Is there a difference between dieing of old age behind bars and being fried? The state has taken a life in both instances.
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Death penalty is damn right
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I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio
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In what way?I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio
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Life in prison leaves open the possibility of overturning an erroneous conviction (permanently, whereas with the DP, eventually they run out of appeals).
The justice system is all sorts of fallable. I'd rather err on the side of caution.
-Arriangrog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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Your post is too FABULOUS to respond to.I make no bones about my moral support for [terrorist] organizations. - chegitz guevara
For those who aspire to live in a high cost, high tax, big government place, our nation and the world offers plenty of options. Vermont, Canada and Venezuela all offer you the opportunity to live in the socialist, big government paradise you long for. –Senator Rubio
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Originally posted by DinoDoc
Your post is too FABULOUS to respond to.
grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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/me notes, Arrian is going out of his way to avoid words.
Next year: Random (gay) smilies!!!Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing?
Then why call him God? - Epicurus
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Originally posted by Tingkai
Exactly. The justice system makes mistakes all the time. We can't trust it with the power to determine life or death. Better to throw the murderers in jail for life.
I understand you disagree, and I accept it, but it's a philosphical difference, and we'll have to agree to disagree.
Also, if the victim had been a severely deformed kid, how many people would be talking about this case? How many would be demanding the death penalty?
The question is whether or not kidnapping someone, beating their skull in with a shovel, then tossing them in the river is a crime heinous enough to warrant State-sponsored extinction. I think it is; you think it isn't. It doesn't matter who the victim is.
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Maybe thats the price we pay for living in a civilized society?
Remember the purpose of a penal system is to reform, not to avenge.
One of my chief concerns is that, by devaluing life via executions, if we aren't actually inducing far more murders that we're deterring.
Human beings are rational entities with the ability to make choices. When it is proven that they made a rational decision knowing the consequences of their choices (ie not insane) they should be held responsible. Freedom is not just being able to make choices, it is reaping the consequences of them.
People tend to think that it is the government taking their life, which is ridiculous. These individuals voluntarily forfeited it.
The government has a prerogative to defend society. The death penalty does not defend society in any way that imprisonment does not
I am sure those parents are happy their child’s murder is watching cable television for the next 50 years out of their taxes."The DPRK is still in a state of war with the U.S. It's called a black out." - Che explaining why orbital nightime pictures of NK show few lights. Seriously.
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Excatly, It is not the job of anyone here to change the minds of believers or non belivers in the DP. The only thing one can do is express why he/she feels the way they do on this topic. The penal system like life is always fallable, no one thing is perfect.When you find yourself arguing with an idiot, you might want to rethink who the idiot really is.
"It can't rain all the time"-Eric Draven
Being dyslexic is hard work. I don't even try anymore.
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Originally posted by Cyclotron
and while a state has the right to act to keep its people safe, the state does not have the right to act out of vengeance.
Rights should be abridged only when to not abridge them would endanger the equivalent rights of others. You have yet to demonstrate how "doing something heinous" requires death, making this just another platitude.
Not saying that you are (which is why I couched my statement with the phrase "Am I missing something?"), but that is how this philospohy can be viewed by someone who believes that bad actions should have proportionally bad consequences.
Why do you think that a heinous crime deserves life imprisonment, especially if the murderer could somehow be reformed and made harmless after a few years? How can you justify advocating life imrisonment for someone who could possibly be rehabilitated? Isn't that just "vengeance"?
Punishment has value in and of itself. Society has a desire to see bad people get what's coming to them. This desire is incorporated into our legal system, as demonstrated by the fact that we have different punishments for different crimes. The worse we consider the crime to be, the more harsh the criminal's sentence is. Leaving that desire unfulfilled can lead to vigilantism. That's often why particularly objectionable offenders tend to fall victim to "prison justice." I prefer to have the judicial system dispense justice rather not have to rely on prison vigilantism.
but I see a certain heirarchy of punishment: execution is more serious than imprisonment. A prisoner can still contribute to the world; this we saw during the Stanley Williams incident.
If life imprisonment is sufficient to fulfill the prerogatives of the state, why execute?
1. It prevents the criminal from escaping from incarceration
2. It prevents the criminal from victimizing other prisoners
3. I find it unjust that we pay to keep these people alive while other needs go unmet
4. I don't find it enough of a removal from society. These people still can interact with others, they can still watch t.v. and read books, they can still use the drugs and alcohol that are smuggled into prison, and, in some instances, they can still conduct criminal operations while imprisoned.
Yes, these elements incorporate the "vengeance" that you. When people do certain crimes, they lose their right to certain enjoyments. The worse the crime, the worse the punishment should be. However, they also incorporate societal protections that life imprisonment doesn't.
The argument I usually hear then is something along the lines of "why should we have to pay to keep that SOB alive?" My answer to this is that, unfortunately, what is the duty of a civilized society is not always either expedient or monetarily efficient. Feeding prisoners is simply one of the costs of an advanced system of justice.
Currently, if the statistics I've seen are correct, it costs more (in California, at least) to execute than to imprison.
There's that "innocent" word again. I wonder what the point you are trying to make with that is?
People should recieve the chance to rehabilitate, quite simply, because people are not perfect. I'm not saying that this applies specifically to this case; it may be that the state deems them unredeemable. Generally speaking, however, people deserve a second chance because the society owes them one.
I agree that rehabilitation should be the primary goal for lesser crimes. They're lesser crimes because society has judged them to be so, and consequently gives out lesser punishments for them. Since they're going to be out in society again, it's in our best interest to rehabilitate them so they don't commit more crimes and cause more harm when released. Society does this not because it "owes" the criminal the chance for rehabilitation, but because it owes it to itself to ensure its own safety and stability.
People who have commited crimes so severe that they're not going to be released aren't "owed" a chance to rehabilitate. They've permanently lost their chance to be in greater society. You even recognize this. Rehabilitation ceases to become a reason for their imprisonment. If they're never going to be allowed out into greater society, then why suffer the four elements that make life imprisonment inferior to death?
We must not turn our back on any that can be returned to civil society.
Degrees of murder are based on the intent of the killer, not on the degree of "innocentness" of the victim.
The legal system realizes that killing someone who provokes you is not as bad as killing someone who doesn't provoke you, as is demonstrated through different sentencing levels for the different homicide crimes. Yes, it is tied to the killer's intent, but the actions of the victim are also taken into account.
We're never going to convince each other. We'll just trade platitudes for platitudes and emotional appeals for emotional appeals. I think the "irrevocable rights" and "vengeance" arguments are meritless, because I don't agree with the philosphies undergirding those arguments.
The only good argument against the D.P. IMO is the danger of executing an innocent. That's a very strong argument, and it's why I think that execution should only be the answer in the most obvious of cases. I think that in a perfect legal system there would be no life imprisonment, only execution (because of the 4 elements I listed above). However, I realize that the system is imperfect, and that life imprisonment is a necessary evil. However, when you have someone like John Wayne Gacy, someone who was absolutely and clearly guilty, then there's no reason to keep him alive.Last edited by Wycoff; April 3, 2006, 18:15.I'm about to get aroused from watching the pokemon and that's awesome. - Pekka
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I had the experience of going thru hi school with my father who is now deceased as a prison inmate. While going to the process of writing to this man and recieving letters i realized there is something wrong when these guys can make their own alochol with things in the prison, smoke, get fed up to 6 times a day, have free run of the place, read porn and live life i, (sorry i am not seeing suffering or rehab going on here). They arent forced to go to rehabailtion classes they choose to do this if they want to try to get out.
My father was in there for murder, a bar room fight that ended in the loss of another mans life. You can call me heartless if you want but i no where think that my dads life was or wasnt any more important then the man that died.
If my dad would have gotten the DP then we would have had to accept it. He like the others in that bar had choices. He choose to be there, he chose to get into a fight, so did the guy that died, and the results were that two families were now with out fathers.
Bottom line if you are conscious enough to choose this crime then you must also be willing to accept what penalties come with it.When you find yourself arguing with an idiot, you might want to rethink who the idiot really is.
"It can't rain all the time"-Eric Draven
Being dyslexic is hard work. I don't even try anymore.
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