lomiller
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2007
- Messages
- 13,208
1. The idea that a life without parole sentence is reversible in a way a death sentence is not seems facetious without there being an actual mechanism to actively review cases as to matters of fact. Without that, it is almost entirely an emotional balm for those that want to be wishy-washy about taking a life away. Celebrating the rare cases where by chance a wrongful conviction is overturned that wouldn't have been if the person was executed is akin to perseverance porn. What should be shocking tragedy and evidence of systemic failure gets reported in a positive "never give up hope" type light in a way that is totally counterproductive.
You admit yourself that wrongful convictions do get overturned, the fact that this happened at all is justification for saying wrongful they can be overturned and mitigated when there is no death penalty.
More can and should be done but lack of perfection isn't an argument against improving.
That it is cheaper to lock someone away for life is evidence of a broken system more than an argument against the death penalty.
What's broken is the fact that the death penalty exists and to even reduce the harm that causes is really expensive
3. Life in prison with no parole is better because it is the worse punishment. It's Democratic politics in a nutshell. They can't just come out and be against the death penalty based on cruelty because they've totally capitulated as to whether being cruel is a virtue and are more arguing about the optics of cruelty.
It seems that you are trying to suggest that people can't be against the death penalty if they are not against the the inherent cruelty of it, but you don't get to tell other people what their positions should be.
For the worst of the worst offenders, if they truly are guilty, I don't care one way or another if they suffer nor do I care about the optics of that suffering. If the system could guarantee with absolute certainty that no innocent people were included I'd be fine with them getting the death penalty or not, provided society is adequately protected from them. It's not executing people I'm against it's executing people who don't deserve it, unfortunately we will never be able to compeltely untangle the two.