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In my mind, I distinguish between lawful and excessive.

!PIZZA

!CTP

You might also want to distinguish between "lawfully excessive" and "excessively lawful". 😆😅

!LOLZ

!CTP

There are II kinds of people
Those who understand Roman numerals and those who don't

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(5/8)

Oh! That requires a great exegete to identify the difference between the two. 🤣

!LOLZ

!PIZZA

What did the judge say when the skunk walked into the courtroom?
“Odor in the court!”

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(2/8)

If you think exegesis would cost you a lot of time and effort to determine the difference between the two phrases, then maybe you should do eisegesis first. 🤣

!LOLZ

!PIZZA

Oh my! That's more expensive. It might cost you and others something even beyond time and money. 😄

!LOLZ

!PIZZA

What rock band has a huge ghost following?
The Boo Boo Dolls.

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(1/8)

Looks like you have tried eisegesis before (several times). 😄

!LUV

!CTP

What does "lawful" mean, and can legality transform injustice into justice? How can a non-zero level of extortion ever be just? Who decides what is excessive?

I understand that the word "law" is a heavy word and its meaning varies depending on someone's worldview or set of presuppositions one perceives the world. I am speaking of law from the Judeo-Christian point of view.

As to the second part of your question, I agree with you that there is a difference between law and justice. Unfortunately, most laws are unjust and that's why human laws are made to make plunder legal thereby instead of serving justice, they become tools to make injustice institutionalized.