Law in Contemporary Society

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JulieParetFirstPaper 4 - 23 Jun 2013 - Main.EbenMoglen
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Home Invasion

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My hometown of Cheshire, CT, where I return every Thanksgiving and Christmas, is exactly what I imagine people to picture when they think of “a sleepy town in Connecticut” — a prototypical suburbia, where everyone knows everyone, and nothing out of the ordinary ever happens. That’s all it ever was, until one summer night in July 2007, when it became the site of a home invasion of unimaginable horror that would forever transform my once ordinary town.
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My hometown of Cheshire, CT, where I return every Thanksgiving and Christmas, is exactly what I imagine people to picture when they think of “a sleepy town in Connecticut” — a prototypical suburbia, where euveryone knows everyone, and nothing out of the ordinary ever happens. That’s all it ever was, until one summer night in July 2007, when it became the site of a home invasion of unimaginable horror that would forever transform my once ordinary town.
  It was surreal. Hayley and Michaela went to my middle school. I rode the bus with them every day. We got on at the same stop, where my mom used to chat with Mrs. Petit before the bus arrived. And then, the news broke. I listened in horror as the details were slowly revealed: how two men had followed Mrs. Petit home from the store, how they beat her husband and tied him in the basement, how they escorted Mrs. Petit to the bank to withdraw $15,000 from her account; how the teller called 911 and the police had set up a perimeter, but that it was too late; how they tied Mrs. Petit and her daughters, 17-year-old Hayley and 11-year-old Michaela, to their beds and molested them, right before strangling Mrs. Petit and dousing them all in gasoline, and setting the house on fire, killing all but Dr. Petit, who not only lost his wife and two daughters, but all of the records of their shared lives together as his home went up in the flames.
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Works Cited

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Why aren't these just links in the text?

 http://www.governor.ct.gov/malloy/cwp/view.asp?Q=503122&A=4010 http://abcnews.go.com/US/connecticut-repeals-death-penalty-governor-dannel-malloy-signs/story?id=16212552#.UWSpzBmpa2w http://thedartmouth.com/2012/01/05/news/Petit
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 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Bruce_Ross
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I don't understand the idea the essay is meant to convey. You are, it appears, ambivalent about ending the death penalty because there are some people you want to kill. The people you want to kill are closer to being dead than most other people people want to kill in order to "get closure" for other killings. So, despite your recognition that "rationally" those other people shouldn't be given whatever psychological satisfaction they take from the execution of the murderers at whom they are particularly angry, you'd like to get yours.

And?

The difficulty is the direct unmediated juxtaposition of your personal emotion and the issue of constitutional policy. You feel this way, as citizens feel a variety of strong ways for a variety of personal and psychically complex reasons. But making interpretative use of that fact requires more intermediate conceptual material, which you don't provide. How are we to understand you personal feelings in relation to the public issues? That you are ambivalent isn't in itself of much value to the reader or the rest of us.

We are all, I think, for example, —yourself included—aware of the obsessive quality of the search for revenge, "closure," "satisfaction of honor," quiet rest of the spirit of the murdered relative, or whatever name we give to the obsession. Are you asking us to recognize, criticize, accept, defer to, or cure the obsession? Are we being told that public policy should be, should not be, is, or is not made on the basis of obsessional behaviors by individuals and groups? Are you introspectively describing an obsession of which you are critical? Why do the obsessions we acquire in this way deserve to affect public policy, while the obsessions we acquire in other fashions are our own business: Why does what you need "for closure" become a public question, where what you need "for sex" or what you need "for dealing with fear of old age and death" is not?

 

Revision 4r4 - 23 Jun 2013 - 17:08:44 - EbenMoglen
Revision 3r3 - 10 Apr 2013 - 01:03:32 - JulieParet
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