LuckyR wrote: ↑October 1st, 2018, 2:07 amGE Morton wrote: ↑September 30th, 2018, 8:10 pmThen much ado about nothing, we are in complete agreement.
I agree there is a vernacular meaning of "justice" that equates it with vengeance. That is not the dictionary meaning, however, and not the meaning intended when I said the purpose of a criminal justice system is to secure justice for the victims of crime.
The issue was "getting justice for the victim". If we look at the definition of justice, then it is hard to equate with ANY process in place.
just behaviour or treatment.
"a concern for justice, peace, and genuine respect for people"
synonyms: fairness, justness, fair play, fair-mindedness, equity, equitableness, even-handedness, egalitarianism, impartiality, impartialness, lack of bias, objectivity, neutrality, disinterestedness, lack of prejudice, open-mindedness, non-partisanship"
What victims seem to want is to hurt the perpetrator as they have been hurt. This is vengeance, and since they consider this vengeance AS justice, we can only conclude that "getting justice for the victim" is a classic case of euphemism. Justice is the means to vengeance in this case.
I prefer to talk plain. Vengeance is what we have been talking about all along. The victims are no impartial, they have an obvious bias to punish the perp. The court is the conduit for that vengeance.