and?
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mr_j_morris-1 — 19 years ago(August 29, 2006 09:51 AM)
The entire story was sad. Was she killed by the Department of Corrections? How can one correct something one has just destroyed?
The death penalty, be it by hanging, electric chair, firing squad or lethal injection isn't justice, it's vengeance. -
Lady_Jeran — 19 years ago(September 03, 2006 12:03 AM)
An eye for an eye will leave everyone blind.
We have an amazing government that legalizes murder, in many forms. Rather than using money to help people in her situation before they become murderers, the government prefers to kill them after the fact to make it look like they are doing society some good.
I see Aileen's case as a sad example of someone who has slipped through the cracks of society, and no one was there to catch her. I don't think she needed to resort to killing people. I would hope that her case would spur programs and funds to help young people in bad situations before they get any worse. I think that it is pointless to speculate whether she was justified or not in killing those men, whether they deserved it or not, whether it was a product of her childhood, or of her mental ability to handle to situations. I think that, in order to prevent more deaths like this, we need to assume that something could have been done to stop her, and use that to help other people who are in situations like her.