Thanks for the chapter TOWL enjoyers.
Bad villain! Whack!Next time don't break their arms, break their necks instead MC.
PROTECC THE LOLI!!!
I got confused and thought Cain just left the other kids in cages and left on the carriages and was like WTF
Someone already mentioned it but Parma is the only one Cain actually knows and can actually calm down easily, keeping the others on their cell in the meantime is "much safer" than to risk them getting stressed over what the strangers(Cain's group) is going to do with them. Cain can also just actively puts everyone to sleep to avoid them getting stressed but that would look more sus than him leaving them there in the meantime.I agree. Dude is an effective demigod. Didn't even bother casting shield & invisibility spells in everyone with a finger snap? And what about the other kids who have been sold? The ledgers? What about sending the villains to Hell to have Dami give them some extra special TLC?
I LOVE this series, yet Cain not saving everyone nor teleporting everyone out is kinda sketch. Like, he breaks the "don't over share your specs" rule ALL THE DAMN TIME—hence, his near constant bombardment of scolding from the king. But, what about the other kids?
I wonder if in the light novel, Cain casts invisible protection magic that enables him to catch the big pudgy bad who is about to get stomped?
I agree. I just would have liked to have actually seen that. Hopefully, this gets an anime adaptation of MORE DAMN SEASONS! 😭😭😭😭😭❤️💯 and with that, more fleshed out nuance here.Someone already mentioned it but Parma is the only one Cain actually knows and can actually calm down easily, keeping the others on their cell in the meantime is "much safer" than to risk them getting stressed over what the strangers(Cain's group) is going to do with them. Cain can also just actively puts everyone to sleep to avoid them getting stressed but that would look more sus than him leaving them there in the meantime.
There's being negligent with harmful elements, and then there's just blatantly allowing them to do whatever the fuck they want.For bonus points, he was also involved in the corruption of another country.
Those 2 guys were part of the guards unit. Previous chapter, page 6.Okay, so the pig and the sleazy guy (along with 2 guys I don't know) are about to enter the crime scene with smug faces. Either they have plans against every outcome including Cain's feat just now (That would be pretty close to a Light Yagami tier of planning), or they're merely oblivious idiots.
I'm starting to think that maybe the King's frequent "take over the country" might not he the worst idea. 🤣😅There's being negligent with harmful elements, and then there's just blatantly allowing them to do whatever the fuck they want.
The fuck's wrong with royalty in this world?
Non lethal punishment is the better solution anyway. It's really disappointing when the antagonizing person gets the easy way out after how repeatedly evil they're portrayed. Shield hero kinda does it well with bitch and her father, strip them of everything they cared about and make them continually suffer.It's a japanese shounen, so of course he doesn't kill.
Honestly it is one of the biggest tropes there is for japanese media, and one of the more annoying ones (might have to do with the ratings board i guess).
There are, but doesn't that make you more evil than simply applying the death penalty?Non lethal punishment is the better solution anyway. It's really disappointing when the antagonizing person gets the easy way out after how repeatedly evil they're portrayed. Shield hero kinda does it well with bitch and her father, strip them of everything they cared about and make them continually suffer.
There are far worse punishments than death.
Let us also not forget the ancient traditions of debt forgiveness and sin, in particular, anderarum¹, and the ancient methods of punishment — namely, death or equivalent exchange for wrongs (eye for an eye was equivalent exchange [ethical alchemy for you Fullmetal Alchemy fans] as opposed to excessive; when the Torah speaks of this it is preventative measures to prevent excessive forms of punishment; take an arm vs death! Rape tended to be death likely since, as you noted, there isn't exactly much of a compensation that wouldn't involve the person becoming a villain themselves, so death becomes an ethical compromise), paying some kind of fine or debt to the family — this is often where slavery or debt bondage came from as selling the person into bondage (or selling oneself) was a means of financial compensation for the debt of harm or sin to the other party (or parties) — or lastly, exile, where one could travel to the city of exile for a time (or permanently deoending upon the severity of the crimes) where they would be cut off from the outside world, their horns, families, communities, often in difficult settings.There are, but doesn't that make you more evil than simply applying the death penalty?
(td;dr At the very least, history and modern studies have shown that justice is not served with excessive harm.)
Also, the main question is not "how bad a penalty can you apply?"
The more important questions is "what do you intend the penalty to achieve?" (and implicitly "how well does it serve the stated purpose?")
There are at least 4 non-exclusive answers: retribution (i.e. revenge for the victims or society at large), reparation, rehabilitation, deterrence.
More generally, the different stated purposes are generally addressed differently.
- Being as harmful as possible to the culprit doesn't do anything in regard to reparation and rehabilitation. And it's often doubtful that it works as deterrence either, not even at an individual level seeing how it's likely to cause more resentment. So it mainly serves as retribution.
- Death penalty is similar, but it does serve as individual deterrence. You can't crime again when you're dead. (Unless you're in a setting where ghosts/undead exist... that's a different matter though.) It's been shown that it doesn't work well as global deterrent though. And that's why most modern societies have abandoned the death penalty.
Reparation is often handled with financial penalties and civil service. It's the most simple solution, though there is a limit to its efficiency. There is no financial compensation for human life or lifelong trauma.
Rehabilitation is often handled by education while in detention and monitoring during social reinsertion. (For crimes caused by poverty and desperation, this generally fulfills the goal of individual deterrence too.)
Deterrence is generally done simply by publicizing the results of the trial and the resulting social shaming. This is the most difficult purpose to achieve anyway. You can prevent a guilty party from committing crime again (often with radical options like death, exile or life sentence to imprisonment), but there is little you can do to prevent anyone else from doing it. So the purpose is attained when the vast majority reasonably refrains from crime because there is at least some physical and social penalty for it.
As for retribution... this is complicated as many modern countries have an explicit statement that this purpose is not intended at all, though it might be fulfilled incidentally. When it is a stated purpose, it is often fulfilled by placing the guilty party in detention with various degrees of harsh conditions, or by the death penalty where it still applies. Being overly harmful doesn't help though: studies have shown that victims never feel satisfied anyway, so you're only perpetuating a cycle of evil by increasing the punishment to the highest degree that is physically possible.
I'll also note that Lex Talionis ("eye for an eye") doesn't fulfill much either. It simply propagates the harm that was done back to the culprit. It is pretty much good for revenge only, and it places a cap on the penalty used for this purpose as, morally speaking, one shouldn't punish more harshly than the harm that was done. It doesn't serve as reparation, rehabilitation, and most of the time not as deterrence either, for the same reason that the death penalty doesn't. Even retribution is rarely served as the victim rarely feels satisfied with an equal harm done to their perpetrator, nor even with greater harm.
Justice is a tough balance to reach, isn't it?
Also, and while not specifically addressed, vengeance from an emotional framework may well be a factor here (as demonstrated by readers' emotional reactions; seeking retribution for the pain caused to these characters). Retribution from an ethical framework I think would be better discussed by recognizing the inherent distinction between the ethos (reputation and ethics; community/uprightness/character of the individual elements) and logos (logic) as compared with the pathos (emotions and passions) of retribution.There are, but doesn't that make you more evil than simply applying the death penalty?
(td;dr At the very least, history and modern studies have shown that justice is not served with excessive harm.)
Also, the main question is not "how bad a penalty can you apply?"
The more important questions is "what do you intend the penalty to achieve?" (and implicitly "how well does it serve the stated purpose?")
There are at least 4 non-exclusive answers: retribution (i.e. revenge for the victims or society at large), reparation, rehabilitation, deterrence.
More generally, the different stated purposes are generally addressed differently.
- Being as harmful as possible to the culprit doesn't do anything in regard to reparation and rehabilitation. And it's often doubtful that it works as deterrence either, not even at an individual level seeing how it's likely to cause more resentment. So it mainly serves as retribution.
- Death penalty is similar, but it does serve as individual deterrence. You can't crime again when you're dead. (Unless you're in a setting where ghosts/undead exist... that's a different matter though.) It's been shown that it doesn't work well as global deterrent though. And that's why most modern societies have abandoned the death penalty.
Reparation is often handled with financial penalties and civil service. It's the most simple solution, though there is a limit to its efficiency. There is no financial compensation for human life or lifelong trauma.
Rehabilitation is often handled by education while in detention and monitoring during social reinsertion. (For crimes caused by poverty and desperation, this generally fulfills the goal of individual deterrence too.)
Deterrence is generally done simply by publicizing the results of the trial and the resulting social shaming. This is the most difficult purpose to achieve anyway. You can prevent a guilty party from committing crime again (often with radical options like death, exile or life sentence to imprisonment), but there is little you can do to prevent anyone else from doing it. So the purpose is attained when the vast majority reasonably refrains from crime because there is at least some physical and social penalty for it.
As for retribution... this is complicated as many modern countries have an explicit statement that this purpose is not intended at all, though it might be fulfilled incidentally. When it is a stated purpose, it is often fulfilled by placing the guilty party in detention with various degrees of harsh conditions, or by the death penalty where it still applies. Being overly harmful doesn't help though: studies have shown that victims never feel satisfied anyway, so you're only perpetuating a cycle of evil by increasing the punishment to the highest degree that is physically possible.
I'll also note that Lex Talionis ("eye for an eye") doesn't fulfill much either. It simply propagates the harm that was done back to the culprit. It is pretty much good for revenge only, and it places a cap on the penalty used for this purpose as, morally speaking, one shouldn't punish more harshly than the harm that was done. It doesn't serve as reparation, rehabilitation, and most of the time not as deterrence either, for the same reason that the death penalty doesn't. Even retribution is rarely served as the victim rarely feels satisfied with an equal harm done to their perpetrator, nor even with greater harm.
Justice is a tough balance to reach, isn't it?