Daryl wrote:The best human societies are founded on egalitarianism, with equality of opportunity and no discrimination.
That may not be optimal with a society made up of very different species with very different abilities and outlooks. There may well have to be safeguards to protect all sentient citizens, just as we now have laws to protect the slower witted from con merchants.
As an example, code duello where the challenged gets to choose the weapons would have to be different.
cthia wrote:Spray paint that thought onto the canvass of a society exclusively founded on religion and righteousness, colored by the current discussion. Burdette's
ignorance should have been protected by righteousness. He was still innocent until proven guilty. And the charge of guilt could have been tainted by Satan and his harlot. There is an ongoing war between God and Satan - good and evil. A true Christian should not await secular laws to catch-up with righteousness.
All I know is that honestly, I personally could not have kept the truth from him and lived with myself afterward, sleeping peacefully at night. There must be something intrinsically wrong there, or I wouldn't be too hard on myself, having survived a duel.
My notions, though they have a tendency to be controversial in nature are oftentimes like pulling teeth. Oftentimes you eventually come around. Eventually.
tlb wrote:I very much doubt that the rules of the dueling code would be changed much: perhaps some limits on the choice of weapon, but the right to choose is already a safeguard to make a challenger think twice. However the code is more likely to change that a little noted, rarely used part of the Constitution; that is more likely to be simply removed.
Burdette may have the right to be considered "innocent, until proved guilty" in a judicial proceeding; but he both rejected a judicial proceeding and admitted to the Protector and his peers that all counts against him were true, except for knowingly causing the death of Reverend Hanks. Had the proof against him been needed, it was a direct confession to Church and the Protector of his armsman, who shot Reverend Hanks; something that was in no way "tainted by Satan and his harlot".
Whatever the truth about the strength of your feelings; that says nothing about the strength of the truth of your assertions.
cthia wrote:What about Burdette's right to choose whether to enter into an unacceptably lopsided unrighteous, unfair contest?
Burdette rejected the secular court and demanded to be judged by God, in a Trial by Combat with the Protector's Champion; that was his right no matter how "unacceptably lopsided unrighteous" and "unfair" you chose to call it. It was a rational decision faced with the evidence against him, because if he won, it gave him the chance to kill Honor, discredit the Protector and vindicate his honor; and he would not be any worse off if he lost.
tlb wrote:However the code is more likely to change that a little noted, rarely used part of the Constitution; that is more likely to be simply removed.
cthia wrote:Expound?
FIE, chapter 29 wrote:no one had claimed challenge right in over three hundred years!
Burdette may have the right to be considered "innocent, until proved guilty" in a judicial proceeding; but he both rejected a judicial proceeding and admitted to the Protector and his peers that all counts against him were true, except for knowingly causing the death of Reverend Hanks.
cthia wrote:He chose to take it to a higher court. No problem.
Higher court unrighteous, bribed and brainwashed. Problem.
And the kids.
Not sure what why you mention "the kids", since he did accept responsibility for actions that led to their deaths. Since God is expected to judge the Trial by Combat, are you calling God "unrighteous, bribed and brainwashed"?
tlb wrote:Had the proof against him been needed, it was a direct confession to Church and the Protector of his armsman, who shot Reverend Hanks; something that was in no way "tainted by Satan and his harlot".
cthia wrote:It was a confession to the transgression against man's laws to the sacristy.
It was an appeal for proper justice to the church. Justice devoid of hidden costs of the price of [un righteousness].
No, the armsman confessed to
both the Church and the Protector so that the statement could be admitted in court against Burdette, the man who had ordered him to the place where he shot Reverend Hanks.
tlb wrote:Whatever the truth about the strength of your feelings; that says nothing about the strength of the truth of your assertions.
cthia wrote:Spoken like a true secular man. It says plenty if I'm right about the condition of my faith.
It would be better, for this purpose, if your assertions were as strong as you claim your faith is (I did not mention your faith in the selected line, only your use of "feelings" as evidence). Why do you keep referring to "the transgression against man's laws" as though causing the deaths of children and others is not also against God's Laws?
I wonder, had Burdette won the fight, how well he would have been allowed to live despite having been shown the favor of God, after having so publicly admitted all that he had done? Note that he did accept responsibility for Reverend Hanks death, since Burdette only denied specifically targeting him.