I guess they're two related, but ultimately separate issues.
Firstly, I want to believe that people born to kill have the possibility, no matter how unlikely, to find a way around their natural instinct. So, if it's a possibility, I don't want them killed when it isn't completely and utterly proven there isn't an alternative.
Secondly, I don't want you to feel as though you should die because despair born from loneliness and isolation due to circumstances sucks. Maybe it doesn't apply to you, but the pattern I've observed from that kind of situation is, if someone has no one else who can truly understand their struggles, they will suffer in solitude and - quite possibly, do all kinds of things to try to escape those feelings out of desperation.
For humans at least, having others to share the burden with helps people continue onwards with the knowledge that at least they aren't alone. But I thought - if you're alone with your feelings, it could feel like an unbearable weight, and so it would be difficult to see much hope for yourself, or even want that hope if it meant continuing on alone.
[They reach the lobby, and he continues to the elevator.]
...but like I said, if you don't like it, you can just forget I've said anything at all.
no subject
Firstly, I want to believe that people born to kill have the possibility, no matter how unlikely, to find a way around their natural instinct. So, if it's a possibility, I don't want them killed when it isn't completely and utterly proven there isn't an alternative.
Secondly, I don't want you to feel as though you should die because despair born from loneliness and isolation due to circumstances sucks. Maybe it doesn't apply to you, but the pattern I've observed from that kind of situation is, if someone has no one else who can truly understand their struggles, they will suffer in solitude and - quite possibly, do all kinds of things to try to escape those feelings out of desperation.
For humans at least, having others to share the burden with helps people continue onwards with the knowledge that at least they aren't alone. But I thought - if you're alone with your feelings, it could feel like an unbearable weight, and so it would be difficult to see much hope for yourself, or even want that hope if it meant continuing on alone.
[They reach the lobby, and he continues to the elevator.]
...but like I said, if you don't like it, you can just forget I've said anything at all.