Retaliation Essays

  • Punishment and Retaliation

    1343 Words  | 3 Pages

    Retaliation and punishment are some of the core themes involved in researching acts of violence among ancient cultures. In these cultures the killing of a family member by an individual may result in either the killing of the original murderer or the killing of one of their family members in retaliation. Often, this is deemed as a justified reaction. Even today the punishing of someone due to wrongdoing is often believed to be justified. The existence of the death penalty in the United States is

  • Strategic Defense Initiative Essay

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    depend upon the threat of instant U.S. retaliation to deter an enemy attack?”                                Ronald Reagan; 1983      In his speech of March 23, 1983, President Reagan presented his vision of a future where a Nation’s security did not rest upon the threat of nuclear retaliation, but on the ability to protect and

  • Deterence in International Politics

    2929 Words  | 6 Pages

    Deterrence is a theory of International relations based in Realism. Essentially, it tries to explain the situation of when two or more states threaten retaliation if attacked, in order to deter the attack. It is therefore possible to very simply state deterrence as "You hit me, I hit you." For this essay, two main questions have to be addressed, ‘Has it worked?’ and ‘Does it make sense?’ To answer these questions, I will firstly define what deterrence is, I will then examine some of the main arguments

  • Speech

    561 Words  | 2 Pages

    no threat and decided to keep the information from the American people. However, it has become a threat. One week ago, Canada sent cloned troops towards the United States in hopes to overthrow our government. American troops were also sent for retaliation. Unfortunately because the United States has not properly funded our cloning program over the past few decades, hopes of victory have diminished to very slim chances. Over the past few days, the Canadian clones have wiped out two-thirds of our American

  • Personal Narrative: A Career As An Acting Beeper

    628 Words  | 2 Pages

    "I can't believe he did that! I'll get even for what happened." Revenge. Hot blooded or cold and calculated. Everyone has had occasion to seek revenge; to retaliate for some wrong, real or perceived. For some, retaliation takes the ultimate and final form. Death. But for most people, just knowing that something was done, no matter how small, is enough to cool the desire to "get even." There are multitudes of ways to redress wrongs; however, in this paper I will just be talking of three ways satisfaction

  • Oedipus at Colonus Essays: Revenge

    610 Words  | 2 Pages

    Revenge in Oedipus at Colonus A prevailing concept throughout Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus is that of revenge.  Oedipus is given the opportunity to avenge many of the wrongs he has accumulated in his lifetime, and he takes the opportunity. Oedipus suffered through the latter portion of his life.  Although the gods should be credited with the majority of his pain, he was wronged by mere mortals during his life.  Did he have the right to seek revenge in general?  Yes, he did.  There is more to

  • Revenge in Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    in the end self-injury involved in serving revenge’s purposes will be more damaging than the original wrong. Heathcliff never finds peace through his revenge.  In fact, the only time he truly finds happiness is when he gives up his plan for retaliation.   Austin O’Malley states  “Revenge is like biting a dog that bit you”  (O’malley 1).  O’Malley’s quote reflects Heathcliff’s immature need to propagate agony in those who have offended him.  Heathcliff’s plan for revenge on Edgar and Catherine

  • Capital Punishment Essay: Hypocrisy of the Death Penalty

    650 Words  | 2 Pages

    is essentially: a revenge. A punishment that penalizes without forestalling is indeed called revenge. It is a quasi-arithmetical reply made by society to whoever breaks its primordial law. That reply is as old as man; it is called the law of retaliation. Whoever has done me harm must suffer harm; whoever has put out my eye m...

  • A Critique of Bush's Speeches after September 11

    1269 Words  | 3 Pages

    is written, He called for revenge, called Osama bin Laden the prime suspect and asked for him dead or alive. (Max 1) Using such strong words gives an impression that Bush is overly confident and jumping to conclusions. Using revenge would imply retaliation and in result would come a war. Bush seems so sure that bin Laden is responsible when, still as of this day, he has no hard evidence. Asking for him dead or alive is probably the first threat he made. The only accomplishment Bush got out of making

  • Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA)

    751 Words  | 2 Pages

    terms, conditions, and privileges of employment (Hernandez, 2001). This applies to the entire range of employer-employee relationships, including testing, work assignments, discipline, leave, benefits, and lay-offs. In addition, the ADA prohibits retaliation against individuals w...

  • Lincoln Keiser's Friend by Day, Enemy by Night

    960 Words  | 2 Pages

    example stated in the book is, “a blow should answer a blow and a death answer a death.” For such offenses as attacks on men through their wives, sisters, and daughters retaliation usually occurs in deadly violence. Killing the offender is considered the most appropriate response. Although violence usually takes place during retaliation, it is not the only way to handle it. The rules don’t always require taking revenge. Enemies can peacefully settle mar dushmani in one of two ways. First, if the murderer

  • An Analysis of the Epic Poem, Beowulf - The World of Beowulf

    972 Words  | 2 Pages

    That is the feud,                  the hatred of tribes, war-lust of men, (2999-3000) Consider Beowulf’s revenge of the murder of Heardred, son of Hygelac, by the sons of Othere. And the awaited revenge on the Geats by the Swedes in retaliation for Wulf and Eofor’s killing of Ongentheow.  Hygelac, going “to the land of the Frisians, attacked the Hetware,” provoking a feud between the Geats on one side and the Franks, Frisians and Mereovingians on the other side. Beowulf’s father had killed

  • Hester Pryne of Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    grew up living a different life from her peers.  Growing up with Hester, Pearl never really associated with children from her age group.  This happened because whenever Hester and Pearl went into town, they were tormented and harassed. In retaliation, Pearl began to throw rocks back at the children.  This kind of thing only happened in the beginning of Pearl's life.  Later on, the kids stopped harassing  Pearl because her mom's sin did not have as much effect on the people of the town

  • The Oresteia Conflict Essay

    1871 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Resolution of Conflict in Aeschylus' Oresteia       Aeschylus, was a master dramatist - he liked to portray conflict between persons, human or divine, or between principles.1 His trilogy of plays, the Oresteia, develops many conflicts that must be resolved during the action of the Eumenides, the concluding play of the trilogy. The central theme of the Oresteia is justice (dike) and in dealing with questions of justice, Aeschylus at every stage involves the gods.2 The Oresteia's climactic

  • Self-Assessment and Reflection

    1032 Words  | 3 Pages

    expression and freedom did not exist. Since I could remember, there was a constant pressure for me to conform into Indian Christian society. Over the years the burden of not being able to convey my feelings and endless demands grew to hatred and retaliation toward my parents. The day after my high school graduation, without lett...

  • The Conflicted Linda Loman in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

    757 Words  | 2 Pages

    Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman Watching a solitary blade of grass will never tell you the direction of hurricane, just as one characteristic can never describe Linda Loman. In Death of a Salesman, Linda Loman is a woman torn between guilt, retaliation, and pity. Her guilt stems from the fact that she prevented Willy from pursuing his true American Dream; she retaliates in response to Willy's failure; she feels sorry for Willy, because he is a "pitiful lone adventurer of the road" (47). As the

  • Essay on Pointing the Finger in John Milton’s Paradise Lost

    1105 Words  | 3 Pages

    Milton’s Paradise Lost, Adam and Eve bicker and blame one another for their decent. First, Adam accuses Eve for her physical act of accepting the apple from Satan and eating it, thus defying God’s decree not to eat from the Tree of Knowledge. In retaliation, Eve responds and attempts to not only justify her act, but also to place the blame on Adam. Eve’s reaction is typical of someone who does not like to admit he is wrong. Eve begins by challenging Adam with an argument that he would have done

  • Symbols and Symbolism in The Scarlet Letter

    942 Words  | 2 Pages

    meaning as well as different meanings to various characters.  To Hester, the A means humiliation.  The A to Dimmesdale is a reminder of his own contrition. To Pearl, the A is peculiarity and Roger Chillingworth sees the A as a journey for retaliation.  Other then adultery, the A can also stand for "Angel" and "Able".  Angel, for it appears in the sky after Governor Winthrop's death. Able, for Hester has won the respect of the Puritans even if she has sinned terribly. Hawthorne uses

  • Richard III and Adolf Hitler

    731 Words  | 2 Pages

    driven by fear.  Their anxieties and insecurities lead to a hatred that has a desire to destroy, deep-rooted in violence.  Despot rulers are also never satisfied with the power they have at any given time, thus exposing their constant fear of retaliation from their subjects.  This examination of the despot ruler by Plato clearly shows the motives by which despot rulers rule, but it fails to explain why and how these motives originate in the human mind. In order to comprehend why such a

  • Plato's The Crito

    981 Words  | 2 Pages

    not and keeps silent. In the stand Socrates takes, he argues that since he has lived in Athens all his life, he is required to stand his ground and take what's thrown his way, even if that punishment is death, "do you think you have the right to retaliation against your country and its laws?" (Crito, 53) Socrates was a master of words. It is easy to say that his intellect allowed him to make anyone see all sides of an argument. Even Crito at times is confused about his decision to free his friend,