You're hilarious.It's easily solved by executing more white people.
Torture is wrong except when I'm really angry and want to make bad people pay! Sometimes justice looks like a hammer and chisel.How would you feel about torture, then?
Yes, the death penalty is basically human sacrifice to appease our bloodlust. We like to feel that justice has been served, but it's actually just impotent revenge. (If you doubt it, just watch how many people shriek for the torture and execution of especially vile offenders.) Killing criminals doesn't reduce crime or undo any specific crime, and the death penalty actually incentivizes murder to remove witnesses. Also, the state really ought not to hold the power of life and death over its citizens. Innocent people can and have been killed by the system. One mistake is one too many, and more than one has been made.
You realize that's just an horrendous lack of empathy on your part?The death penalty always seems to be some sort of hot debate these days but I've never really understood why, I support the death penalty and while I consider myself a fair and rationale person I could never quite understand arguments against it that call for abolishing the practice altogether. Now, that doesn't mean I don't think the process could be improved, obviously I don't think people with mental defects should be executed for their crimes and neither should minors or non-violent offenders but in general I fully support executing fully adult violent offenders (meaning murder).
The consistent arguments I hear against the penalty is #1 It's immoral because life is sacred and #2 because innocent people sometimes get executed. I completely disagree with point #1 as I don't believe life is anything special that has to be protected at all costs, I see nothing wrong with executing a convicted murderer or serial killer. As far as #2 goes while it may be that an innocent person could perhaps be executed I don't think that is a reason to abolish the entire practice.
So are there any Gaffers here that are against the death penalty and want to explain why? And, am I wrong in not seeing any problem with executing a person?
Death penalty costs a lot more than imprisonment.So you would rather tax payers keep some scumbag in prison for some petty "he deserves to suffer" instead of oh i dont know..keeping that money so they can make next months rent or feed their family
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/race-and-death-penaltylol The US is extremely racist but pulling the race card here is a stretch.
Cameron Todd Willingham
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/28/u...s-questions-about-a-texas-execution.html?_r=0
an innocent father accused of arson and acused of killing his children due to the negligence of poorly trained volunteer firemen who had zero training in investigating arson<s.
but it's Texas. He was executed even through irrigulararites were brought up during the trial and investigation
As far as #2 goes while it may be that an innocent person could perhaps be executed I don't think that is a reason to abolish the entire practice.
Are we supposed to learn something from convicted prisoners? Punishment is not a learning process, we execute people because society has no longer deemed them necessary to live in our society. They agreed to the social contract we all live in and violated it by choosing to murder others, as such society has the right to permanent remove them.
Yes, the death penalty is basically human sacrifice to appease our bloodlust. We like to feel that justice has been served, but it's actually just impotent revenge. (If you doubt it, just watch how many people shriek for the torture and execution of especially vile offenders.) Killing criminals doesn't reduce crime or undo any specific crime, and the death penalty actually incentivizes murder to remove witnesses. Also, the state really ought not to hold the power of life and death over its citizens. Innocent people can and have been killed by the system. One mistake is one too many, and more than one has been made.
What do you mean?
I'm against torture too.
I feel, if you're supporting a punishment based system, for heinous enough crimes, torture shouldn't necessarily be out of the question.[...] so I feel they should live their lives deprived of freedom to pay for what they did.
A stretch how?
I'm sorry but when dealing with someone who has so little regard for human life, I'm not going to worry about "stooping" to their level. Yeah, 99% of people won't escape from a mamimum security prison but that 1% may go on to kill another innocent when that could have been prevented and there comes a point where the moral high ground isn't worth people's live. It's like batman, great hero, but everytime the joker kills someone, that is 100% on bats at this point.
Innocent person can die in the process. How's that NOT a good reason to abolish the entire practice?
Society also has no use for most homeless people. Or most old people. Or most people. So... yeah. You might never wanna use that line of thinking ever again.
I don't think the racism is extending into the death penalty debate, it's just a problem with the criminal justice system itself. It may end to the same end result but the reasoning is different. People aren't getting assigned the death penalty because of the color of their skin, they are just being accused and charged of crimes more often. Is racism a problem, yes but it isn't a problem with the death penalty itself, its just the fundamental issue with how our criminal justice system functions. Texas is despicable in its capital punishment practices but I'm hard pressed to call their death penalty assignments racist, if you commit whatever level of crime then they send you off without a care in the world whether you are white, black, brown, red, blue, green, or yellow, the issue just comes back to, its easier for some people to put blame on someone who is black than someone who is white.
According to a recent study by Professor Katherine Beckett of the University of Washington, jurors in Washington are three times more likely to recommend a death sentence for a black defendant than for a white defendant in a similar case. The disparity in sentencing occurred despite the fact that prosecutors were slightly more likely to seek the death penalty against white defendants.
Until you're the one getting slapped with a death sentence for a crime you didn't commit. Are you fucking serious?An innocent person can be given a life sentence and subsequently die in prison does that mean that life sentences should be abolished? I'm not saying that executing an innocent person isn't an tragic thing but unless there are statistics showing that it is something that is common I really don't see it as a persuasive point.
Torture is wrong except when I'm really angry and want to make bad people pay! Sometimes justice looks like a hammer and chisel.
The EU is attempting to do just that.An innocent person can be given a life sentence and subsequently die in prison does that mean that life sentences should be abolished?
No offense, but you need to educate yourself on this issue before spouting incorrect opinions.I don't think the racism is extending into the death penalty debate, it's just a problem with the criminal justice system itself. It may end to the same end result but the reasoning is different. People aren't getting assigned the death penalty because of the color of their skin, they are just being accused and charged of crimes more often. Is racism a problem, yes but it isn't a problem with the death penalty itself, its just the fundamental issue with how our criminal justice system functions. Texas is despicable in its capital punishment practices but I'm hard pressed to call their death penalty assignments racist, if you commit whatever level of crime then they send you off without a care in the world whether you are white, black, brown, red, blue, green, or yellow, the issue just comes back to, its easier for some people to put blame on someone who is black than someone who is white.
Loss of personal liberty is punishment enough. Beyond that, revenge is almost always the prime motivator. Punishment isn't for criminals so much as everyone else. It's a way to reinforce the divide between us vs. them, to serve as a warning to potential lawbreakers (even though we already know deterrence doesn't work), and to reassure us that we live in a just society where the wicked are made to pay.I don't see why the death penalty needs to serve some utilitarian purpose and I don't believe it is some blood-lust desire for revenge, it is simply punishment, a recognition by society that this person is no longer deemed fit to live in society. The State absolutely has the power of life and death over you, that kinda cuts to the heart of the social contract, you give up certain liberties in order to live in a civilized society.
An innocent person can be given a life sentence and subsequently die in prison does that mean that life sentences should be abolished? I'm not saying that executing an innocent person isn't an tragic thing but unless there are statistics showing that it is something that is common I really don't see it as a persuasive point.
(People argue about deterrence, but I'd be very surprised if capital punishment vs life imprisonment made an appreciable difference in murder rates. Typically likelihood of punishment is a much stronger factor in deterrence than the actual level of punishment.)
lol The US is extremely racist but pulling the race card here is a stretch.
But the death penalty assignments are incredibly racist (you're more likely to be recommended for the death penalty if you're black, you're also more likely to be recommended for the death penalty if your victim was white) so maybe that should be fixed before we administer the death penalty to anyone because clearly we're not doing it in an unbiased way.I don't think the racism is extending into the death penalty debate, it's just a problem with the criminal justice system itself. It may end to the same end result but the reasoning is different. People aren't getting assigned the death penalty because of the color of their skin, they are just being accused and charged of crimes more often. Is racism a problem, yes but it isn't a problem with the death penalty itself, its just the fundamental issue with how our criminal justice system functions. Texas is despicable in its capital punishment practices but I'm hard pressed to call their death penalty assignments racist, if you commit whatever level of crime then they send you off without a care in the world whether you are white, black, brown, red, blue, green, or yellow, the issue just comes back to, its easier for some people to put blame on someone who is black than someone who is white.
Loss of personal liberty is punishment enough. Beyond that, revenge is almost always the prime motivator. Punishment isn't for criminals so much as everyone else. It's a way to reinforce the divide between us vs. them, to serve as a warning to potential lawbreakers (even though we already know deterrence doesn't work), and to reassure us that we live in a just society where the wicked are made to pay.
With life sentence there's still a chance to save the person (even if it's few years after he/she was imprisoned). With death penalty there's zero chance. None. Nada. You're killing the person right now and nothing can change that, nothing can bring him/her to life.
As far as #2 goes while it may be that an innocent person could perhaps be executed I don't think that is a reason to abolish the entire practice.
obviously I don't think people with mental defects should be executed for their crimes and neither should minors or non-violent offenders but in general I fully support executing fully adult violent offenders (meaning murder).