...is because I believe in emotionally-charged exceptions to "2 wrongs make a right."
3/23/2008 11:13:59 PM
I believe in the death penalty, but don't believe the government should be allowed to put people to death.If someone commits mass murder, or some other heinous crime, then I see no reason we should waste our tax dollars feeding and taking care of that person until they're dead. However, there have been so many cases where people on death row are set free, because of DNA evidence, etc, I just don't trust the government to do it right. And with innocent lives at stake, we can't take that risk.I don't trust the government to deliver my mail properly let alone decide if someone should be put to death.
3/23/2008 11:42:54 PM
^Excellent post! I agree.But I do trust the government to deliver my mail properly.And I want to add that I'm not strictly concerned with innocent lives. Even when people are guilty, I don't trust our justice system to decide who dies. Too often, the guy with the most expensive lawyer and the most "sympathetic" face lives, and everyone else gets the chair. That's not fair.[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 2:09 AM. Reason : add]
3/24/2008 2:05:24 AM
3/24/2008 2:38:58 AM
I support the death penalty, but it's not really a hot button issue for me either way, and I definitely see the other sides of the issue.My 2 reasons are as follows:1. Most importantly, net preservation of innocent life (i.e., the GrumpyGOP argument). I'm not especially concerned with what's "fair" (either in terms of which guilty people get life without parole and which guilty people get the chair, or in terms of the possibility of executing an innocent person) nearly as much as I'm concerned with what approach saves the greatest number of innocent lives.In other words, say we execute 10 people, and 9 of them were guilty of murder, with 1 innocent man...but if we hadn't whacked them, say those 9 murderers (either after parole or while incarcerated) murder 2 more innocent people. In my book, we did the right thing by pricking those murderers in the arm, because we scored a net positive in innocent lives saved.2. They fucking deserve it.
3/24/2008 3:35:46 AM
wow, i wish i could view the world so objectively firm.
3/24/2008 9:08:49 AM
All I know is that according to the Declaration of Independence, the Framers held it self-evident that all men have the inalienable right to life.[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 9:33 AM. Reason : ...]
3/24/2008 9:26:16 AM
psst...that is the Declaration of Independence.
3/24/2008 9:27:15 AM
[thx]
3/24/2008 9:33:20 AM
^^^ THAT MUST MEAN WE'RE SUPPOSED TO BE IMMORTAL!THOSE FRAMERS THEY WERE GENIUSES![Edited on March 24, 2008 at 9:34 AM. Reason : .]
3/24/2008 9:34:27 AM
man said rights are endowed on us by our creatorthe lord giveth, and the lord taketh away[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 9:36 AM. Reason : okay to kill if you have a mandate, i guess]
3/24/2008 9:35:52 AM
3/24/2008 11:48:36 AM
3/24/2008 11:53:32 AM
Everybody wins.[Edited on March 24, 2008 at 11:54 AM. Reason : .]
3/24/2008 11:53:34 AM
3/24/2008 12:01:14 PM
4/7/2008 6:09:56 PM
4/7/2008 6:27:32 PM
^Granted. Arguments regarding relative versus absolute morality give me a headache.
4/7/2008 6:30:43 PM
4/7/2008 6:38:09 PM
^ I think all governments. But, to clarify I do think that we have to defy the government when they violate God's law. That said, if you think God's law is to never kill anyone then it would obviously lead you to be against the death penalty. I for one do not believe that, God did command folks to kill enemies in various times and places. So some killing must be sanctioned by God. When and where is the difficult question. Supper is ready I must go.
4/7/2008 7:14:26 PM
^ For someone who believes in an absolute standard of right and wrong, you sure do seem to have a lot of uncertainty in what that standard is.That's an extremely dangerous position to take, to me.
4/7/2008 7:17:02 PM
^really? I would hope you would applaud caution. What I am saying is that there exists an absolute truth, what is in debate (from my perspective) is if we can find and interpret that truth reliably.My point was that it is incorrect to assume that the fact that the government is killing some criminal as a punishment for their transgressions against society is not automatically equivalent to taking it out of God's hands. I think that was the intent of FroshKiller's post. To reword it, we shouldn't kill anybody because that is only for God to do. My point is only that government can be a proxy for God in this matter.I do not wish to argue the nuances as to which crime and what burden of proof is requisite for the dispensing of the ultimate punishment.I would hope you would appreciate that I still have not made up my mind on this issue entirely. You might sway me to join the picket line out on Western some day.[Edited on April 7, 2008 at 10:26 PM. Reason : .]
4/7/2008 10:24:54 PM
I always assume that people in prison find out what the other inmates have done.I also assume theres a group of people just going around beating the shit out of child rapists and the such.
4/7/2008 10:45:04 PM
4/7/2008 10:45:29 PM
^^You're kind of touching on a problem I have with life in prison.If an inmate is serving life and has no chance of getting out, I imagine he or she may be more difficult to handle than someone who is trying to behave well in the hopes they may somebody get out.In other words, I support life in prison instead of the death penalty, but I feel really bad for the people who have to deal with the lifers...[Edited on April 8, 2008 at 3:43 AM. Reason : sss]
4/8/2008 3:42:36 AM
We really ought to switch to an eye-for-an-eye. Do the exact same thing to these "people" as they did to that women. I'm not even trolling.
4/12/2008 3:49:05 PM
4/12/2008 8:06:21 PM
4/13/2008 6:15:14 PM
4/13/2008 7:01:56 PM
If God wants them dead, they will be fucking dead, you can take that to the bank
4/13/2008 10:52:00 PM
fo real.why are we killing people when it seems God will do it for us.save some monies
4/15/2008 8:38:22 AM
the death penalty should be applied to white collar crimes
4/15/2008 3:00:10 PM
^racist!
4/16/2008 12:32:59 AM
It’s backWe’re a more barbaric nation today
7/14/2020 10:55:52 AM
Daniel Lewis Lee is a fine example of the kind of person we should be executing. Here we have a person with a lengthy history of violence, who was let off for one murder and then went on to commit three more, whose crimes were premeditated and whose motives were vile. There is no chance that he will ever be able to be productively returned to society. Every day we kept him alive was a day in which he could kill other people - fellow inmates, guards, or, if he managed to escape, civilians. There is, as far as I know, no hint of police or judicial misconduct, no opposition to his execution on any grounds other than "It might hurt." This guy is practically a poster child for the sane and correct use of the death penalty in this country, though for me, that title will continue to belong to Dylann Roof his number comes up. There's a lot to be fixed about American capital punishment - cases where it never should have been an option, legitimate claims to inherent bias in the judicial system - but it ain't Dan Lee.[Edited on July 14, 2020 at 11:12 AM. Reason : ]
7/14/2020 11:11:58 AM
at least now they are just overdosing them on a single common drug[Edited on July 14, 2020 at 12:06 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2020 12:04:56 PM
^^ the victims family was against it and said the execution in their mind tarnished the legacy of their dead daughter.We’ve treaded these arguments a million times but the trump era magnifies they importance of examining which power the gov should have. Trump has called for executing journalists and protestors, are we now saying if enough people agreed these people should be killed the government should have that power?
7/14/2020 12:25:56 PM
^^^where do you propose the line be drawn?v I agree with you. I would just like to hear where grumpy draws the line between murderable and non-murderable.[Edited on July 14, 2020 at 12:58 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2020 12:30:16 PM
Counterpoint: or the state could not execute its prisoners.
7/14/2020 12:32:06 PM
7/14/2020 2:16:55 PM