Arthur Ravel who was 16 years old at the time, witnesses this carnage only because the two men assigned to accompany him to his dad’s store were shot by the town folk. Villa’s men proceeded with such methodical precision that it was clear they had scouted the city before the raid. When the American forces returned fire they inflicted heavy casualties on the bandits one of them being Pablo Lopez, the author of Santa Isabel massacre; who was bounded on both
Charlie Manson made people believe murdering was right. Manson led what became to be known as “the Family” whom he manipulated into brutality killing others on his behalf. To the world Manson had become an icon of evil. Many times after a murder, Charles Manson and “the family” would write blood on the walls and killed his victims in a brutal way. In a trial Susan Atkins (a member of “the family”) responded to the judge by saying, "Better lock your doors and watch your own kids"(4).
Although thoroughly "institutionalized” Karl is deemed fit to be released into the outside world. Prior to his release, he is interviewed by a local college newspaper reporter, to whom he recounts the brutal murder of his mother and her boyfriend with a sling blade. Karl continues, saying that he killed the man because he thought he was raping his mother. When he discovered that his mother was a willing participant in the affair, he killed her too. 1.
Not much time passed before he slew his son Marcius without hesitation for stealing Lavinia away from the emperor and standing in Titus’s way when he tried to go after her. Towards the end of the play, Titus kills his daughter Lavinia for the shame of being raped. Both murders show that Titus values dignity, honor, and the emperor over his own children, as well as the obvious and now deplorable ability
Then he stands up for his friend and kills bernardo. All Puerto Ricans get mad at tony and start hitting him with chains. The police show up and everyone leaves tony . Anybodys comes and helps him out. Maria gets the message that her brother is dead and that her love has killed him.
Angry and hungry for revenge, he hires a couple of men to kill her and her husband. But the plan doesn’t work out entirely like he had planned, and Elizabeth manages to escape, convincing most people (with the help of her father and uncle) that she had been killed. She believes that this option will lead to the safety and protection of David,
Dictionary.com defines satire as, “the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc. Satire was the idea behind Mark Twain’s book, Huckleberry Finn. Mark Twain wrote this novel to mock mob mentality, greed, and hierocracy. One target of Twains satire is mob mentality. In one scene the men in Bricksville try to lynch Colonel Sheburn, Colonel Sheburn saw that the town was getting ready to attack him, so he begins to give a speech saying “The idea of you lynching anybody!
Lady Macbeth challenges him, saying that he is not a man. Macbeth becomes defensive, and to defend himself, he kills Duncan. So, in the end both are to blame. Macbeth had committed the actual murder, and Lady Macbeth made the plan and convinced her husband to commit the
The Dangers of Vigilante Justice Vigilante justice is like a wildfire. It starts with a small spark, where actions and events then fuel it into a flame that consumes everything in its path. The idea of taking law into one’s own hands quickly spreads to become the common mob mentality when one is angry or overcome with rage. This type of justice is demonstrated in Walter Van Tilburg Clark’s The Ox-Bow Incident. The central theme of justice is questioned through the actions of the lynching mob and is portrayed as ineffective because it overlooks important facts and evidence, proving that fair trial is necessary for proper justice.
While both women endured their brutal murders, they screamed out hoping to stop the killing and receive help from others. In “The Lottery”, Mrs. Hutchinson screamed, “It isn’t fair, it isn’t right” (Jackson 318), and in “Thirty-Eight Who Saw Murder Didn’t Call the Police”, Catherine Genovese screamed, “Oh my God, he stabbed me! Please help me! Please help me!” and “I’m dying” (Gansberg 121). In Shirley Jackson’s story, the town people are solely responsible for killing Mrs. Hutchinson by voluntarily picking up stones and stoning her to death.