Yes Allan, I agree that my commentary is general and that laws vary.
What I said was related to the use of the term murder in the English
language only and not associated to any specific area. Each area would
require the knowledge of local law to know when killing was murder or
not.
Your specific example is indicative of how this is relative. Some
areas consider it against the law to kill anyone who breaks into your
home while others do not. Therefore, if I were writing newspaper copy
for each case, the use of the term murder would be appropriate (and
correct) in the former and not in the latter. In both cases the notion
of premeditation wouldn’t enter into the story.
On a little more philosophical and hypothetical note, we don’t have
enough information to know whether the person in your example who
breaks into your house actually meant to kill you so while you would
still say you were murdered the notion of premeditation may or may not
apply
On Aug 7, 6:44 am, allan deheretic <
dehere...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Orn I did not say it incorrectly it is semantics what ever your view is
> just general.. and laws vary. an example if you charged into my home with
> your guns blazing and I popped or killed you.. that is all I have do is kill
> you. but on the other hand if you kill me then it is murder because it was
> a premeditated act..
> Allan
>
> On Sun, Aug 7, 2011 at 10:35 AM, ornamentalmind
> <
ornsmindseyes...@yahoo.com>wrote: