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Anonymous (Login Annie_Mich) Posted Jan 6, 2008 1:24 PM
From reading the newspapers or watching the news I would say my intution has gotten "some help" to believe the parents did it... but still... I also find it hard to believe that her own parents could have done it - killed their own daughter whether by accident or not - and not broken down and admitted the whole thing by now. That their conscience would be so unbreakable... this makes me doubt...
If in Britain more than 260 Falklands veterans have committed suicide - more than those killed in the war, one would assume that the reason for wanting to die would have to do with guilt after killing another human being - bad conscience...
Even if there are no official figures for GI suicides in Vietnam according to the Veterans of Foreign Wars 180.000 Vietnam veterans have since taken their lives... one would assume guilt had something to do with it - the conscience... even though in war you rarely know the enemy you kill... In this case it was their own daughter - someone whom they loved dearly...
I know... itīs not the same thing with casualties in a war and to murder a family member - a big difference in many ways, but still the conscience should be "stronger" or at least more vulnerable when it concerns someone close to you and whom you love...no?
What would make Madeleineīs parents not break down and admit if they have done it? Can you really survive the guilt after you have murdered your own child and keep it a secret and then lead a "normal" life? Maybe they are telling the truth?
"I live in a world of my own, but itīs ok - everybody knows me here" |
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