exmachina64
Banned
I hate this country.
You know, cause Jesus totally would have injected a mentally ill man full of chemicals until his heart stopped for the sake of revenge.
I honestly think it's time I seriously look into leaving this country.
Just to be clear, I don't condone this decision, I just want to understand the particular disgust over it, which I assume has something to do with the treatment of those who are mentally ill.
I hope no one is offended by this post, even though I know they will be.
What does killing people under the guise of "justice" ever accomplish? Nothing. It doesn't deter further murders or anything. It just sates primal blood lust and demand for vengeance (because having a murderer be executed will totes make you feel better!).
When will we outlaw this practice? At the rate this country is going it's going to take another 100 years at least.
Death penalty is wrong. Just wrong. There's no punishment in it, just turning the lights out. When/why did a life sentence of hard (and I mean hard fuckin') labor for violent criminals and child molesters go out of style?
I understand the thinking behind this, and I used to agree that the death penalty is wrong, but I'm not so sure anymore.
From a purely logical standpoint, if someone commits a crime heinous enough, what good is it to give them a life sentence? Why waste space, time, and money making sure this person who has been deemed a threat to society is punished? Wouldn't it make much more sense to remove the problem altogether? I definitely think that it should remain an extreme measure to match an extreme crime, but I also think that maybe there is merit in maintaining the practice.
This is a topic I think about relatively often, and also leads me to wonder if we should really consider morals when punishing someone who has committed a severe crime. While it may put us on the same level as the criminal, it also is the most logical conclusion and most likely the safest as well.
I never have had a pristine moral compass though.
I'm sure I did a bad job explaining, but at the end I guess I can just say that killing someone is a very final and serious act.
I understand the thinking behind this, and I used to agree that the death penalty is wrong, but I'm not so sure anymore.
From a purely logical standpoint, if someone commits a crime heinous enough, what good is it to give them a life sentence? Why waste space, time, and money making sure this person who has been deemed a threat to society is punished? Wouldn't it make much more sense to remove the problem altogether? I definitely think that it should remain an extreme measure to match an extreme crime, but I also think that maybe there is merit in maintaining the practice.
This is a topic I think about relatively often, and also leads me to wonder if we should really consider morals when punishing someone who has committed a severe crime. While it may put us on the same level as the criminal, it also is the most logical conclusion and most likely the safest as well.
I never have had a pristine moral compass though.
Innocent people have lost their lives, and others damn near have. It's an incredibly flawed and barbaric as fuck system. Also, the death penalty isn't cheap, not even a little bit.
Putting aside the moral aspects, the Death Penalty also has many of the problems you listed with life imprisonment. It's incredibly expensive not just for the execution itself, but for the legal cost of actually getting to the point of executing someone. There are many, many appeals and other legal things to go through that takes the state's time and money. Also add in the fact that those things take an incredibly long time to do and you don't even have the kind of gross "reduced prison population" benefit.
Then you add in the fact that the Death Penalty isn't really proven to work at all as a deterrent and seems to have incredible racial and economic biases and also the risk of killing an innocent person. It's an incredibly flawed idea.
Absolutely, if the system is to be maintained it would need to undergo tremendous overhaul to make sure innocents don't get killed. I agree that that is absolutely unacceptable.
Also I'm not terribly familiar with the financial aspect, all I know is we spend a lot of money on prisons.
Absolutely, if the system is to be maintained it would need to undergo tremendous overhaul to make sure innocents don't get killed. I agree that that is absolutely unacceptable.
Also I'm not terribly familiar with the financial aspect, all I know is we spend a lot of money on prisons.
This has more to do with harsh drug sentences and huge prison populations that go with them than it does with any sort of executable crime. I don't have the numbers in front of me, but I'm sure the number of people in jail for drugs and other non-violent offenses far outnumber those for murder.
It's often been said that keeping a prisoner alive is much cheaper than actually killing them, but you know, blood lust and all that. Also, along with factors like innocents being sent to death row and the incredible cost associated with such a thing, you also have something like a botched execution that can go horribly wrong. It's all very fucked up, and no good can actually come from it.
its more expensive for the state to kill someone than housing them until they die. 2.5-5x more expensive on average, actuallyFrom a purely logical standpoint, if someone commits a crime heinous enough, what good is it to give them a life sentence? Why waste space, time, and money making sure this person who has been deemed a threat to society is punished? Wouldn't it make much more sense to remove the problem altogether? I definitely think that it should remain an extreme measure to match an extreme crime, but I also think that maybe there is merit in maintaining the practice.
Daniel B·;156429961 said:Even with his diminished brain capacity, did he deserve the death penalty? Reading up on the particulars of the case, his actions (he, for example, tried to force someone to give him an alibi) would suggest that he was hardly mentally impaired to a degree that would warrant a lesser sentence.
Is it ever moral to kill someone, where there is no question of guilt? For a moment, put yourself in the shoes of the victims, such as the parents of a child who was brutally raped and then murdered. If the evidence was incontrovertible (in the example, semen was tested by two independent labs and perfectly matched the accused), the surviving victims would be completely justified in wanting the murderer humanely executed as why should the murderer get to live out the rest of their life, even if behind bars, when they have taken the life of an innocent?
Seeing as he was a murderer. Yes, I considered him a threat to society.And he was a clear and present threat to society, right?
Daniel B·;156429961 said:Is it ever moral to kill someone, where there is no question of guilt? For a moment, put yourself in the shoes of the victims, such as the parents of a child who was brutally raped and then murdered. If the evidence was incontrovertible (in the example, semen was tested by two independent labs and perfectly matched the accused), the surviving victims would be completely justified in wanting the murderer humanely executed as why should the murderer get to live out the rest of their life, even if behind bars, when they have taken the life of an innocent?
Daniel B·;156429961 said:Even with his diminished brain capacity, did he deserve the death penalty? Reading up on the particulars of the case, his actions (he, for example, tried to force someone to give him an alibi) would suggest that he was hardly mentally impaired to a degree that would warrant a lesser sentence.
Is it ever moral to kill someone, where there is no question of guilt? For a moment, put yourself in the shoes of the victims, such as the parents of a child who was brutally raped and then murdered. If the evidence was incontrovertible (in the example, semen was tested by two independent labs and perfectly matched the accused), the surviving victims would be completely justified in wanting the murderer humanely executed as why should the murderer get to live out the rest of their life, even if behind bars, when they have taken the life of an innocent?
Side note, I'm more surprised that 47% of liberals support capital punishment. Thats about 45% higher than I ever would have expected.
Its more surprising to me that the dems number is so high than that the repubs is so low. Thats actually unexpected.
yup. What gets me is its usually conservatives and Republicans who are most in favor of capital punishment.
You know, cause Jesus totally would have injected a mentally ill man full of chemicals until his heart stopped for the sake of revenge.
Death penalty is wrong. Just wrong. There's no punishment in it, just turning the lights out. When/why did a life sentence of hard (and I mean hard fuckin') labor for violent criminals and child molesters go out of style?
The fact that victims would quite like perpetrators to be executed isn't a sufficient justification for them to be executed. I'm sure that quite a few victims of fairly trivial crimes want absolutely ridiculous punishments for the perpetrators that we would be quite right in just ignoring completely, so I'm not sure why we'd consider it important. The entire reason we have a justice system with set penalties and a legal proceedings is to ensure that the verdict *isn't* simply the product of whatever the victim wants, and instead reflects what would be best for society as a whole. The death penalty doesn't really seem to do anything particularly good for society, so there doesn't seem to be much in favour of it being part of our justice system.
Daniel B·;156435307 said:The punishment should fit the crime.
But, on the "death penalty has no deterrent", I would disagree. Say I'm committing a crime and by leaving a witness alive I run the risk of being quickly apprehended, but, on the other hand, killing the witness would also guarantee a death sentence, I would certainly think twice (hopefully, the moral aspect of taking a life would also dissuade some).
I honestly think it's time I seriously look into leaving this country.
I hate this country.
The conservative numbers are obviously horrible and a huge issue, but those Dems numbers are scary as shit as well.
It's not like he's innocent, he's guilty and he's a cop killer. The punishment fits the crime, even his brother thought executing Clayton would remove an evil person from the earth. Not sure why someone who murders another human being in cold blood (outside of a death penalty execution because someone has to pull the lever or do the lethal injection) should get to live out his life while the victim gets to rot six feet under ground.http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/missouri-executes-cecil-clayton-missing-part-brain-n325081
No one can say he didn't deserve punishment for his crime but what does killing him accomplish? Who was he a danger to in prison? Are they serious that late in life mental disability don't legally make you mentally incompetent? Since children understand what being killed by the state entails and its justification does that mean according to Missouri's argument we should execute them?
When are we going to end this horrible outdated practice? Its a continued stain on our country.
Statement from his lawyer
Is your question whether it is moral for the state to kill someone, or whether it is moral for someone to feel the urge to kill someone who wronged them profoundly? Because the question you seem to be asking is the latter, and I'm not sure it really matters all that much for the former. I recognize that many people, when hurt, lash out and want revenge. I don't think they have enough active control over that impulse to characterize it as moral or immoral; it simply is something they feel on an affective level. I'm not going to write a lengthy thing crapping on victims for feeling what they feel. So I'm not really sure what your argument actually is, in this case? Is there a rash of people insulting or maligning victims for their feelings?
Gotham is either in New Jersey or New York, neither of which permit capital punishment.
It's not like he's innocent, he's guilty and he's a cop killer. The punishment fits the crime, even his brother thought executing Clayton would remove an evil person from the earth. Not sure why someone who murders another human being in cold blood (outside of a death penalty execution because someone has to pull the lever or do the lethal injection) should get to live out his life while the victim gets to rot six feet under ground.
Daniel B·;156438649 said:My argument is that in a perfect system, where there is zero chance of executing someone for a crime they didn't commit, it is moral for the state to take the life of the condemned, on behalf of the victims. To all those who strongly disagree, are you really saying that The Hague shouldn't have ordered the execution of those that took part in The Holocaust? I personally see no difference with those who committed mass murderer and the murdering rapist.
It's not like he's innocent, he's guilty and he's a cop killer. The punishment fits the crime, even his brother thought executing Clayton would remove an evil person from the earth. Not sure why someone who murders another human being in cold blood (outside of a death penalty execution because someone has to pull the lever or do the lethal injection) should get to live out his life while the victim gets to rot six feet under ground.
I honestly think it's time I seriously look into leaving this country.
Daniel B·;156435307 said:The punishment should fit the crime.
But, on the "death penalty has no deterrent", I would disagree. Say I'm committing a crime and by leaving a witness alive I run the risk of being quickly apprehended, but, on the other hand, killing the witness would also guarantee a death sentence, I would certainly think twice (hopefully, the moral aspect of taking a life would also dissuade some).
I honestly think it's time I seriously look into leaving this country.
yup. What gets me is its usually conservatives and Republicans who are most in favor of capital punishment.
You know, cause Jesus totally would have injected a mentally ill man full of chemicals until his heart stopped for the sake of revenge.
Cause you don't execute people who are incapable of understanding their actions, that's a very important point with the death penalty.
The result is the same, you have dead victim whose life has been taken away, one person is dead and the other gets to live out his natural life? Doesn't seem fair to me. You kill an innocent human being (not in self defense, not in the process of stopping a crime), you get taken off the planet.I'm sure at some point the Feds would step in and fry his ass.
Cause you don't execute people who are incapable of understanding their actions, that's a very important point with the death penalty.
The result is the same, you have dead victim whose life has been taken away, one person is dead and the other gets to live out his natural life? Doesn't seem fair to me.
You get to live and breathe, you get to taste the food you eat, see your family once in a blue moon if they aren't too disgusted to see you, maybe read a book, get some exercise once a day, which is more than the dead gets to do which is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, not really fair at all, death sentence all the way. It's good they executed Clayton, one more killer off the planet.Living out your natural life in a federal prison =/= living out a natural life.
Seems fair to me.
You get to live and breathe, you get to taste the food you eat, see your family, maybe read a book, get some exercise, which is more than the dead gets to do which is ABSOLUTELY NOTHING, not really fair at all, death sentence all the way.