Boyish-Tigerlilly wrote:Again, they give up their right to exist when they violate a person;s rights in their own home. Knowing the risk in doing so. They are not innocent, and there is no question of guilt when caught red handed. Is calling the police preferable? SUre. Is it always or even usually a viable option and will they ever retrieve your stolen property in most cases or even catch the criminal? FUck no.
What ethical principle are you using that says X loses all rights to life if X breaks into your home to steal property? I don't remember that principle anywhere in Ethics, not even in the half semester we did on Rights Ethics. There wasn't a single Philosopher I read that held that position.
On the other hand, there were SOME who said you lose your right to life when you TAKE another, but even that is losing ground, because one wrong does not make a another wrong right. It doesn't serve any purpouse.
The whole concept of rights is that they exist independantly of the permission of others. The only way to take them is to initiate force against another person. A person only has rights if they are willing and able to defend those rights against those who initiate force against them.
A person who initiates force against another person does so at the risk that the victim will defend their rights. It is a concious choice on their part. Sort of like sticking their tongue in a lightsocket. They know the risk, and do so anyway, thus they relinquish their right to life de-facto.
If the victim does not defend their rights, then they may as well not have them. The police can act retrocactively, but the right to property is already violated.
The property itself is not what is worth more than the criminal, that is what needs to be understood. It is the RIGHT to property. Not to say the right to property is worth more than the right to life. However if one cannot use lethal force to defend their rights against someone who initiates said force in the first place, the entire concept of rights may as well not exist because we cannot defend them. That is the problem. The right of a person to own property and make a living for themselves is destroyed ifn they are not permitted to defend what they own.
Is lethal force preferable? in a perfect world no. But a perfect world does not exist, and in many cases lethal force is all that can be realistically used by a person defending their rights. Government, where cooler heads and more sheer manpower prevails and is available, can place nin-lethal sanctions against those who initiate force against others more effectively, however those sanctions are after the fact, and the violation of rights has already taken place.
To use a Utilitarian argument rather than a rights based one...
A criminal who commits a home invasion causes suffering to a person and their family. This suffering is essentially that caused by having to rebuild a lifetime worth of property memories, irreplacable family hierlooms, not to mention cash and capital goods. if they go through life continuing their course of action, they will commit this crime many times before they finally get caught. They will spend a bit of time in prison, then they will get out causing more suffering to perhaps dozens of families, considering the recidivism rates of prison systems. In fact their crimes may escalate into more violant offenses, hardened by the prison system.
If the law allows for the immediate defense of home by lethal force, the government will cause several good outcomes. First the crime rate will drop as the fear of imminent death discourages home invasions in the local area in which the residents defend their homes. This will have the effect of reducing the amount of suffering on a large scale at the cost of the lives of a few criminals who do not contribute meaningfully to society and who in fact generate negative utiles. This will generate a reputation in the social circles of those of ill repute that the area is not an easy mark for burglaries seeing as the population is armed. Secondly it will allow for more resources to be spent on the retroactive punishment of criminals not deterred by the armed populace, or who exist in areas that are not armed. This will again, decrease the total amount of suffering in any given area.