Ok...so I decided to see what all the fuss was about for Infinite Warfare (who's dislikes are well over 2 million at this point...lol)
While I'm not the biggest CoD aficionado...I guess people were a bit turned off by the whole space fighting bit...well 'a bit turned off' may have been a bit of an understatement...
They're turned off by the fact that they are releasing a remaster of the original Modern Warfare (one of the most beloved games in the franchise) as part of a limited edition for Infinite Warfare.
It would be like if Nintendo made Galaxy 3 and released a HD remake of the original Galaxy with a limited edition, rather than as a standalone.
Soldiers do not commit murder.
They kill, they don't murder.
A murder is the act of killing someone, with the intent to kill them.
You can defend that it isn't murder all you like, but soldiers are trained to accept this fact going in, and it's the very reason why a soldiers first kill can be a traumatising experience. They
know they just murdered someone, and feel they are that much closer to being like a terrorist or something.
Don't get me wrong though, I'm not saying "they're no better than terrorists" myself or anything. But the idea that soldiers "don't murder people" is flawed because no matter what, intentionally killing someone is always going to go against SOME country's law.
You are missing my point. I'm not talking about normal jail cells.
Those are honestly weak and have little security. I'm talking about solitary cells with no means to escape and no contact with any other human beings or anything like that, unlike most prison cells.
I literally mean locking the worst criminals like they're animals to be caged. Cut them from the outside world in a completely isolated and fortified cell. No windows to show the sunlight, feed them barely... Treat them like caged animals who are not to see the light of the day ever again in their lives and leave them to rot. Does this sound like torture, sure, but suffering is what they deserve more than the peace of death.
I understand the point of the death penalty, but when there's the possibility of the state killing someone innocent, I can't bring myself to condone it, as much as some people truly deserve it.
I'm aware you meant solitary cells, that doesn't change anything about what I said.
And I don't think the risk of wrongfully giving someone the death penalty is enough of a reason to not have it. There's a risk of letting a criminal out too if you lock them up.