Zimbardo does not justify their actions, only explains how these abuses likelydeveloped under certain conditions.
In the article, Zimbardo refers to his own experiments about human behavior in certain conditions to explain the reasons behind the soldiers' behavior. He states that their mental state allowed for their actions because of "stress, fear, boredom and heat exhaustion, coupled with no supervision, no training, and no accountability." In the text he never states that their behavior is acceptable or justified given the conditions, he is merely explaining how good people can do bad things.
<span>Darrow uses charged language, such as “crazy” and “barbarous” and “ashamed” to persuade the judge and audience to reject the death penalty in spite of the horrible crime Leopold and Loeb committed.
These types of words would hang in the audience's minds and appeal to their emotions. Using this type of language would make the audience think and hopefully persuade them to reject the death penalty. </span>
It brought more jobs because we had to produce more things in bulk like the uniforms and medical supplies and food and many more things also since so many men left for war their jobs from before were hiring new people