean that because we want them to finish out their sentences we are vengeful. They committed horrific crimes and for that they are to spend the remaining years of their life behind bars.
I am sure that eventually they did become remorseful for what they did. I have seen a number of interviews with the other two women that committed the murders and they seemed remorseful. Nevertheless...they did it and they have to pay for it.
If the only reason you want them in prison is "to pay for what they did", then that is by definition vengeance.
If there is no productive practical purpose for keeping them locked up (and costing in some cases $120,000/year or more) other than make them pay for their actions, that is by definition vengeance.
If you are fine with that,
I have no problem with taking a stance that people pay for what they did. But then I really think the laws need to change to ,at the very least, go easy on people with vengeance as a motive.
Karrie
Is the structure of law that's invovled here declare that parole is a "right"? If there's a body of the majority who believe that this person should remain incarcerated...should we simply de-construct that system because we entertain the single factor of this persons potential to repeat or bring harm to the society she flagrantly disowned?
You can try to have "justice" but there are no guarantees.
And to repeat just as much as you are, I'll say that the difference between letting the courts and law do the vengeance rather then people filled with emotional rage, is that it gives the accused a chance to prove their innocence, prior to getting their punishment. An emotionally filled human directly affected by the crime won't give them a chance, they'd be dead.
And what happens when that person whom you killed through vengeance turned out to not be the person responsible for the crime? You just murdered an innocent now, and thus, the situation is now thrown on you, and then the family and those who loved the person you just killed will be coming after you in a vendetta.... and then that's how family feuds start.
There's a reason why there is a court system in process to handle these matters outside of the hands of those affected.