A man undergoes a radical new justice program under the State's revised stance on capital crime. THE DISAPPEARANCE OF WILLIE BINGHAM is used with permission from Matt Richards. Learn more at fouranchorisland.com.
Something tells me that isn't a parade for the kiddies. But rather a parade FOR the kiddies, they saw the face of death and laughed at it and now they just face it. Not just dark, grim dark.
@@dawey8897 that's the point. Fearmongering only causes more fear. That's why it's grim dark, it's an inevitable cycle instead of dark stories' usual straight line. 100% better than Black Mirror. It actually says something.
wait so in the end the supervisor said that 5 years later he and the father go to highschools is bc they still continue trying to tell kids dont be like him??
I once read on Humans of New York: "When someone does you wrong, you want the maximum amount of justice. But when you do wrong, you want the maximum amount of forgiveness and understanding."
@@blue-chaos96striker72I think you misunderstood the point of the post. He wasn't advocating compassion or retribution. He was just talking about different perspectives.
What’s interesting in these types of revenge shorts is that they very rarely ever show the actual crime being committed. You only hear of it second hand and it’s introduced so quickly by the guilty man who is already pleading for mercy. It’s easier for the audience to feel some sympathy whilst he desperately begs. I wonder though, had the film started out showing the horrific scene of an innocent young woman being SA-ed, murdered and mutilated by him, would a majority of us feel little to no compassion? I think it would drastically change opinions.
@@igorvoitenko841 I actually think it would be fascinating and a real gut punch if they had added the scene of him committing the attack after his final punishment(s) and ending. That would have had us challenging our emotional calibration for sure.
Yes and initially he's accompanied by his two daughters then there's just one of them and after that none showing that he lost rest of his two daughters to his revenge
I like the symbolism used with the family, after the 1st surgery his daughter no longer goes, then the next and he becomes more dishevelled throughout. It shows what grief & revenge can do to a person
The sequence at 4:19, where the camera pulls in as we watch the girl's expression of progressing horror, until it's right on her and she moves away, only for dad to come closer -- just really expertly done. Says so much without any words at all.
Honestly the worst thing about this short is that it's well... too short. A 30 to 40 minutes version of this would have been amazing cause this is great psychological/ body horror
That scene with him in the bath tub, staring at the nurse. He has an expression of overwhelming despair, and she looks like she's trying not to be physically ill at the thought of what they've done to him.
This is what it feels like to be SA’d. You lose that feeling of control over your own body, as if people can just take it from you. You feel helpless and alone, like no one’s on your side. For me, it went on for a year straight. So like this guy, it got dragged out, and felt repetitive. Like each time I lost another inch of myself. Greatly symbolic.
As someone who just recently had a surgery performed, this is absolutely terrifying. The post-surgery is incredibly difficult, mentally and phisically. It's grueling trying to imagine what is going through the minds of the characters, especially the father who went on and on with the surgeries, the absolute hatred he must've felt, the suffering he inflicted not only upon Mr. Bingham, but to himself, anyone with that much anger surely can't have a fulfilling life. Also, imagine being convicted in this system, and having someone sadist on the other side of the glass, waiting to call on the phone and make them start your surgery.
I just got back a few day from my wife mommy surgery. Tummy tuck lipo, and a few c section fixes. All went extremely well but the post surgery was basically what it would be like if she had gotten hit by a car. Every move was excruciating so I was thinking that while watching.
@@reinburhythm3215no no sadist is correct maybe slight sociopath/psychopath works well for someone that is like the dad. There is being a person in grief and there is being a messed up person and most just blur the line so they can be both because it makes them feel better
Yea, that wasn't the right way to punish the convict. The victims family should have to petition a judge for further punishment and explain why they felt it was necessary.
Corinthia McGinty when seeking revenge you dig two graves. One for the person who wronged you, and one for yourself. The father and inmate did not die, but they suffered similar fates, death of the mind.
and thats the message of the film the husband slides downhill consumed by his thirst for revenge. the nurse is hatin it and the supervisor steadily deteriorates when faced with the procedures on the inmate. the confuscuis quote is gold.. having said the crime was particularly heinous so part of me was u reap what u sow
No, it does not. It is not about any technology we didn't have since 200 years back. People have had their limbs amputated way back then. Black Mirror is not about dystopias, it is about how we use technology, for the better or for the worse.
This is all horrifying, but the line of ''steady revenue stream for our now privatized prison system'' is one of the scariest, frankly. Really well done! H a t e to have watched it
Think this is scifi? There are currently more than 116.000 people incarcerated in private prisons in the USA. The American prison industry has a revenue of approximately $5 billion. It's already happening.
Nowadays, the illegal organ harvesting and marketing by greedy, aggressive doctors reportedly continues on the global, deep dark web. A price schedule and a "best-by date" are published for potential buyers.
@@renuverma6995 Those who look to the justice system for vengeance are no better than the criminals who have harmed them. They simply have the sanction of the state in committing their crime.
roguishpaladin roguishpaladin Lets say someone kills a mans daughter, the man who lost his daughter wants the man who killed his daughter executed, are you saying the man who wants the original criminal dead is no better than the original offender?
Ему и не может стать хорошо. Он потерял ребенка. Ты хоть на долю представляешь, что он переживает? Хотя, не удивительно, что не представляешь, ведь в фильме убийство и насилие просто сказано словами, считай, пропущено. "Ну убил какую-то девочку, ну изнасиловал, это не важно мельком пронеслось. А с ним за это вот что сделали! Изверги! Руки отняли, ноги, достоинство, уши, нос, язык!!!"
This is like a similar case of a Pakistani serial killer named Javed Iqbal. He was sexual abuser and had r@ped and killed more than 100 boys ranging age of 6-16 years. He then dismember them and dissolve them in acid. The judge later sentenced him death by similar manner that he killed the boys that is cut him into 100 pieces that too infront of the parents of the boys. He committed suicide before his punishment... People only showing empathy to this Willie because we have seen only his side of story and punishment. Now just imagine about the pain that school girl had endured when he r@ped, mutilated her body and her body later found by her dad.
If we had seen his crime on screen at the start there would be a lot less people defending him. People like him have no chance at reform, he was even making excuses after his sentencing.
Not everyone is the same. Even if we saw what he did to the girl and in the end he ended up fully regretting his actions, some ppl would still sympathise with him. And once again, many people, although they don't sympathise with him at all, would still think its immoral.
It was a good choice to subtly show us the dad’s mental state too. He’s emotionally deteriorating, stops bringing the daughters, tells them to proceed all the way to the end, even though it’s not giving him any peace or justice or closure. It’s a good allegory for high cost vices, that make us worse not better, yet we keep choosing to destroy ourselves anyway.
to me the issue is time revgenance and mercilessnes does have a place in the world but this slow agonizing spread of time just keeps all the pain perputally at the forfront of there mind. outside the attacker outside the many obvious allegorys there is a intense one relating to familys waiting for monsters on eath row to get to the chair. and how this very process where them down mentally as it makes them unable to ever forget it even momentairly. and how many stop trying not out of lack of care but being unable to burn out any longer.
@@housewilma4904 I think *justice* has a place in a modern society, but vengeance implies something else. It’s actually counterproductive in most cases to watch someone who’s wronged you suffer. It seems logical to our irrational brains when we’ve been wronged and are just desperately grasping at anything that could soothe the pain. So it makes sense we’d find it somehow comforting or therapeutic to punish the person who wronged us. But like you said, all that does is keep the pain at the forefront of the victim’s mind, so they never progress past the irrational early stages of grief. And now the victim is dealt even more trauma and stress with the complicated ethics and guilt of them taking part in inflicting violence on someone else.
@@trishachokshi8414 of course but in this case the crime was inflicting pain and mutilation on another person. hence justice must insure that person suffers as much as there viktom did how this suffering is deployed differs. id just rather eath row or life imprisonment for such sadistic crimes though honestly life imprisonment likely does more suffering long term because of what we discussed previously. but then again eath cant be taken back if the states wrong so neither is worry free unfornatly.
Whether or not the punishment is fitting aside, this seems like an unnecessarily expensive and strenuous process that most likely would not work on a large scale. I also would think about how awful it would be if someone got this punishment and it was found out that he or she was innocent of the crime.
@@iepvienredstoneHuy007 From what I have heard, harsh punishments are actually not a good deterrent for committing crimes. I think it has something to do with criminals themselves. Most rational people would see a punishment and certainly not want to commit crime, but criminals are generally not the most rational people. Maybe that whole idea of it not being a deterrent is wrong. If it actually is true that harsh punishments do deter people from committing crimes, this would definitely be doable on a small scale with a handful of particularly terrible individuals that definitely committed the crimes they are accused of. May I also suggest that instead of having amputations take place over and over for months, the amputations are done all at once? That would save the country more money as well as adhering to the idea that justice should be swift. That also gives them more time to be carted around as an example, because they will not have to worry about pausing for more surgeries. Also, seeing someone go from having all their limbs to none in a single day would probably having more of an impact than getting used to seeing them lose pieces here and there.
@@Gears_StartingThis is about punishment not deterrence. Why should be be able to live the rest of his life out in the safety of a prison. I don’t agree with capital punishment. But he deserves it none the less
@@Gears_Starting I was sure i would find an idiotic bloodthirsty psycho who actually thinks this punishment is fair and racional. And i was damn right.
@@Mr-R.R. Except it isn't real. Families of victims of death row inmates were asked if they felt better after their loved one's killer was executed. The answer was almost unanimously yes.
@@sewpungyow5154 I think that’s the point of the film That torturing someone won’t get you anywhere, your loved one won’t come back and you’ll only be damaging yourself It’s better to either A) leave the criminal to rot in jail or B) kill them
Truly horrifying. A masterpiece, in under 13 minutes, about how low humanity can sink. It’s actually possible, that doctors, in a dystopian future, would forsake their Hippocratic oath, in obedience to flawed government edicts! 😢
I think it’s a way of seeing how they have reacted to his body getting cut off as they each of them leave due to the fact on how gruesome it looks when a new limb is cut off the other kid leaves as the more they can’t handle the fact they have to watch it happen in front of them so they never want to see it happen again
I actually think this is a good punishment. I don't really see anything wrong with it. People are saying the father is worse than the killer, but the father didn't kill anyone. I think they should start this punishment in the US too.
@Matthew W The father gave them the “OK” to go through with the surgeries, so technically he did kill him. He was no better than the killer, The killer lost his limbs and the father lost his family
“Darkness imprisoning me All that I see Absolute horror I cannot live I cannot die Trapped in myself Body my holding cell Landmine has taken my sight Taken my speech Taken my hearing Taken my arms Taken my legs Taken my soul Left me with life in hell” Some Metallica one/Johnny got his gun vibes here
While I was growing up, my parents were friends with a couple that the husband was the one that flipped the switch on the executions in my state. During those years, he had to a change of heart and no longer supports death penalty. We HAVE to be so careful as humans not to let hate change our capacity for love. That's someone's somebody.
The sympathetic smirk on the female nurse/doctor saying "Now, now Mr. Bingham it'll all be over soon." as she's prepping him for surgery to lose 'his namesake' 🤣 😍
This is a good display on why punishment is not chosen by the ones that gut hurt/left behind. No matter the crime, that doesnt help anyone at all an just shows how cruel literally anyone can become, depending on the situation.
Martin Borgonia the first one wasn’t terrible but disappointing at least, the rest were genuinely all cash grabs. That’s what happens when James Wan makes a horror movie. Edit: what I mean is the first movie is good (or in Saw’s case great) but the rest are just easy money.
In the US, you are not “proven innocent.” Ever. It’s either guilty or not guilty. There’s a huge difference. Once in a very great while someone is exonerated or given clemency. But the average inmate will most likely never receive either.
@@alilclosey28 5 billion and a new set of prosthetic limbs! I see it as a slight win for both sides. You get payed for that and they have prosthetics advance further.
anyone who violates a child to such a gruesome extent deserves no mercy from the justice system or the world, the amount of comments that are sympathizing with the assaulter is horrifying. you don't know what the anger feels like until it's someone you love
@@sibling_of_sin I suggest you rewatch the film and you'll figure it out. Spoiler: It's about how our criminal justice system makes a show of punishing individuals as a spectacle rather than out of concern for the victim. Notice how the victim was uncomfortable with the entire process? Notice how she wasn't the one calling the shots of how far the surgery went, but instead the dad was?
What I find striking is that as time goes past, the daughters show more humanity than their own father. They are both there for the first surgery. Then there is only one of them. Then even she walks away whilst the father carries on watching. "An eye for an eye" might make us all blind but this also shows two young women with far greater compassion and decency than dear old dad.
@csknives2140 i'd say that maybe a more serious punishment, than the normal needle, but nobody deserves to be tortured, physically nor mentally, get showed off to kids in schools, and be left in a prison to rot, not being able to hear, speak or move. this is one of the most cruel types of torture, because this is impossible to recover from. and without sounding like a psycho, at least the boy got death. at least he got an escape. this man will sit here, however long fate decides he should. there comes a point, where everyone deserves a bit of compassion, and that should have been latest at the 2nd surgery.
@csknives2140 What would be the point of torturing someone who will never reenter society? The point of this short film is to ask the question "at what point does justice become equivalent to the evil committed?". Your idea of justice would just be a sadistic satisfaction for the people who where affected by the crime, it would serve no purpose other than that, the point of our correctional facilities is to be a deterrent and teach/ warn people not to offend and reoffend. An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind is saying evil begets evil. karma doesn't exist and has no bearing or power in the real world, it's just a hope that bad people get what's coming to them. Committing evil acts to an evil person makes you just as much of a monster as them. Forgiveness and/or acceptance is what brings true peace.
The principle of an eye for an eye was to restrain or limit vengeance, not demand it. A more exact statement would be "no more than an eye for an eye, no more than a tooth for a tooth."
@@Yolf65 Thank you. At last, someone who understands what was being taught. It differentiates justice from vengeance which is two eyes for an eye - THAT would leave the world blind.
@@uayfb1 Wow! You have given the key to unlock that objection! Those keys are usually simple and obvious, but I often lack the clarity to discern them. Thank you!
BTW For all those saying the punishment was deserved: I had a relative in a nursery home in the 90s. He had lost both legs, amputated above the knee due to diabetes/ smoking. First the foot of one leg, then the lower leg, then most of the other leg. His wife took very good care of him, came to visit every day from early morning til late evening, decorated his room, brought magazines, listened to the radio with him, watched TV, took him out in a wheelchair (he could not sit for long). After 5 years he said he wanted to die. There were also other things lacking, the care in the home was not very good, if he wanted to go to the restroom after lunch, the nurses would sit in their room, saying "we have a lunch break until 3 pm" and the wife would often go there and yell at them to come. But his condition alone, losing the legs, being bedridden, lead to suicidal thoughts after 5 years. He went on to live for some more years, though. So, I guess, losing your left hand would be a punishment to occupy your mind for years and decades.
Milan Vujcich a child molester or child killer should absolutely be . But everyone has their own opinions and beliefs. I have a 1 year old son. If anyone harmed him or took his life I would gladly do it myself 🤷🏻♀️
The most terrifying part about this is how they still keep him alive after all that. Just imagining living permanently in miserable state gives me chills
And will probably turn out as Willy. Also landing at the same spot, waiting to be dismembered. Thus continueing the cycle. I can see part 2 already : He was in a car with a prostitute while drunk. Kills her in an angry rage. Plans to dispose her dismembered body, but was caught by the cops. The family of the prostitute wants justice too, but far far worse...
@@docducttape9270 In my opinion he became psychopath, the very moment he brought his underaged daughters to watch a man being dismembered. Seriously, which sane person takes his kids to watch such a thing ? He probably would let them see taking Willie's willie away, which is even more sickening. Revenge and justice are one thing. Purposely letting your kids behold such gruesome stuff is something totally different. It can mentally scar them.
A lot of people in the comments are mad at the victim's father for continuing the surgery but I think the father's deterioration can also represent how he's punished himself for not having been able to protect his daughter at the time. There's also the component where even though the surgeries seem gruesome and overcompensating for the victim's murder, the victim might have been mutilated while she was alive whereas Willie gets the luxury of anesthesia and good medical care. So to the father, no amount of "an eye for an eye" feels like justice to him because he'll never get his daughter back.
Alt Fit Humans can’t become “inhuman”. Just like cats can’t stop being cats. These are still people, loss of freedom would be punishment enough but this is just sick.
@Alt Fit On the contrary; artful violence is strictly human behavior. What other creature can you think of that is capable of such cruelty? Nature is brutal, but its violence doesn't come anywhere near the creativity that humans can muster. Accept that these things are within your nature, then watch your thoughts vigilantly, and do not let hatred and evil take root. That is the only solution.
@Alt Fit wtf r u talking abt bro. if u are going to say that the temporary inability to override emotions with logic is inhuman not only are you going to indict every act of human passion, moral judgments in themselves aren't really strictly logical in the first place. i.e. if there was no judicial system, the mans actions, though awful, might not even be "illogical". and i mean it should go without saying that there are other things that separate humans from other animals...
@Alt Fit not sure what that has to do with logic though. in terms of it being instinctual, murder can be premeditated. if anything the knowledge its wrong to kill people comes from emotion more than logic
I loved how they put us in both the lawyer's and Willie's perspective, as the short makes us feel sorry but at the same time never makes us forget, both through the father and through the narrator's lines, the atrocities that Willie committed. This short is brilliant and a true masterpiece, a true example that even the most heinous crimes can be seen in other ways depending on who we are in the situation.
Imagine the horror if after this they found out there was some new evidence introduced and he was actually innocent. That is the biggest reason against capital punishment. What happens if you were wrong
"Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you" -- Friedrich Nietzsche.
@@kendrahein45 I think they were always monsters on the inside and now they just found an excuse to let the monster come to the surface. For all we know that man could have been violent with his children as well, using excuses like disobedience, bad grades and so on to justify his behavior.
Ive watched a lot of Omeletos...but this here...this is dark. Its done flawlessly of course because it touches on a side of many people who believe in eye for an eye but to see a depiction of that...wow.
@@AndyTaken so if it's an eye for an eye then you only stop when you remove on eye huh makes zero sense but ok. If someone goes and removes your eye and you remove his and you both have one left either of you could then go and A. get angry and remove the other or B. Or you get the other removes later down the line. The saying is that if I hurt you and then you hurt me then it spirals and people from all sides join in to get revenge for themselves and or people that were hurt by you.
The sickest thing about this isn't the video itself, yet the comments I find on other social media platforms, saying how this is great and should be implemented. Absolutely deplorable
just seeing a human lose himself in film is haunting 'nurse!' *'yes mr bingham?'* 'they cutting off my right leg or me left?' *'thats your... left mr bingham!'* 'left legg...!' *'left leg!'*
Is the death penalty humane ? Only if you assume death is the end. Perhaps it's a beginning. I look forward to this beginning and yet I dont believe this beginning is the same for everyone. We need a Saviour.
Oh wow, this was very disturbing. A long time ago I thought that x convict deserved to have an amputation depending on the crime and the severity of it, I’ve grown out of that mentality and this video just underscores why. There is no way in the world I could be one to tell them to proceed with the surgery. The state of the father after each additional surgery showcased that it doesn’t bring you any closure, it just makes your hate stronger.
@blepblep7245 Seriously, I would have been fine with the first couple of surgeries. There would have been a poster size picture of my daughter hanging in the window for him to see as well. I'm an eye for an eye supporter 100%
Yes, but the amount of murderers would go down. Not only dose the murderer die and is unable to murder again but it will make anyone who dosnt want to die think twice before committing murder.
Really sadistic to the most extreme, even if the victim experiences no physical pain. So insane that makes you think that no society would ever condone such punishment. And hope it is so, indeed.
@@Valorius I am sorry but I hope the dad experiences the worst pain possible on this planet. I do not care what someone has done. This punishment is undescribable. It is bassically what my answer would be if you asked me the worst possible punishment.
@@AverageDev_Tutorials he got drunk and chopped a girl up like slapped ham he deserved a harsh punishment just not this eath. was the more rational and mercifull option in every way a short painfiull period followed by eath not a YEARS LONG slow eath.
@@AverageDev_Tutorials he did that was his crime he got drunk and high then mutliated a girl to eath the dad and kids is that girls family. he even admitted it at the start.
As a mother of a girl who is a survivor of a violent crime, I understand the father on real level. Altho we got justice in court, my daughter will live with the scars forever. He got 9 months cuz he was a youth. This would have been better
@@Uppensaidrugaddicti believe she means that the punishment in the film would be better than the current system, which lets too many assaulters get off easy
I love how it affects not only Willie but even his supervisor, the nurses, the doctor, and the family member who signed him off to be a guinea pig to this form of punishment. Amazingly well done. Also, difficult to stomach through when you're eating dinner.
😂 or the last week of the month when they were going to the high school there was definitely a "LESS"on to learn about how punishment fits the crime! 😉
Imagine this film being forced upon inmates to view in all prisons? With the beginning and ending of the film saying; "Coming Soon At A Prison Near You!"
This is what this so called kind of justice looks like and what a horror it is. Everyone was destroyed by the feature’s end: the family of the dead child, the doctors that had to facilitate the system, the narrator and ultimately the audience. The criminal caused grievous harm to his victim and ultimately her death but the privatized system out did him 1 thousand percent. This one is not for the faint at heart but worth viewing if for no more a reason than to check in on your own humanity and moral compass.
@@lynxf Is any human ever truly innocent in the word's deepest meaning? Maybe not. But that's not relevant here. In this context, the answer to your question is "Yes".
@@Mark-xh8md "In the context"? Whatever this means. The "innocent normal people" who support wars and oppressive laws caused far more suffering than all of lonely individual criminals in history. The world will only get better when we see how this kind of people is anything but innocent.
@@arabbit9396 You are completely ignorant of the sufferings of Hell then. Eternal, soul crushing, foul stench of death maggots eating you, fire burning you, eternal darkness. TIp of the iceberg.
i heard one story long time ago, about a guy who was abused by his father, all his childhood, when he grew up and had chance standing for himself he beat his father (really bad), and he did just out of pure revenge, but in the end that guy said that he didnt feel relief, satisfaction nothing...Be careful not to become monster yourself when lookin for justice, i dont say forgive them but dont be like them
20+ years ago, I read a book of short stories. One included a guy who was trying to become an ambassador to a planet with unusual customs regarding the achievement of honor / standing in their society. The basic level started with amputating each finger on one hand with a different slow method for each. They used insects, fire, etc. You could take it up a level by having similar actions performed on a full half of your body. The most honored and leaders of that world would be left unable to see, feel, taste, smell, and barely hear anything. It disconnected them from all forms of pleasure to prevent corruption. I think the author was Pier's Anthony... It was a vivid enough story that it stuck with me... There was another in the book that involved farming that stuck in my mind too... Amazing author.
You're ALMOST certainly talking about one of Harlan Ellison's two collections - "Dangerous Visions" and "Again, Dangerous Visions". Both of the existing ones (and a third that's supposedly been "Coming Soon" for the last 40-ish years) are collections of SF/Fantasy short stories by various authors with a theme of "things that are too taboo for even SF/Fantasy authors to write about". Of course, "taboo" 40 years ago isn't quite the same as "taboo" today, so I suspect the third one will never be published. The farming story was PROBABLY Piers Anthony's "In The Barn", though I don't recall the first one you describe.
@@felsinferguson1125 I believe that you are correct and that it was the second book I read. I remember being shocked that it was just sitting on a shelf in a classroom at my high school. Books with stories like that had a lot of influence in shaping my perception of the world when I a teen / young adult. I feel a bit tempted to pick up copies of both books and read them now.
@@shaun6828 Actually, I think you were on the right track to begin with. I believe the story you are talking about is "On the Uses of Torture" by Piers Anthony from a short story collection called "Anthonology."
Whoa...had no idea Piers Anthony did dark stuff. I mean sure possible to believe any author can put a spin on humanities darker sides. I so enjoyed his Xanth. Also read Steppe. How peculiar to find this reference though. Thanks?
Very chilling, and depressing as hell. The punishment would have to be new, because if criminals knew that horror awaited them, most would make sure they weren't taken alive, no matter what. I know I would.
@Natasel Dude, it's been proven time and time again that the death penalty doesn't deter crime. That much is not a disputable claim, because it's a fact. In states without the death penalty, crime is actually lower, especially violent crime. The death penalty also costs taxpayers more than a life sentence because of the trial and everything required. So why try to justify it? Just say you want to kill people. You want people to die. You think we should kill other human beings as justice, and you don't think that killing killers is wrong, because it's okay for us to stoop to their level. Don't lie. You don't think the death penalty is more effective. You just want more death. An eye for an eye and the whole world is blind...
I've watched a lot of horror films, but this was hands down one of the most horrific things I've watched. The thought of what society might be capable of is scarier than any monster, ghost or masked serial killer.
Gijs de Bruine 'An eye for an eye will make the whole world blind' it makes a perfect world, everyone is blind, no corruption, no murder, no war, no politics etc👊
You need to watch academy killer on Liveleak and 3 guys 1 hammer. What would you feel if this happened to you or a family member of yours? Then come back to tell me what your solution would be to erradicate these crimes.
I think the Hippocratic oath is long gone. MDs remove healthy tissue all the time for "prevention." Vaccine mfrs are protected from any consequence for harm done by their elixirs. As to criminals, prosecutors and judges conspire to convict people all the time. Look at where people like the "insurgents" of Jan 6th are being held. How 'bout just the tortures we know about at Gitmo? How 'bout "Rendition" to other countries for torture under the "Patriot" Act and NDAA 2016?
@@KutWrite you cannot make a procedure or a cure that will be 100% effective 100% of the time. this is impossible. for the vaccine to be 100% sure of it;s safety it would have to take a couple of decades o testing if not more. in that time humans would have disappeared on the most part. Would you like for you and your loved ones to die? or take a risk with a vaccine that in 2 years made 3 casualties in the US that were linked to blood clots and can be treated now that we know about the effect. big pharma, the monopolies, the conglomerates, the monoliths of economy and lords of our lives do not want us DEAD, they want us to be ALIVE and CONSUMING and making them MONEY.
Asterio okay, so let it be, this is not justice, this is rage of revenge, imagine that you have robbed a shop for a chocolate, and your punishment will be like, seller wanted to get your full house, and now you are homeless because of taking one not paid chocolate bar.
You may be delusional here mr. Asterio. They put these criminals in a prison to protect the people from them, not to torture the prisoners. A prison is where you put a criminal isolated from humanity and love to make them repent. Those who either don't get changed from prison, or have too much of a serious case, get executed, and that is justice. Putting one man to pain would not make only him the criminal.