Introduction to Criminal Guilt

Criminal guilt is the most basic category. It identifies individuals who have physically violated established laws. In Jaspers' framework, this isn't a philosophical debate—it is a matter of evidence, trial, and sentencing. If you broke the law, you are criminally guilty. End of file.

However, forensic history shows that legal systems are often the first casualty of systemic collapse. Laws can be drafted to protect the executioner and punish the witness. Criminal guilt must therefore be cross-referenced with the other three categories to determine the true scope of failure.

Forensic Observations

"Legality is a documentation status, not a moral baseline."

"The state’s permission to kill does not erase the biological act of murder; it merely delays the prosecution."

Cross-Examination

  • The "Legal" Shield: At what point did you outsource your personal morality to a legislative body?
  • Documentation of Dissent: Can you provide a verifiable record of any moment you refused a legal order on ethical grounds?
  • The Executioner’s Logic: If a law were passed tomorrow requiring the harm of your neighbor, would your only defense be "it’s the law"?

Audit your complicity in the context of the Gaza genocide.

Try the Assessment