if i ever got sent to prison, i'd kill other inmates (the shitty ones who should've already been pricked in the arm, anyway) until i got put on death row and executed.i'll be damned if i would ever rot away in the butt-hut for a day longer than i could help it.
11/21/2005 12:53:57 AM
^Indeed. The irony of the death penalty is that it's altogether more humane than life imprisonment; and nobody cares enough to change that particular circumstance.
11/21/2005 12:57:17 AM
11/21/2005 12:58:29 AM
11/21/2005 1:01:07 AM
i think he was taking a stab at the sentiment that "the death penalty is too harsh" [Edited on November 21, 2005 at 1:05 AM. Reason : zgsdagasd]
11/21/2005 1:05:05 AM
It's entirely possible. Smoker has his flashes of lucidity. But I wanted to make the point.
11/21/2005 1:05:36 AM
what you're still missing is 2) These guys would be the same guys deemed executable by your standards. so if you would be executing them, i would just be putting them in solitary for life.3) 907 beds. we cannot accommodate 907 more beds?
11/21/2005 1:06:15 AM
^^^^I have trouble believing that the goal of prison is to minimize crime. That's a patently silly notion. People who are going to commit murders deserving of death, quite obviously don't care about the consequences. They are not rational people in the same sense as you or I.As to the overflowing of prisons, that rather flows from the use of the law to criminalize any manner of behaviors which society finds unappealing (of course, drugs being first among them). In that sense, the use of prison has been to increase the level of crime, by redefining crime and assigning its punishment accordingly.I am in favor of death for the worst among us, and humane prisons for the rest. Anything else is morally reprehensible -- as the system is today.[Edited on November 21, 2005 at 1:06 AM. Reason : foo]
11/21/2005 1:06:21 AM
i don't think he's arguing that deterrence is a viable method of reducing crime
11/21/2005 1:07:51 AM
no one is arguing deterrence.no one is arguing rehabilitation.much to abonorio's chagrin[Edited on November 21, 2005 at 1:09 AM. Reason : alright i got tests tomorrow.]
11/21/2005 1:08:44 AM
11/21/2005 1:18:05 AM
I'm against the death penalty for different reasons. I believe that a person should be made to work for the rest of their natural lives instead of being executed. Killing them is giving them the easy way out. Let them linger on and think about what they have done for the rest of the lives. I look at it this way, why kill when you can enslave?
11/21/2005 1:46:25 AM
now that's a weird position coming from a hardliner, ideologue Libertarian.
11/21/2005 1:47:49 AM
11/21/2005 1:55:03 AM
takin' it off here, Boss.
11/21/2005 1:55:43 AM
GrumpyGOP, it seems you are arguing that we need to kill more prisoners, because it's the only way to stop their recidivism (which is fairly high, I can't find a good number, but it's upwards of 50% it seems), and also that the potential State murdering of innocent citizens is okay, because it's such a small percent (this seems to be arguable) of overall murdered people by the government. Last year, if I read that deathpenaltyinfo.org site right, only about 60 people were executed. This is such a small amount of people, that this number likely puts no dent in the crimes. At most, 48 repeat-crimes were prevented by those executions, with most of those not being murders or rapes. It seems ridiculous to argue for the current death penalty on the basis of being the only way to reduce crime absolutely.I hate to bring this up too... but your argument against abortion is that even though most would-be aborted babies will be born disadvantaged (to poor, stupid parents/mother), and might be statistically to be criminals or on welfare (a general burden to society), the potential death of an innocent is not acceptable. They seem to be 2 philosophies at odds with each other.
11/21/2005 2:09:44 AM
no, both of those philosophies are based primarily around minimizing the deaths of innocents. you aren't getting the big picture of what he's driving at.[Edited on November 21, 2005 at 2:14 AM. Reason : he's saying he'll wrongly execute 1 innocent to save 2 other innocents]
11/21/2005 2:13:20 AM
^ I don't. One promotes the creation of (a small amount of) criminals, while the other stops a very small amount of crime.
11/21/2005 2:16:12 AM
11/21/2005 2:40:30 AM
11/21/2005 2:51:40 AM
11/21/2005 3:03:05 AM
11/21/2005 3:39:53 AM
Hmm.I will sleep on it.
11/21/2005 3:51:48 AM
For the record, I support the death penalty, but it is on the basis of irrationality.If someone killed a loved one (that I loved), I feel I would want them to be killed in return.From a practical perspective though, I feel it's ridiculous and disgusting for any modern, civilized culture to have an government controlled, systematic ritual for killing people.
11/21/2005 4:04:18 AM
Well, actually, here's a few thoughts now:-The report says that it only takes into account the three year period following the prisoner's release. Meaning that if the convicted murderer kills a guy three years and a day after he got let out of jail, he's not counted. That's your biggest problem.-The study only counts people who were released, not those who may have killed people in prison or who escaped..-The study only looks in fifteen states out of fifty in one particular year out of thirty or so.-Not all of the people who got released are the type of murderer that I favor executing.
11/21/2005 4:09:34 AM
^ Why would prisoners killing prisoners affect your argument?I don't think the other variables would drastically alter thing (except maybe the last one, since you could define "murders who murder people after they are released" as your criteria).
11/21/2005 4:13:38 AM
you know, I don't really care if something "works" or not. Beating your wife will probably teach her to keep her mouth shut; it definitely WORKS. Whether or not it's right is what's most important.
11/21/2005 7:19:19 AM
that's totally true, but not comparable to what GrumpyGOP is arguing.
11/21/2005 7:23:55 AM
11/21/2005 7:57:20 AM
11/21/2005 8:02:17 AM
to be clear, I don't think the death penalty does work as a deterrent. We've been using it... since the dawn of civilization, I guess? And it hasn't seemed to have really stopped criminals in those couple of thousand years.But, the way I see it, even if it did work, you're just causing more sadness. Someone kills a few people, hurting their families and friends, right? Then you kill the murderer, thereby hurting HIS family and friends. How is that fixing anything?
11/21/2005 8:33:27 AM
i dont think (i hope not) that anyone is arguing that it is a deterrentit would be foolish as there is no evidence its true
11/21/2005 8:35:05 AM
11/21/2005 8:39:28 AM
11/21/2005 9:10:15 AM
doesn't suprise meTexas is the killinest state in the Union, they're bound to mess up now and then
11/21/2005 12:59:31 PM
^^ pwnt
11/21/2005 1:08:58 PM
11/21/2005 1:33:57 PM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=366833
11/21/2005 1:47:09 PM
11/21/2005 3:50:57 PM
11/21/2005 4:47:48 PM
11/21/2005 4:51:22 PM
11/21/2005 6:03:46 PM
11/21/2005 10:09:44 PM
if prisons get full, kill more prisonersgot it
11/21/2005 10:24:17 PM
11/21/2005 10:54:49 PM
11/22/2005 12:18:40 PM
just one week?
11/22/2005 12:57:53 PM
What is the best method to eliminate someone? If not a firing squad to save ammunition. Something quick but less barbaric than guillotine? Conversely, what method is worst? I feel like stoning or crucifixion were pretty over the top.Nitrogen hypoxia I’d put closer to the good method end of the scale. Especially with it being too difficult to acquire the proper drugs etc. Why can’t they just give someone like a bunch of fentanyl, person has most awesome couple of minutes ever
1/26/2024 8:09:27 PM
Pressing]
1/26/2024 8:21:02 PM
Nitogen/CO seem like good ways. You just pass out. Another option could be massive insulin injection; again, you just pass out
1/27/2024 12:54:58 PM