Or is it us - "the system" itself that generates both wealth and poverty (due to our collective obsession with and high regard for wealth/material/asset gain) that naturally empowers those that have it and disempowers those that don't. Is the system itself the flaw? — Benj96
is not necessarily justice, because the court operates on a monetarist civil law, rather than karmic principle. And it is certainly not restorative, because now we have other persons involved, who need to be paid for their time and effort, and both litigants have spent extra money, time and effort on the court case. What began as a simple one-to-one transaction has snowballed into a societal issue.Person B takes legal action against person A and their finances are restored on court order. — Benj96
Why is it necessary to blame? What purpose does it serve?Who is to blame? — Benj96
Who is to blame? Or are we all equally to blame for different or specific reasons in each individual case - as unique instruments in the chain that lead to the whole/total outcome? — Benj96
is not necessarily justice, because the court operates on a monetarist civil law, rather than karmic principle. And it is certainly not restorative, because now we have other persons involved, who need to be paid for their time and effort, and both litigants have spent extra money, time and effort on the court case. What began as a simple one-to-one transaction has snowballed into a societal issue. — Vera Mont
Why is it necessary to blame? What purpose does it serve? — Vera Mont
B is under no moral (or legal, for that matter) obligation to bring legal action — Ciceronianus
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