Vik🃏
29.5K posts

Vik🃏
@Amviktar
Maximalist. Mundus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur
Outside the matrix 参加日 Haziran 2020
6.2K フォロー中6.8K フォロワー

@Lovandfear And Rumi said;
“This place is a dream. Only a sleeper considers it real. Then death comes like dawn, and you wake up laughing at what you thought was your grief.”
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Vik🃏 がリツイート
Vik🃏 がリツイート

In today's standard paper, I ask;
1. Given that a judge holds office by reason of his capacity to reason, can a judge then err in reasoning?
2. I ask whether a judge is permitted to use a particular school of jurisprudence as a fixed and determinative position
3. Does the constitution combine the various schools of legal reasoning (jurisprudence)?
4. Does the constitution have a framework for legal reasoning (a basic structure for reasoning)?
Enjoy reading, and let me know your feedback.

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Do you think he actually deserves redemption in the sense that the world has to give him a second chance after he serves his sentence?
Or you believe that what he did cannot be undone and even though he served his sentence, his punishment continues for the rest of his days?
Evelina River@EvaRiver4
Yes. Definitely. It’s the whole point. You can think you’re Napoleon, eliminating an agent of evil, and then out of nowhere there’s this sudden, unexpected “collateral damage.” There’s no way Raskolnikov can justify his murder of Lizaveta (I think it’s Lizaveta, actually, not Elizaveta, a different version of the same name). She and her unborn child are complete innocents.
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There are domestic flights from Arua to Entebbe — just 1 hour.
The long road should not keep you away.
Welcome to Arua City — Uganda’s business hub. @wekesa_amos



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@Kinki_muniain Greenland and Iceland should switch names. A mistake was made during the naming ceremony
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@athenaeumbc He compares the extra ordinary man who laws don't apply to, to great men like Napoleon, who won battles in which thousands died but they could not be said to be guilty of any crime because they were above societal laws and their "crimes" served a greater good.
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Crime and Punishment isn't about a single murder, but the *idea* that can justify murdering millions.
Raskolnikov famously kills a predatory pawnbroker, reasoning that she won't be missed, and he can use her money for the greater good.
Strangely, however, he never uses her money. He instead buries it under a rock and forgets it.
What was his true motivation then?
Later on, you discover he's motivated by a much darker ideology, which he shares in an article titled "On Crime."
He argues there are only 2 types of people:
1. Ordinary people: who live by the status quo and obey the law
2. Extraordinary people: who have the strength to break the law
He concludes that extraordinary people SHOULD break the law to serve the greater good of humanity…
The problem of this ideology is it doesn't justify just one murder, but two, or three, or three thousand, etc. Raskolnikov proves this himself: after murdering the pawnbroker, he then murders her innocent sister, solely for self-preservation.
Ultimately, Dostoevsky warns that when man rejects objective morality, not only is murder justified, but moral relativism — taken at scale — can justify mass murder itself.
What is brilliant about Crime and Punishment is that the greatest damage to Raskolnikov is not the legal or social consequences that eventually catch up to him.
Instead, Raskolnikov's actions destroy him bit-by-bit from the inside. Where Raskolnikov thought that his own superiority would allow him to commit crimes with impunity, he finds that it is the personal cost that actually damages him.
Thus Dostoevsky makes a poignant argument that morality is objective. And if we live according to our own will, and to our own ambition, disaster is lurking...

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@EvaRiver4 @athenaeumbc She was? My English translation must have left that out
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Remember, Raskolnikov actually murders two people: the pawnbroker but also her younger sister Elizaveta, who stumbles across him while he is committing the crime. Since she is pregnant, in the view of Dostoevsky and most of his readers when Crime and Punishment was published (since they were Russian Orthodox believers), Raskolnikov actually committed a triple murder. It’s always interesting for Dostoevsky scholars that everybody forgets the murders of Elizaveta and her unborn baby. It speaks of the sympathy most of us readers have for the anti-hero Raskolnikov, even though he is a killer.
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@DailyMonitor Nothing to see here. Just a third world leader reasoning like a third world leader.
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Museveni: What can you do with a SWASA, psychology and procurement degree?
President Museveni has criticised graduates for what he described as “carelessly selected courses” that do not solve Uganda’s unemployment crisis. | Details👇🏽
monitor.co.ug/uganda/news/na…
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Vik🃏 がリツイート
Vik🃏 がリツイート
Vik🃏 がリツイート

They’ve been reducing my money for so long, withholding taxes and last year I filed my annual returns.
Vik🃏@Amviktar
@welandfab URA will pay you a visit shortly 😂😂
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@Its_ereko We are expanding our debt structure as others are paying off theirs
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🇳🇦 BREAKING: Namibia just paid off its entire IMF debt. Zero balance. $23.8 million repaid. No new loans. No new conditions. Freedom.
While other nations drown in IMF austerity, Namibia walked out. No more structural adjustment. No more neoliberal lectures. No more foreign control over economic policy.
This is what sovereignty looks like. Paying your debts. Refusing new ones. Charting your own path.
Namibia is free. Other African nations should take notes.
Question for the timeline: Which African country should be next to tell the IMF goodbye?

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