ShaggyJebus wrote...
This sprang up from the
Can You Waste Talent? thread.
You're walking down the street when you hear noise from a nearby alley. You peer in and see one man stabbing another to death. You walk away; you do nothing. You go home and act like you never saw it.
Are you indirectly responsible for that man's death?
The law says, yes, you are. If you do not attempt to stop someone from hurting/killing another, then you are an accessory to the crime. But that doesn't mean you have to wrestle the murderer and try to get him to stop. You just have to try to help. The easiest way would be to call 911 and tell them what's happening. This law doesn't just apply to murder though; if you let a wanted person stay with you, knowing that he is wanted by the police, that is illegal.
I'm not entirely sure, but isn't there something like 'you are obligated to help but this obligation doesn't apply if your actions might endanger your own life or health'? Trying to stop the culprit would, in case of seeing someone getting stabbed, surely endanger your health/life, so I say just calling ambulance/police and waiting until the attacker gets away is perfectly acceptable by law. Yeah, moralists might say that it's cowardly and shit, but seriously... you would risk your own health/life for some complete stranger? I guess not.
If you just see a stabbed person (or anyone who clearly need medical care ASAP, or being hurt) and completely ignore them, then I say you should be held responsible if anything happens to them.
ShaggyJebus wrote...
Here's a less extreme example: Your friend throws a party, and a lot of people are there, including you. At one point, you're in your friend's bedroom, where some people are talking away from the noise of the music. You see another friend pick up your friend's wallet (which was laying on a table), look inside, and take out some money. You say nothing and do not stop the person. The next day, your friend discovers that his money is missing. He confronts the person who did it (lucky guess on your friend's part), and the thief tries to drag you down with him: "He saw me do it and didn't say anything." Does your friend have the right to get mad at you? Or at you not at fault at all, because you weren't the one who stole the money?
I'm not entirely sure on this one. I'm actually pretty used to the fact that my former classmates were visiting others wallets without asking and there was no problem with it, since they did it mutually and more or less knew who took what from whom. Not to mention they were from families where a few tens of dollars were just a daily cash from parents... I sometimes share my wallet with my best friend and our accounting is as clear as day. My point is, due to my circumstances, I just take it as a normal thing that some people go to others wallets.
In this situation, it would probably depend on WHO took that money and if the 'robbed' friend asks or wonders why there's less money in his wallet. If any question would arise from him, I would speak immediatelly, but if he says nothing... it's none of my bussines.