A Moral Dilemma — Difficult Problem

What can a person do?

A Moral Dilemma — Difficult Problem

What can a person do?

AI Art — MidJourney

What Do You Think?

Hypothetical Situation:

Suppose a being that is a true immortal, and could never die.

The immortal in defending the life of another being, killed three mortals in self defense.

For the crime of killing three mortal men, sentenced to life in prison.

The being is a true immortal, and will never die.

Does the punishment fit the crime?

Having been taken from his family and friends to spend forever and ever behind bars, is that correct and right and true?

What do you think?

The three men the immortal killed were only mortals, and would have died anyways.

The law is the law; however does the punishment fit the crime? Does it seem correct?

What do you think, and believe?

Do you not believe that the authorities would eventually be faced with either killing the immortal; or setting him free? The other immortals find the injustice beyond what they can stand. And want justice for the injustice that has been committed.

What do you believe should be done?

This is only a hypothetical delemma. But I’m curious what you feel is just?

Truth Is:

The judge was a mortal man, and has been long dead for 50 eons. He had no understanding of immortals, or their ways. The immortal in question was not given a fair trial, and his immortality was not taken into consideration of the punishment.

Reincarnation is true; and the three men have since been reborn, and lived many lives upon the earth, and died each time. Is this justice?

What is your answer?


Hi there!


Originally published at https://mydigitalchaos.substack.com.