Ei.tonik kirjoitti: Haittaisko ampua vihollista?
Eikä ketään muutakaan, joka tekee vaarallisen teon, jonka pysäyttämiseen tarvitaan ampuma-asetta
Valvoja: Valvoja
Ei.tonik kirjoitti: Haittaisko ampua vihollista?
Tämä on niitä juttuja joihin vain ei saa vastausta ennen kuin kysymys on oikeasti esitetty. Sama juttu kun kysytään mitä tekisit onnettomuustilanteessa. Kaveri oli kovaa sitä mieltä että auttamaan ja antamaan ensihoitoa, kunnes sitten joutui tilanteeseen ja jäätyi täysin.Point kirjoitti: Nyt tuntuu siltä, että en pystyisi ja haittaisi... Mutta toisaalta hyvällä koulutuksella ja johtamisella voisin pystyäkin (ellei vihollinen ampuisi minua ensin).
Mä sanoisin että aseeseen kallellaan olevalle henkilölle ihmismaalin keskelle täräyttämisen kynnys on poikkeuksellisen matala.English Bob kirjoitti: ...why not shoot a president.
The OFC and TPJ weren’t alone in this moral processing. Another region, known as the fusiform gyrus, was more active when subjects imagined themselves killing civilians—a telling finding since that portion of the brain is involved in analyzing faces, suggesting that the subjects were studying the expressions of their imaginary victims and, in so doing, humanizing them. When subjects were killing soldiers, there was greater activity in a region called the lingual gyrus, which is involved in the much more dispassionate business of spatial reasoning—just the kind of thing you need when you’re going about the colder business of killing someone you feel justified killing.
Hitmen bury their feelings for a successful 'hit' -- ScienceDailyHitmen succeed in contract killing where they successfully bury any feelings or emotions, a study into the psychology of novice assassins has found.
Hired killers who consider themselves strategists or businessman, doing 'just a job' as one hitman described it, can convince themselves they are dealing with a target rather than a person, research by a team of criminologists at Birmingham City University revealed.
A rare example of a female contract killer, Te Rangimaria Ngarimu, murdered Graham Woodhatch in May 1992. She was paid £1,500 (after being promised £7,000) and shot Mr Woodhatch while he was attending the Royal Free Hospital in London. Ngarimu fled to her native New Zealand but returned to Britain to confess to her role in the murder. It remains unknown why a multi-linguistic devout Christian, who had several degrees, with no previous convictions, agreed to the commit the hit.
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