LumbergTech
Diamond Member
- Sep 15, 2005
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Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
By the way...
Fund health care via live pay-per-view executions? Yes, basically every society is that fucked up.![]()
corrected
Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
By the way...
Fund health care via live pay-per-view executions? Yes, basically every society is that fucked up.![]()
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: BurnItDwn
I am against the death penalty not because I oppose retribution for the wicked, but because the justice system is imperfect. Any risk of terminating an innocent innocent life, no matter how minor or small the risk, is far too great.
I don't know of an absolute method in use in courts used to determine guilt/innocence with 100% certainty and 0% chance of error, so therefore, a permanent and irreversible penalty taking everything and leaving nothing is excessive.
I am for the death penalty, but the above is the only argument that will give me pause. In the end, I happen to believe that not having a death penalty would be worse than having it. I know how that sounds, it sounds dispassionate and removed from reality. But that's exactly the thing that it prevents. People need to be faced with extreme consequences for extreme actions, otherwise, in the heat of the moment, they lack the reason to restrain themselves. Enough people get heated enough to fling the possibility of their death aside, and if there wasn't even that, I can see people being able to consider murder as an option much, much more.
Originally posted by: sandorski
Does not work.
What is with your 1 liner responses lately? If you don't care enough to explain yourself, then don't post dissent. I guess you think it makes you look smart. But unfortunately we don't have the benefit of knowing your greatness as you do, so you need to explain these things to us poor peons.
Originally posted by: themusgrat
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
countries that do not have the death penalty have lower murder rates than us, so thats a pretty irrelevant point in general.
Some countries, yes. I'm sure it wouldn't take long to find a country with no death penalty with higher murder rates than us as well. I guess here I should insert a random correlation/causation lesson, but no. Fact is, the death penalty has worked as a deterrent in the past, and for most people, if being killed is the penalty for raping and murdering a little child, then that's enough of a deterrent to not do it.
I do understand that I'm assuming people to be rational, but at the same time if you try to use that argument against me, I'll just say that nobody is truly and completely rational, we're all just at various degrees. The real question is whether someone who is considering murder, or besides themself with rage, will be deterred by the possibility of their own death, since we are far removed from death penalties these days, as pointed out above. The problem is, either you have psychos murdering and raping, or you have people who would, at least at the time, tell you they'd be willing to give their lives up to achieve the "justice" they suppose they are achieving. Then again, the fact that very many murders are committed in cold blood is an indicator that the status quo is working. You'll never prevent all murders, but if having a death penalty prevents some, then it's worth it.
Originally posted by: Infohawk
It's interesting that many people assume retribution is necessarily animalistic and/or primitive.
This is simply not the case. I would refer you to Kant:
Kant on Capital Punishment
Furthermore, the legal system does have to take into consideration the emotions of society as a whole. If the entire populace felt that justice was not being dolled out to criminals, they would simply take the law into their own hands.
Originally posted by: Pneumothorax
Originally posted by: Modelworks
I would love to see the 20 year sentence replaced with a 20 year + must have a college degree to be released.
Lol, nice... so we can welcome our newly released murderer's and rapists smarter than before they came in? Look, vast majority of these people are inherently evil or malevolent and no amount of "rehab" will ever make them acceptable members of society.
Originally posted by: sandorski
Because Vengeance is not Logical or Reasonable, it is pure Animal/Primitive emotion.
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I'm not naive. In an ideal world it should be automatic death penalty for first degree murder, no ifs and no buts. However, this is not an ideal world, if it was, there wouldn't be any murders in the first place. And I believe it is naive to think that justice is always 100% correct. Innocent people get sentenced every year and every year people get exonerated based on new evidence. There are documented cases where prosecution or cops fudged up the evidence to convict the guy. I'd hate to put an innocent guy on a death row. Life sentence is every bit as good as death penalty (aside from wasting tax money), and if the guy was innocent, at least he has a chance to be exonerated.
Originally posted by: Darwin333
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I'm not naive. In an ideal world it should be automatic death penalty for first degree murder, no ifs and no buts. However, this is not an ideal world, if it was, there wouldn't be any murders in the first place. And I believe it is naive to think that justice is always 100% correct. Innocent people get sentenced every year and every year people get exonerated based on new evidence. There are documented cases where prosecution or cops fudged up the evidence to convict the guy. I'd hate to put an innocent guy on a death row. Life sentence is every bit as good as death penalty (aside from wasting tax money), and if the guy was innocent, at least he has a chance to be exonerated.
Costs more to execute someone than it does to incarcerate them for life. For that reason alone, I say scrub it. You can add in the possibility of killing an innocent person but at the same time, most people that have had sentences overturned that could potentially have resulted in a death sentence sat in max security hell hole prison for 30 years of their life before being found innocent. Personally, I'd take the death penalty over 30 years in a max security prison for a crime I didn't commit.
Originally posted by: soulcougher73
Originally posted by: Darwin333
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I'm not naive. In an ideal world it should be automatic death penalty for first degree murder, no ifs and no buts. However, this is not an ideal world, if it was, there wouldn't be any murders in the first place. And I believe it is naive to think that justice is always 100% correct. Innocent people get sentenced every year and every year people get exonerated based on new evidence. There are documented cases where prosecution or cops fudged up the evidence to convict the guy. I'd hate to put an innocent guy on a death row. Life sentence is every bit as good as death penalty (aside from wasting tax money), and if the guy was innocent, at least he has a chance to be exonerated.
Costs more to execute someone than it does to incarcerate them for life. For that reason alone, I say scrub it. You can add in the possibility of killing an innocent person but at the same time, most people that have had sentences overturned that could potentially have resulted in a death sentence sat in max security hell hole prison for 30 years of their life before being found innocent. Personally, I'd take the death penalty over 30 years in a max security prison for a crime I didn't commit.
1 single rope should last a good hundred people before it finally snaps and you have to buy a new one. Plus bullets are cheap as well.
Originally posted by: soulcougher73
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1 single rope should last a good hundred people before it finally snaps and you have to buy a new one. Plus bullets are cheap as well.
Originally posted by: LumbergTech
what country doesnt have a death penalty and has a higher murder rate?
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Originally posted by: sandorski
Because Vengeance is not Logical or Reasonable, it is pure Animal/Primitive emotion.
There are generally reasonable people that disagree with you. There is a lot of academic work on the idea that reciprocity creates cooperation, specifically in the field of game theory.
I don't believe that we have evolved beyond basic self-interest (otherwise socialism might work). Instead, we are still animals with an ingrained basic sense of justice in us. That doesn't mean we can get rid of trials but I don't think it's useful to stop promoting reciprocity.
Originally posted by: soulcougher73
Originally posted by: Darwin333
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I'm not naive. In an ideal world it should be automatic death penalty for first degree murder, no ifs and no buts. However, this is not an ideal world, if it was, there wouldn't be any murders in the first place. And I believe it is naive to think that justice is always 100% correct. Innocent people get sentenced every year and every year people get exonerated based on new evidence. There are documented cases where prosecution or cops fudged up the evidence to convict the guy. I'd hate to put an innocent guy on a death row. Life sentence is every bit as good as death penalty (aside from wasting tax money), and if the guy was innocent, at least he has a chance to be exonerated.
Costs more to execute someone than it does to incarcerate them for life. For that reason alone, I say scrub it. You can add in the possibility of killing an innocent person but at the same time, most people that have had sentences overturned that could potentially have resulted in a death sentence sat in max security hell hole prison for 30 years of their life before being found innocent. Personally, I'd take the death penalty over 30 years in a max security prison for a crime I didn't commit.
1 single rope should last a good hundred people before it finally snaps and you have to buy a new one. Plus bullets are cheap as well.
Originally posted by: villageidiot111
Killing someone, whether it be an act of murder or state supported retribution, is never right. Whenever the state executes someone there is blood on everyone's hands.
Wow that was helpful. Maybe you can publish your findings for all those game theorists out there and they can stop wasting their time.Originally posted by: sandorski
Uhh, you're wrong.
It is useful to stop all kinds of things.
1) A 13(approx) year old girl is ready to Mate. We prevent that to give her the chance to Learn more free of influence from Older Men. To give her the Opportunity to choose her path.
2) We prevent people from Speeding or travelling wherever they feel like it. Causes less Death/Destruction and improves Traffic Flow
I hear this kind of thinking works well in abstinence programs.Our conscious Effort to rise out of Animalistic and Barbaric existence.
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Wow that was helpful. Maybe you can publish your findings for all those game theorists out there and they can stop wasting their time.Originally posted by: sandorski
Uhh, you're wrong.
It is useful to stop all kinds of things.
1) A 13(approx) year old girl is ready to Mate. We prevent that to give her the chance to Learn more free of influence from Older Men. To give her the Opportunity to choose her path.
2) We prevent people from Speeding or travelling wherever they feel like it. Causes less Death/Destruction and improves Traffic Flow
These points don't really contradict mine.
I hear this kind of thinking works well in abstinence programs.Our conscious Effort to rise out of Animalistic and Barbaric existence.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
i don't give a flying fuck whether someone wants revenge (justice lol) or not. If someone in my family were murdered/raped, i would hope that noone would listen to me either. The law should be fair, impartial, and respect the rights of the (potentially) innocent, not the rage of a family or individuals loss.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: tk149
Or they simply believe that government should not be in the business of killing.
the government has no right to kill its citizens
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: soccerballtux
Death penalty is not about forgiveness-- it's about providing a dis-incentive to future murderers. I'm not worried about forgiving the current criminals actions, I'm concerned about how this makes a future criminal less likely to restrain himself. Look at China-- hardly any homicides there, you can't get out of a murder no ifs-ands-or-buts.
If you want it to be about forgiveness then you should get a church involved, get the criminal coming, see if he converts and shows some real fruit of change. Otherwise no getting off death penalty; also, esp. if death penalty is cheaper than keeping people in prison for life, then they should be put to death.
countries that do not have the death penalty have lower murder rates than us, so thats a pretty irrelevant point in general.
Originally posted by: soulcougher73
Originally posted by: Darwin333
Originally posted by: fleshconsumed
I'm not naive. In an ideal world it should be automatic death penalty for first degree murder, no ifs and no buts. However, this is not an ideal world, if it was, there wouldn't be any murders in the first place. And I believe it is naive to think that justice is always 100% correct. Innocent people get sentenced every year and every year people get exonerated based on new evidence. There are documented cases where prosecution or cops fudged up the evidence to convict the guy. I'd hate to put an innocent guy on a death row. Life sentence is every bit as good as death penalty (aside from wasting tax money), and if the guy was innocent, at least he has a chance to be exonerated.
Costs more to execute someone than it does to incarcerate them for life. For that reason alone, I say scrub it. You can add in the possibility of killing an innocent person but at the same time, most people that have had sentences overturned that could potentially have resulted in a death sentence sat in max security hell hole prison for 30 years of their life before being found innocent. Personally, I'd take the death penalty over 30 years in a max security prison for a crime I didn't commit.
1 single rope should last a good hundred people before it finally snaps and you have to buy a new one. Plus bullets are cheap as well.
Originally posted by: Infohawk
It's interesting that many people assume retribution is necessarily animalistic and/or primitive.
This is simply not the case. I would refer you to Kant:
Kant on Capital Punishment
Furthermore, the legal system does have to take into consideration the emotions of society as a whole. If the entire populace felt that justice was not being dolled out to criminals, they would simply take the law into their own hands.
Originally posted by: soulcougher73
1 single rope should last a good hundred people before it finally snaps and you have to buy a new one. Plus bullets are cheap as well.
Originally posted by: DLeRium
I vote for using a firing squad and sending the bill of that to your family. OF course we need some major cost reductions first of all. Execution reform just like health care reform. All it takes is 5 guys with 5 rifles. The cost should be to drive your ass to a field and the cost of shooting 5 bullets... oh and the cost of those 5 guys who get to shoot you (by the hour). I'd say under $1000 no?
Originally posted by: Infohawk
It's interesting that many people assume retribution is necessarily animalistic and/or primitive.
This is simply not the case. I would refer you to Kant:
Kant on Capital Punishment
Furthermore, the legal system does have to take into consideration the emotions of society as a whole. If the entire populace felt that justice was not being dolled out to criminals, they would simply take the law into their own hands.
