CDFingers wrote: Tue Sep 10, 2024 3:34 pm
The age of 18 may be the compromise. If 18 is that compromise, then the parent must accept responsibility. If the kid is tried as an adult, then he is taking responsibility, yet it is the dad ultimately who supplied the weapon. Morally, I don't think a kid can make the call, so it falls upon the parent.
Seems like at least two points here, whether or not we should use separate justice systems for children based on age and if we do, what age should we use, are big enough that we could easily fill 100 pages yammering about them. So that's deep water, but I like deep water. I'm willing to go there and go all the way to bottom if you folks are. It's your last statement here that intrigues me-- "Morally, I don't think a kid can make the call,..."
Then there's the standard boilerplate-- I think a moral kid would make a better call than an immoral adult, so on and so forth, yadda, yadda. At least part of the questions facing us in these new issues (ancient issues, but "new" to this thread) are questions like "can separate justice systems ever be moral?" and "if this is about the brain's physical development, how can we tell whether a given child makes decisions like an adult or like a child?"
I recall that the Supremes said that separate is not equal when talking about education systems split by race, so how can splitting the justice system by age be moral?
It turns out that that ARE real, significant differences between the physical decision making capabilities of an adult vs. those of a child, but I have never been convinced that a separate justice system is the moral answer to that problem. Separate legal options for all parties, yes, a separate system, no.
CDFingers wrote: Tue Sep 10, 2024 3:34 pm
Yet again, if an under-18 cannot yet accept the burdens of adulthood, then he also cannot buy a gun.
Uh, oh. Let's see. Okay.
I've been thinking about modifying my position on at least one of these issues, and maybe today is the day I hash it out.
My core belief as of this morning: Any sane adult has the right to self defense.
No distinctions between races, religions, country of origin, legal status or criminal histories. All sane adults. If his sentence isn't finished, put him back in prison. If his sentence is finished, give him his gun belt back. All sane adults. Even the ones with no I.D., the "illegal" immigrants, the adults who switched sex and the adults who dress in those weird clothes and even the adults from those nationalities that dress their men in skirts.
"Self defense" includes both access to learning the skills and access to any weapon that adult deems necessary.
The reason I've been considering modifying this position is the same thing we're talking about with the children-- how do you tell how a given person makes decisions? How do you tell if they make their decisions like an adult or like a child? And the real question, how do you tell how
this person makes decisions? A child who kills demonstrates how tough this can be-- not even their parents could tell. That's a major sticking point in all issues, and is also a fulcrum that should be used to stop the prosecution of one person for the crimes of another-- you simply can't tell how another person makes their decisions.
And finally, there is the on-point moral question that if you
could tell how someone makes their decisions, what are you morally obligated to do with that knowledge?