The example anna posted was very simple, as some of you posted that you don't get what karma is about. It was a good example, but of course it raised more questions.
@Chavez: A basic statement of all theories/philosophies that support the idea of karma is that if you are solid you can't flow, and the point is to "flow." If you understand things, things are the same. If you don't understand things, they are still the same. So, you wanting a solid argument will not work on this topic as all the people who believe in karma -myself included- aren't interested at all in making up theories that are solid as even this word repels us.
@Kiwii: I would agree with your post, if you hadn't said this:
"since I'm not drugged with afterlife or reincarnation that gives people a second chance", as reincarnation, isn't at all a second chance, is a repeat cause you weren't able to learn the lessons you were supposed to learn. The point is to break the re-incarnations circle and live only one life, is not having other chances.
@Devlin: And what I said to Kiwii applies here also. The example you gave us is very interesting to discuss, although i doubt that this can happen here. Anyway, for people who believe in the concept of karma there is also the concept of dharma. Don't imagine them as opposites, but better as two things that complete each other in the same way the yin & yang symboli is presented. You can google it and you will find around 100 definitions for what dharma is, but i will try and give you my definition about it: Dharma could be defined as a moral law combined with spiritual discipline that guides one's life, in other words: our duty in this life. The main principles of dharma are:
Patience (dhriti), forgiveness (kshama), piety or self control (dama), honesty (asteya), sanctity (shauch), control of senses (indraiya-nigrah), reason (dhi), knowledge or learning (vidya), truthfulness (satya) and absence of anger (krodha).
Karma and Dharma are 2 concepts that have to do with our previous reincarnations and they have also to do with the lessons we are supposed to learn in this life.
With these I mean, don't imagine that karma is about punishment, you did bad things, bad things will happen to you. It's way more complicated than that and of course karma applies in the society we live in at the moment. The people who were killed like this from monsters like Hitler aren't karma's victims, they are Hitler's -and his followers'- victims.