- September 6th, 2017, 6:45 pm
#294682
This is my first post here on these forums, but I've read quite a few. I think some actions that might be considered vengeful would not actually be, depending on the anticipated or desired outcome of the action. When I was in elementary school, many decades ago, we had bullies. I was a small, skinny geek with glasses, so was occasionally a victim of one or more bullies about twice my weight. Several of us put up with it for the first few weeks of school, and then decided to gang up, at least six to one, on these bullies one at a time, and we eventually convinced them that picking on us was a bad idea. While I am not certain of the other kids' motives, I was willing to be a part of a gang beating in order to stop being a victim, and retaliation was probably not high on my list of concerns. Was this vengeance? Personally, I don't think so. I am not a person to hold a grudge, and I tend to forgive those who have wronged me. I tend to be more leery of them in the future, but retaliation is not part of my nature.
Based entirely upon my personal experiences, I would have to say that vengeance has no place in society. Retribution, fairly administered, is necessary for the redress of grievances. Removing a person from society because he is a danger to others is often necessary, but should we put him in a situation that could be considered inhumane, or even dangerous to him? I don't think so. When we find it necessary to do harm to someone just because they did harm, real or imagined, to you, we have a serious moral problem. Vengeance is what allows us to shun or lock away those who believe differently from us. It may seem oblique to some, but the Jim Crow laws were based on vengeance. A group of people, formerly downtrodden, came into their own, and certain other groups saw this as a major threat. When 'getting back at someone' becomes the primary concern for any actions by society, we need to reconsider how we view whatever is being decided. Recently, we have had a spate of news articles about unlawful activities, such as planting drugs, shootings, etc., by officers of the law. Now we have a backlash of actions hamstringing our police, all based on retaliation, not on each case. Many of the investigations focus on a 'systemic problem' within a particular police force, rather than just focusing on the officer that made the bad judgement call. I do not think this is the correct approach. Focus on the individual. If there is a systemic problem, it will come out eventually.