alt_hermione (
alt_hermione) wrote2014-01-01 08:46 pm
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Order Only: Mr Strangeweale
Sorry tea was so...tense, for everyone.
Did anyone change their mind about him? Or did you go through with it after all?
Or should I not ask?
Only, I've been thinking about how some people were against it, at tea. And...and I've been thinking about it. Whether there really was no other way.
Did anyone change their mind about him? Or did you go through with it after all?
Or should I not ask?
Only, I've been thinking about how some people were against it, at tea. And...and I've been thinking about it. Whether there really was no other way.
no subject
But you really don't and I admire that so much. And I guess you can never tell what will happen--like when you saved Professor Dolohov, and then he helped save Ced later.
But those women... I don't know, even if killing him didn't give them peace, at least they know he'll never be able to hurt them again or re-create the Machine. And I don't think they'd be able to say that if we just Obliviated him & put him in prison somewhere. Obliviation can sometimes be reversed, and prisons can be escaped from. Or broken into.
no subject
It was entirely unanticipated that Professor Dolohov should ever have been in a position to help Mr Diggory, and even less foreseen that he should have been so inclined. What I mean to say is that my actions did not anticipate any future return on his part, and might very well not have led to any 'good' of that sort.
I do maintain, however, that while mercy may yield no measurable good, the refusal of mercy does cause certain harm, and not only to the person to whom mercy was denied. Refusing mercy hardens the heart and nerves of the person who, wielding that power of life and death, chooses to extinguish life. And it hardens the sensibilities of those who carry out or bear witness to such brutality.
Allow me to put this to you in another way. When I think of Voldemort, our so-called 'lord protector', I think that what distinguishes him and his actions and his accomplishments is not his mastery of magic (though he is, undoubtedly, one of the most powerful sorcerers in the long history of magic). What distinguishes 'lord' Voldemort is his cruelty and his murderousness, his inclination to kill any who stand in his way or threaten his supremacy.
Each time we make a choice to take life when it could be preserved (however inconveniently), we narrow the distance between ourselves and Him.
no subject
I would also add the pragmatic, as well, if the moral and ethical are not sufficient. Once someone is killed, all they are - all they were, all they knew, all they held - is lost. We do not know which things might allow us to succeed in our goals, or what will be required.
I do not think we can afford such luxuries.
Clearly, we must contemplate some alternatives: this will not be the last time we are faced with this question. (Alice, my dear, I will give thought to some of the practical issues. The research that lead to the method used at Saltash might bear fruit.)
no subject