Decapitation via Katana would be much cheaper and more honorable than some cocktail of drugs.
Decapitation via Katana would be much cheaper and more honorable than some cocktail of drugs.
1) You think it is honourable to get your head chopped off?
2) I don't think the OP was making a statement with regard to the expense. The fact that the OP mentioned 'botched' in the topic title suggests that reliability ought to be a factor in despatchment method, and I doubt that anyone in the US has significant experience in decapitation.
Why can't we just vaporize them with high energy weapons? Seriously, imagine they just instantly turn into a puff of steam? Would that be such a bad thing?
1) You think it is honourable to get your head chopped off?
States without the death penalty tends to be states with fewer murders and thus, states with less pressure to have a death penalty.If what you said is true, then why do states with NO death penalty have less murders. Here is 3 articles that contradict your CBS story.
http://articles.latimes.com/2014/fe...08-tsarnaev-death-penalty-postscript-20140208
http://www.denverpost.com/ci_23374844/no-credible-evidence-whether-death-penalty-deters-experts
https://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/JLpaper.pdf
The death penalty has been phased out more and more over the years, and crime and murders have also? Coincidence?
Very interesting and thoughtful post, thanks. Some good points there.I don't think there is any evidence that doing anything actually works, be it the death penalty or imprisonment or anything. I mean look through history when societies existed that didn't care about humane executions. Despite knowing that you could be tortured to death people still committed heinous crimes. In general I would say the more heinous the crime the less rational thought goes into it.
IMO when I look at the death penalty its not about deterrence or about rehabilitation. Its about making society feel better. Its about the punishment fitting the crime.
Rehabilitation is not the point of the justice system though it thinly attempts to pass that as its purpose. Think about the man for example who through violation of some law accidentally kills his family and another. He is instantly rehabilitated once he knows his evil deed; he weeps tears and begs for forgiveness from everyone he's hurt. Yet it feels wrong to say "you've learned your lesson and have suffered enough". Instead he get a long manslaughter charge despite already being rehabilitated. Most of the offenders in prison if we paid them the cost of imprisonment (60k USD) as a flat wage for the length of the term they would have served for staying out of trouble you'd dramatically slash your repeat offender rate. But it seems wrong to do that.
When I look at the justice system the actions we make as a society are not about rehabilitation or even about deterrence, but rather to achieve catharsis and if that is the case then perhaps the death penalty is justified.
Regarding this particular case, a vein blew. It happens. Its akin to a lightbulb blowing out as you're lining up a critical shot. In hindsight they should set up two IVs rather than just one. Or have a backup agent which can be given intramuscularly.
Another very interesting and thoughtful post. Wow! Thanks!I generally agree with what you're saying.
(Re: bit in bold) - While I'm sure that this is true in some cases, how does a fair judicial system determine this? I spent a bit of time when driving between customers thinking about this yesterday, and peoples' motivations for committing crime differ and so therefore the approach for reforming them logically should be different as well - treating someone who "just wants to watch the world burn" with the same method as someone who thought they might get away with skimming their employer's accounts isn't logical. Even if one made a comparison between two violent crimes it's not even remotely logical that the causes of the crimes are the same.
So an approach that minutely examines the crime and the circumstances of the criminal and determines that person's reasons for doing what they did IMO is mostly a head job, if you want to find out what drives a particular criminal to commit crime.
I then need to make an enormous assumption that the people doing the examining have the skills and experience dealing with this branch of psychology, and they come to generally correct conclusions.
Many crimes are going to come down to very basic things, IMHO:
1 - Greed; people who want more but not having to work for it in the way that law-abiding people do.
2 - Attraction; people who are attracted to the achievement of pulling off a criminal act and haven't found an honest equivalent. Is there always an equivalent?
3 - Ignorance; (whatever crime) is the only thing they think they're good at.
4 - Lack of fear of the consequences; and possibly a combination of points 1-3.
Then responses to counter their reasons to commit crime need to be devised. The fourth is probably the most problematic to directly counter as the obvious conclusion is "give them something else to fear then". Other responses might be the sorts of things that many civilised countries already do (like ensuring that someone gets training to start them in a suitable career), but perhaps with more information about what makes that person tick, a better job can be done. According to some stats I read on a government website yesterday, the US has a reoffending rate of approximately 75%, compare that to the UK (again, stats from another gov website), apparently approximately 25-33%. Something is obviously wrong somewhere, ideally that figure should be significantly less (in both cases IMO).
IMO some of the sorts of responses could lead a judicial system down some very dark paths (e.g. 'A Clockwork Orange' or Room 101 in '1984'), but if you want better answers then you have to start asking more questions.
Most of the offenders in prison if we paid them the cost of imprisonment (60k USD) as a flat wage for the length of the term they would have served for staying out of trouble you'd dramatically slash your repeat offender rate. But it seems wrong to do that.
The simplest solution would seem to be a remote operated gun system. Set up 2 large caliber rifles. Aim one at the head and one at the heart. Operator pushes a button which fires both simultaneously.
Quick, efficient, dead.
Close but try on this - which will also reduce costsNo, the best way is to drop them on island with only enough food for 2 people. The government could televise the condemned inmates killing each other for the food. FOX News would probably pay for the exclusive rights to the telecasts.
Close but try on this - which will also reduce costs
Take an un-inhabited island up in the Aleutian chain.
Install pre-fab concrete huts;
Airlift anyone that has received life sentence (getting rid of the death penalty) onto the island.
Food packages are airdropped once a week/month based on minimal daily caloric counts required.
Nothing metallic and/or tougher than plastic allowed.
Clothing and wrapping supplies are designed to degrade when in contact with salt water.
Mother nature is able to acts as the needed security guards
1) You think it is honourable to get your head chopped off?
By a Katana? Yes. It would allow me to regain my honor if I had failed in life.
Of course not, but the other arguments typically consist of various moral musings on society's supposed responsibility to pay irredeemably violent prisoners more than the average American sees in a year in the form of housing, food and healthcare.
Not saying we should kill all prisoners, but the notions that we should put millions of dollars into incarcerating a single serial killer for decades, and that this is morally superior to spending that money on people who are actually of value or potential value to society, baffles me. The only living serial killers should be the ones we haven't caught/convicted, and the money that would have been spent on their incarceration should hire a quality teacher for decades or pay down the national debt or help launch a mission to Mars or any other of the innumerable things that would be more productive than housing an irreparably violent sociopath for life; or worse, letting him out on parole after a decade to save money, so he can kill again.
I find it ironic that the anti-death-penalty crowd claims the death penalty is about societal catharsis; that it's just around to make people feel better. I'd say SuperMAX prisons owe their entire existence to making squeamish people feel better about themselves.
Don't get me wrong I'm all for re-vamping the system to actually rehabilitate/integrate into society those prisoners that can be rehabilitated, and I'm even willing to spend more money per prisoner if someone can show me a system that does so with a good rate of success. But there are some criminals who cannot and will not ever value human life; they know right from wrong and they don't care. Society is better off with them dead; it's an Old Yeller situation, plain and simple.
The problem with that solution is you are essentially paying people for committing crimes.
You would get fewer repeat offenders, but a lot more first time ones![]()
What's interesting with the news coming out about this guy now is that he appears to have been coached by either his lawyer or some other muderer-lover sympathizer.
1. Refused food and drink = causes your veins to collapse - makes it much harder to set up an IV - Phlembotomist had to resort to a groin IV
2. Even cut his own arm
3. Tried to get into a fight with the wardens which resulted with a tazing when he was due for the routine X-rays prior to executions.
What's interesting with the news coming out about this guy now is that he appears to have been coached by either his lawyer or some other muderer-lover sympathizer.
1. Refused food and drink = causes your veins to collapse - makes it much harder to set up an IV - Phlembotomist had to resort to a groin IV
2. Even cut his own arm
3. Tried to get into a fight with the wardens which resulted with a tazing when he was due for the routine X-rays prior to executions.
You mean a guy about to be executed didn't want to be? That is a pretty stunning revelation you made right there.
The utilitarian, unemotional society in my example would say we are paying for deterring crimes, just like today we pay to deter crimes by mass imprisonment. Except that paying the individual directly would probably get better results.
Regarding more first time offenders, maybe. I'm not really trying to make my example practical here, but more proof of concept that it intrinsically does not seem morally right to allow heinous crimes to go unpunished.
You mean a guy about to be executed didn't want to be? That is a pretty stunning revelation you made right there.
Yet he seems to have no concerns about those that he was responsible for their deaths.
I am sure that girl did not want to die either; however, he provided no options and ensured that it was painful.
Not safe. More humane. Something about cruel and unusual punishment.
