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"If this does not qualify for the death sentence, then there is no case that would''
Got wrapped up doing housework (great way to spend a day off, eh?)
Ramo: Again, you know I'm not advocating mass purgings of people in our society. I have been, from the start, talking about the real monsters. Gaskins, the guy that is the leadin to this thread, others.
People who leave a trail of bodies behind them, shattering families (sometimes killing entire families), and who WILL NOT STOP.
I reject that for these people, there is any reasonable hope for "reconditioning," and it makes my skin crawl to think that my tax dollars are spent coddling these apes.
I realize that you anti-DPers are talking about a total revamp of the current prison system, but a total revamp takes time and money. Money, we can get....time...another matter. We have to deal with these monsters RIGHT NOW. We can't very well put them up in a luxury hotel and tell them to "hang on a while" so we can put our prisons in order and there are lots of places where society wants no part of locking them away, because in doing so, the risk is run that some weak willed politician will pander to some voting block and relase a nutjob back onto the streets, or some underpaid prison psycholgist will deem one of these monsters magically cured and set him free.
These are the folks who say a big no thanks to the kinder, gentler approach, and I don't blame them. I'm one of them.
In my mind, the risk that one of these people will escape and leave an even longer trail of blood overshadows the risk of making an occassional mistake, and while it is unfortunate when mistakes ARE made, it's also a foregone conclusion.
I can express genuine remorse when such mistakes are made and still be utterly unapologetic in my position toward this subset of prisoner.
I don't want them studied in large numbers.
I don't want them coddled.
I don't want them tortured for decades.
I don't want them to do it again...EVER.
There's a solution in place that provides for that, and I support it.
-=Vel=-
The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.
Aeson: I'm definitely not saying that two wrongs make a right...just pointing out that there are other societal choices where it's perfectly acceptable to say "that's too expensive" or "that's too much of a risk" and nobody bats an eye.
If it works in one instance, it works in another.
-=Vel=-
The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.
Which doesn't mean it's ok to say "that's too expensive" or "that's too much of a risk" to ignore a problem.
I fail to see the relevence to the issue of the DP. It sounds like you are trying to justify your DP arguments by referencing automobile accidents and general concern (or lack thereof) on that issue. It just doesn't apply unless you think the validation of "that's too expensive" or "that's too much of a risk" should apply to opinions about everything?
Otherwise you have to accept that the validity (and humanity) of those statements is directly tied to the issue they are referencing. Just because it's "acceptable" to say those things in regards to one subject (ie. automobile accidents) does not mean it's "acceptable" to say those things in regards to another (ie. raising orphans?).
I absolutely agree that it's not okay to make such statements and then blissfully ignore a problem.
In the instance of the DP, there are those of us who aren't convinced that there IS a problem, however, and to spend money to fix something that many view as not being broke in the first place...well, that seems rather a waste of resources. (granted, the current system is far from perfect, and I'm not saying it is....but as a DP supporter, I believe that some criminals--the subset mentioned previously--should be permanantly put out of society's misery. And they are. (I'll also be quick to say that I do NOT support the DP in it's current, relatively wide scale application, and if I were to suggest a change it would be to reserve it for those murderers (mass murderers) whose crimes are of a particularly heinous nature--not crimes of passion, robberies gone awry, etc). In other words, the worst of the monsters.
In the same vein, as a society without the benefits of unlimited resources, yes, it is acceptable to ask "at what cost" any time resources are spent to save lives, and where possible, we should spend those resources such that the greatest number of lives are saved FOR that cost first, and work from there. That's far too broad a generalization, I realize, and will address it further after I finish making dinner...
-=Vel=-
The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.
So why did you bring up automobile accidents at all? If your arguments apply to the DP, then show how they apply to the DP (which I admit you are doing otherwise, even if I don't agree), not how they apply to automobile accidents!
There are 3 main arguments against the death penalty:
1. The state should not have the power to kill it's own citizens.
2. If even one innocent person is wrongly executed the death penalty isn't worth it.
3. Life in prison is a worse punishment and a bigger deterrent than execution.
Of these, it's been cases of wrongful execution of people later found to be clearly innocent, or over whom doubts remain about their guilt, which has persuaded voters to turn against capital punishment.
The case that did it in Australia was that of a man named Ronald Ryan who was hanged in about 1968 over the death of prison guard in a prison escape. Ryan was sentenced to death for murder but there was a lot of doubt about how the prison guard died, with an accidental shooting by another prison guard during the confusion of the escape being a strong possibility.
His execution became a big political issue. Ryan was a likeable character, a bit like cool hand Luke, just a petty criminal, no major crimes on his record before the escape attempt. He had a young family.
After Ryan was hanged, most of the Australian public completely lost their confidence in the death penalty. Noone wanted to go through that again.
Just about everyone involved in the execution became a passionate opponent of the death penalty, including the chief prison warden. The warden revealed recently that he and his wife pray for Ryan every night.
When people who witnessed the execution were asked about it, including hardened journalists, they just burst into tears, even 30 years after the event people who were at that execution are still suffering over it, at the brutality and cruelty of hanging.
One thing that stuck in everyone's mind was how quickly the guy was despatched. Not like Hollywood. The prisoner appeared, the hangman put the noose around his neck and slipped a sack over his head and in a flash the trapdoor opened and the body stopped below the gallows with a sickening thud. Witnessese remember, the hangman actually leapt across to room to pull the lever the moment he had the head covered.
And then it was over and everyone thought, what a waste of time, what a pointless, futile punishment. That was the last one for us.
Any views I may express here are personal and certainly do not in any way reflect the views of my employer. Tis the rising of the moon..
Originally posted by Arrian
"If society preferred to reject the risk of executing innocents, there would be no death penalty."
Yup.
Nothing wrong with that.
Human life has a value - it is not of infinite worth. Otherwise, as Vel has pointed out, we would drive the nerf-tanks, we would have complete and utter safety as our goal. However, we recognize that life isn't of infinite worth - in fact, we even trade convenience for life (again, the nerf-tank).
In fact, the military has a term for this... it's called "collateral damage".
Hashem Dezhbakhsh & Joanna M. Shepherd The Deterrent Effect of Capital Punishment: Evidence from a 'Judicial Experiment'
Dept. of Economics, Emory University Working Paper No. 03-14 (July 2003)
Abstract: Does capital punishment deter capital crimes? We use panel data covering the fifty states during the period 1960-2000 period to examine the issue. Our study is novel in four ways. First, we estimate the moratorium's full effect by using both pre- and postmoratorium evidence. Second, we exploit the moratorium as a judicial experiment to measure criminals' responsiveness to the severity of punishment; we compare murder rates immediately before and after changes in states' death penalty laws. The inference draws on the variations in the timing and duration of the moratorium across states provide a cross section of murder rate changes occurring in various time periods. Third, we supplement the before-and-after comparisons with regression analysis that disentangles the impact of the moratorium itself on murder from the effect on murder of actual executions. By using two different approaches, we avoid many of the modeling criticisms of earlier studies. Fourth, in addition to estimating 84 distinct regression models--with variations in regressors estimation method, and functional form--our robustness checks examine the moratorium's impact on crimes that are not punishable by death. Our results indicate that capital punishment has a deterrent effect, and the moratorium and executions deter murders in distinct ways. This evidence is corroborated by both the before-and-after comparisons and regression analysis. We also confirm that the moratorium and executions do not cause similar c es in non-capital crimes. The results are highly robust.
“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
I think the crux of it is that we're arguing from two different perspectives.
I am utterly uninterested in prescribing a "worse punishment" for these serial killers. My only goal is to make damned sure they NEVER do it again ("never" being bold faced and underlined twice). Nor am I reconciled IN THE LEAST with the notion that lifelong solitary confinement (read: torture lasting decades) is somehow more "morally right" than death. It isn't. I'm not interested in torturing them. I'm interested in stopping them....permanantly.
Not..."almost permanantly"
Not...."well, 'permanantly' unless we let them out again"
Not...."well gee whiz, he's been a model prisioner, and after he cut that movie deal with Paramount (with Danny DeVito playing the lead role!) and conveniently found Jesus he must be okay...surely he won't do it again!"
Not any of that. I mean 100%, absolute certainty that these monsters WILL NOT kill again.
Locking them up and throwing away the key doesn't get it done, for reasons mentioned ad nauseum.
And for the record:
If a society is enabled to send its citizens off to war, then that society is, by default, empowered to end the life of its citizenry.
Human life is not infinitely valuable, and so it is false to say that one innocent death invalidates an entire course of action.
and
Prescribing a "worse punishment" is not, and should not be the goal.
Also, given the stance I advocate, Mr. Ronald Ryan would never even have been a candidate for state-sanctioned death. He doesn't fit the profile I have outlined from the start.
-=Vel=-
The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.
"You're the biggest user of hindsight that I've ever known. Your favorite team, in any sport, is the one that just won. If you were a woman, you'd likely be a slut." - Slowwhand, to Imran
The list of published books grows. If you're curious to see what sort of stories I weave out, head to Amazon.com and do an author search for "Christopher Hartpence." Help support Candle'Bre, a game created by gamers FOR gamers. All proceeds from my published works go directly to the project.
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