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Is it criminally malicious if you watch someone commit suicide on tape? Is it criminally malicious if you watch someone commit suicide online? Is it criminally malicious if you watch someone commit suicide in the same roome? Is it criminally malicious if you yell "jump"? Is it criminally malicious if you hand him the rope? Is it criminally malicious if you kick the chair out from under him? Is it criminally malicious if you tie the rope around his neck, lift him bodily and throw him out a window? I chose examples that are a mix of "yes" and "no's" in my mind. |
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do you find it reasonable to tell an emotional fragile person to kill them self? I'm not saying they are guilty, i am saying there should be an investigation, i don't have all the facts, in all likelihood he would have killed himself anyways. i find it morally appalling that people would egg someone on to kill them self, if a criminal act took place, it should be prosecuted. |
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if someone yells 'fire' in a crowded theater and people die because of a panic, i think that person is responsible. |
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There is no criminal act that took place other than the suicide and that cannot be punished criminally because the man is both victim and criminal. I find it morally appalling that people would try to pass the responsibility off to others in a case as this. |
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I didn't intend to the word "malice" to be used in a "criminal" sense. Only that, I don't see how someone could be encourage someone to kill themselves without malice. But my point is, that I don't think anyone here can draw a definite line on the culpability of people egging on the commission of a crime just because they are not in a position to physically prevent it. In this case we are talking about the crime of a person killing hisself. I think opinion on this issue would sway a lot more if the crime were of a nature that is not self-induced. And that is as it probably should be, or at least, as it should be expected. I just don't think that you can lay down any hard and fast culpability mandates because the people watching and encouraging couldn't have physically stopped it therefore they are free to behave unreasonably. I'm not willing to make that kind of blanket reprieve at this juncture. I mean, personal responsibility, right? It doesn't necessarily end because your "person" has been absorbed into the anonymity of the internet. Legally, perhaps it will remain that way, I fully comprehend the danger of toying with it. But, PERSONALLY, I do not absolve these people of responisbility for what happened. Hopefully some of that makes sense. I've run out of time for writing. doh! gotta go... |
MM - just to drive you insane, go back and change "criminally" to "morally" and tell me if your mixes of "yes's" and "no's" changes. Interestingly (or not), mine doesn't.
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Um, well. I might not find them all to be morally malicious. But I would certainly find them all morally reprehensible. But you are speaking to a person that predicted these sorts of questions, much to my dismay, would one day become questions way back on the release of the first Faces of Death film. Remember those? It disgusted me then and it disgusts me now.
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fixed spelling of nuisance
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btw, how the hell do you spell 'new-sents' lawsuits I've racked my brain and i can't get it... anyways, can we all agree that its a sad event? |
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I love Faces of Death. |
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I draw the line at watching the suffering, mutilation and death of humans and other animals for entertainment. I will never understand why people find that fun or interesting -furthermore I don't even think it's in my capacity to understand.
Gucci, I'll just pretend I didn't see you say that. ;) |
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/end threadjack |
I would think that if the viewers were going to be charged with anything, it would follow more along the lines of legislation that would govern supporting "snuff films" rather than the involuntary manslaughter that some have presented.
The popularity of searches for Saddam Hussein's hanging video as well as the Daniel Pearl video certainly demonstrates a popularity in morbid content, however there seems to be a significant difference between the "Faces of Death" type of video and the actual participatory nature of this event. While I generally do not support legislating morality, and can certainly understand some people's frustration with a depressed/suicidal person's constant threats of suicide, I find the callousness that some people have demonstrated in this thread disturbing. |
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So...part of the people care about others and part of them don't.
What a surprize. I can only think of one public hanging I'd like to see... |
The usernames list of the suicide picture included aMasteratwork... That's his 2nd viewing of a suicide on cam in what? 3 years?
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I feel really bad for the whole situation is just really sad. Whoa, that was an unintentional rhyme, sweet! Anyways, I don't believe the people in the chatroom are in anyway liable in the eyes of the law. On the other hand, I think it takes a sick kind of person to sit there in a chatroom and think it's fun to egg someone on to kill themselves. I hope that whomever was goading him feels the guilt of doing so for a long time and that should be punishment enough. It was his choice, he followed through and the consequences were deadly. I had some personal experiences with feeling suicidal a long time ago but never vocalized it to anyone. It's a pretty awful place to be. I can't imagine thinking it would be funny to go along with something like that, even if you outright knew it was a joke. I had done some pretty self destructive things to myself during that time, but I realize it's not up to me to decide when I die. I think this is just another illustration of what a bunch of dumb fucks this world is inhabited with and how meaningless their lives must be to find shit like that entertainment.
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Okay, what is an "insult" chat room, and what is the benefit of being in one? People just talking shit to each other non-stop, to see how witty or smart-ass they can be? Some kind of junior high locker room? WTF... just sounds totally pointless to me, but someone please enlighten me.
And also... what kind of insensitive fuck jokes about suicide, or EGGS someone on, in any context (yes, even a complete stranger on the internet)? I mean, I can see it if you've known someone for a long time and they've been waffling about it for years, etc... but a total stranger? I don't really care about legal repercussions, but even in this "insult" context, I can't believe that not a single person in that room had the consciousness of mind to think that this person might be serious. Sometimes I hate the fucking internet and what it encourages people to do. (I am not talking about the guy who committed suicide; I am talking about the fuckers who watched him do it, and how they could possibly think that was something "cool"...) |
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And I am aware that the guy might have committed suicide anyway, regardless of the internet or webcam. That is why I said, in the last parentheses to my previous post, that I wasn't talking about the guy committing suicide... I was talking about the fucking assholes who watched him do it, and thought that this was okay, even cool or funny. That's just plain sick. |
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IMO - A suicide is the most selfish act and stupidest thing to do. only wimps do it. I sincerely hope the rope wasn't nicely there and he suffered a while before the passed away. :shakehead:
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I feel just terrible for the tenant who will live in that apartment after him, what with the hole in the ceiling and all.
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I don't know why people hang themselves. So many things could go wrong. If you end up paralyzed, you will have to depend on the care of other people, and they certainly wouldn't help you end your life.
As well, there are figures that suggest that most people who commit suicide where also heavy drinkers, and that contributed- their "addiction" I mean... but I beg to differ. The drinking associated with most wreckless lives was their final means or effort to soothe the pain. They weren't suicidal because their drinking, but drinking because they were suicidal. Obviously it didn't work, but it was an effort to choose life over death. Of course, sometimes it is true that addiction is the culprit, but not all the time as people would like to believe. A study found that like 30% of people who ended their life also were alcoholics, but this is only because they tried it to see if it would make things less painful. It itself wasn't their bane of existence- not in every case. Anyway I've heard of this fad of posting your own death, or threatening to, but always wondered how someone would do it. For youtube.com you have to click 'finish,' then upload it, but I suppose in a live chatroom (never visited one) it would be different, real-time. Quote:
...but for others who end their life, such as Budd Dwyer, it takes courage and guts. I mean, I've loaded my gun, and unloaded it, then loaded it again during tough times, and I just couldn't do it, and so ended up having to deal with a worse pain the next day, that of the situation that made me think about death in the first place. I certainly don't feel like less of a coward for being unable to do it. People who commit suicide want to make a statement about a matter, a loud and clear statement, and it is their last attempt to communicate a message of pain to people who have so far refused to listen. (Of course, I'm not condoning or encouraging the concept.) |
The chatroom was an insult chat room which means you simply insult people not ege them on to kill them self this is not an insult. That would be like watching a young person chug-a-lug beer or alcohol and you edged them on then they died from alcohol poison.
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