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Originally posted by intrepid
I do see what you are saying. Unfortunatly that utopia will not be, I wish it could be. We have to deal with a real situation and it HAS been proven that capital punishment works as a deterent.
Well, as a "deterrent" we could also propose prolonged and extremely painful torturing of murderers, that wouldn't kill them...would you approve of this?
Originally posted by intrepid
I do see what you are saying. Unfortunatly that utopia will not be, I wish it could be. We have to deal with a real situation and it HAS been proven that capital punishment works as a deterent.
Originally posted by Amuk
To be honest I could not care less about the scum that kills for fun, and are a lot more concerened with the next victom
If life without parole really meant life without parole and they were segerated from other less violent prisnors then I would go along with it.
Originally posted by Zuzubar
The Death Penalty is excellent! but why? Well if a man murdered you would you want him playing basketball in jail and eating and drinking while you are in the ground decomposing. No you would this murder subject thrown in the sun.
If you want to be a hippy and not want to test products on animals fine but seriously we should go for an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth.
Originally posted by intrepid
Christ also said "Do unto others as you would you would have them do unto you." So if you extend that, if you kill, shouldn't you also expect to be killed?
Originally posted by SkipShipman
I continue with the argument that the death penalty weakens the State, and is the downfall of authentic government. Have a good look at your prison system, and the nature and attributes of punishments. They have all come home to roost on the people, who have to face more vicious criminals who have been hardened by the system. Rehabilitation is the solution, not some vicious self gratification in the twisted logic of punishment, which in the secret confines of prison is no deterrent. Public punishments are banned, because no public and no informed electorate would tolerate it.
The death penalty is as obsolete as the entire idea of retribution and blood feuds. Maybe capital punishment should only be reserved for those who torture people under color of authority and punish people for their own sick gratification. But even that idea should melt away eventually, once the cycle of punishment and retribution yields to the sublime depth of real civilization.
[Edited on 13-3-2004 by SkipShipman]
Originally posted by mOjOm
Originally posted by intrepid
I do see what you are saying. Unfortunatly that utopia will not be, I wish it could be. We have to deal with a real situation and it HAS been proven that capital punishment works as a deterent.
If capital punishment was the answer, then why isn't it working.
Originally posted by bolshevik
there is a issue of free will i agree, but our ability to make informed, reasonable decision is at the mercy of experience and learned truths (or untruths as the case may be). im sure that you can look at the people around you and see how they influenced your socio-political beliefs; its the same with criminals.
[B]to state otherwise is to argue that people are born evil and to me this sounds absurd - by definition wouldnt that require a gene for evilness?[/B]
the deviant mindset of criminals means that the education system in prisons is entirely necessary to provide people with the sound influences they lacked previously. this is the only way to rehabilitate people back into society. the only other option is for society to give up on people who are imprisoned. indeed, if people who commit crims are 'evil' then does that mean a teenager imprisoned for robbery should spend his entire life incarcerated?
i also cannot agree with your statement that social justice doesnt help the poor. the sole purpose of progressive taxation is to redistribute wealth through programmes such as housing benefit, single parents benefit, unmeployment benefit, state pensions and disability benefit. what are they if not beneficial to the poor?
your statement that taxation steals in the name of justice is interestin. have you read'anarchy, state and utopia' by Nozick? that idea is his central premise. i personally dont like that idea. i think that people have a moral responsibilty to help the rest of society whenever possible. im always puzzled at how rightwing people can be fiercly patriotic, yet at the same time be happy to sit back with their $millions whilst their fellow countrymen starve.
Originally posted by The Fifth Column
It is working! The criminal is dead which is the ultimate PUNISHMENT!
Lets reiterate.
Capital PUNISHMENT = Dead criminal = SUCCESS.
Capital DETTERANT = Dead criminal = debatable either way.
Capital REHABILITATION = Dead Criminal = oops.
So to conclude:
Deterance should not factor into sentencing.
Punishment is #1 concern of criminal justice.
Rehabilitation MAY be considered AFTER and ONLY after the criminal has been punished.
Final thought, only personal morality deters a criminal from the WILL to commit crime.
Of course an armed populace deters burglars etc etc, but thats another debate.
~117 countries have abolished the death penalty in law or practice. 78 for 'All Crimes', 15 for 'All but Military Crimes' and 24 retain it legally but haven't used it for atleast 10 years and do not plan to.
~78 other countries retain and use the death penalty, but the number of countries which actually execute prisoners in any one year is much smaller.
~In 2002, 81 per cent of all known executions took place in China, Iran and the USA. In China at least 1,060 people were executed, but the true figure was believed to be much higher. At least 113 executions were carried out in Iran. 71 people were executed in the USA.
~8 countries since 1990 are known to have executed prisoners who were under 18 years old at the time of the crime. The country which has carried out the greatest number of known executions of child offenders is the USA (19 since 1990). Amnesty International recorded two executions of child offenders in 2003: one in China, and one in the USA.
~In Canada, the homicide rate per 100,000 population fell from a peak of 3.09 in 1975, (the year before the abolition of the death penalty for murder), to 2.41 in 1980, and since then it has declined further. In 2002, 26 years after abolition, the homicide rate was 1.85 per 100,000 population, 40 per cent lower than in 1975.
~Since 1973, 113 prisoners have been released from death row in the USA after evidence emerged of their innocence of the crimes for which they were sentenced to death. Some had come close to execution after spending many years under sentence of death. Recurring features in their cases include prosecutorial or police misconduct; the use of unreliable witness testimony, physical evidence, or confessions; and inadequate defence representation.
~65 prisoners were executed in the USA in 2003, bringing the year-end total to 885 executed since the use of the death penalty was resumed in 1977. The 900th execution was carried out on 3 March 2004.
~Over 3,500 prisoners were under sentence of death as of 1 January 2004.
~38 of the 50 US states provide for the death penalty in law. The death penalty is also provided under US federal military and civilian law.
~It is incorrect to assume that people who commit such serious crimes as murder do so after rationally calculating the consequences. Often murders are committed in moments when emotion overcomes reason or under the influence of drugs or alcohol. Some people who commit violent crime are highly unstable or mentally ill. Moreover, those who do commit premeditated serious crimes may decide to proceed despite the risks in the belief that they will not be caught. The key to deterrence in such cases is to increase the likelihood of detection, arrest and conviction.
~An execution cannot be used to condemn killing. Such an act by the state is the mirror image of the criminal's willingness to use physical violence against a victim. Additionally, all criminal justice systems are vulnerable to discrimination and error. No system is or could conceivably be capable of deciding fairly, consistently and infallibly who should live and who should die. Expediency, discretionary decisions and prevailing public opinion may influence the proceedings from the initial arrest to the last-minute decision on clemency.
This and more can be found at web.amnesty.org...
Originally posted by mOjOm
Does it seem to be working to you??? If it was really working these numbers would be going down. Notice especially from 1975 to 1980 which was when the supreme court ReInstated it. I guess nobody heard the announcement, then or now. That or 'It Doesn't Change Anything".
Killing People that Kill People isn't going to accomplish anything other than KILLING PEOPLE! Why is this so difficult to understand?