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Author Topic: Position Over Principle: When Status Trumps Justice  (Read 29 times)
Btcslop (OP)
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November 10, 2025, 06:12:40 AM
 #1

Your value depends on your position. In our society, no matter how humble or polite you are, you won’t have any real worth. If your footing isn’t strong, you remain powerless. On the other hand, I have seen many unscrupulous people gain high status in society simply because of their position.
The question then arises: Is it only those with wealth and power who can get away with wrongdoing? Or should there be proper justice for every act of injustice?
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November 10, 2025, 07:38:32 AM
 #2

You ask a rhetorical question with an obvious answer, I'm not sure how much discussion you will get out of doing that. If course (almost) everyone wants to live in a fair and equal society, where the rich are subject to all the same rules as an average earner. There's generally going to be two situations however. First, your country has corruption which starts at the very top and being rich means if you pay the right people a certain amount the charges disappear. This should also include countries that accept things like "blood money". Secondly in some countries being rich means you can hire expensive lawyers who slow down or are specialists in navigating complex legal structures to maximize them for a client.

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Btcslop (OP)
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November 10, 2025, 09:02:13 AM
 #3

You ask a rhetorical question with an obvious answer, I'm not sure how much discussion you will get out of doing that. If course (almost) everyone wants to live in a fair and equal society, where the rich are subject to all the same rules as an average earner. There's generally going to be two situations however. First, your country has corruption which starts at the very top and being rich means if you pay the right people a certain amount the charges disappear. This should also include countries that accept things like "blood money". Secondly in some countries being rich means you can hire expensive lawyers who slow down or are specialists in navigating complex legal structures to maximize them for a client.
What you said makes sense, but I see it a bit differently. Reality doesn’t always match what we imagine in our minds. We may picture an ideal and fair society where the rich and the poor are treated equally under the law — but in truth, things are far more complex. Corruption, bias, and the influence of power will always exist in some form, yet that doesn’t mean it will last forever. Change comes slowly, through awareness and a strong belief in justice. So, no matter how beautiful our imagination is, the wise thing is to understand reality and work according to it.
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