Assuming there is justice, not in legal, but in the universal, humane sense, where is it now?
Marharyta, Ukraine:
The issue of justice is almost the same as the question of evil. Believe it or not, it’s a matter of choice.
I do believe that justice exists, and that it will prevail and win in the end.
Nevertheless, events that are happening right now are the consequences of people’s bad acts. Only people themselves are guilty.
In my opinion, today there is a fight between good and evil, justice and injustice. We can name it whatever we want, although the main sense still remains the same.
I hope and do believe that good will win.
People believe that they’re gods or that they’re even better than gods. But the fun fact is that they aren’t. We are all mortal. We don’t have nine lives. So, the will to have all the power, to be the richest and materialistic values will ruin the world.
Kate, Ukraine:
If you ask me about the supreme justice, I don’t believe in that. Any events that are taken now depend only on the actions of other people.
If you ask me on a religious side:
I am an atheist, but I can explain these events from this point of view. God doesn’t interfere in our lives. Everything that we have now, that’s results only of our choices.
But I believe in ordinary human justice. I guess in these horrible historical times, our society has the best time to reconsider its values. In our present time, we have the best fairness test including.
Cause everybody thought a lot about the right actions from citizens in Russia, everybody saw their new side of kindness to our nation. Everyone wondered how to continue the business: whether to help refugees or make a profit and increase rental prices. We have gone through many lessons of “justice” in some way.
Also, unfortunately, we are learning the lessons of the hardest life.
And another important question is: if we could avoid this experience including thousands of deaths, millions of lives destroyed and in general very hard tension around the whole world?
Daria, Kropyvnytskiy:
I do not really believe in justice, because it is unjust to us. Our nation was living under “russian guardianship” since the time when Bohdan Khmelnytsky signed the decree “Pereyaslav Articles”. This means that for more than three hundred years our people knew nothing about justice. Then, finally, the damned Soviet world fell apart, and we only began to understand who we are. And again. Again we see this still undead Soviet world which killing us. Where did that covet justice go? Probably, bullets hit it.
Natalia, Kyiv:
In the morning I was very angry, I was angry with everyone and at everything. It’s probably due to helplessness and worthlessness. Terrible news from everywhere and there’s nothing I can do about it. I even got angry with God, which is the most ridiculous thing, because I don’t believe in God. Perhaps it means I do believe in God, we can not be angry with something somebody does not exist. Or perhaps I want to believe that there is a higher sense in everything around.