Beleth
FAQ Creator
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2002
- Messages
- 4,125
Answer the question, please. Was he treated justly and within the law?That's not the point.
Answer the question, please. Was he treated justly and within the law?That's not the point.
Answer the question, please. Was he treated justly and within the law?
Yes or no, please.Probably.
Yes or no, please.
Do you understand that whatever point you might be making is irrelevant if he was treated justly and within the law?Since there hasn't been a file for mistrial, I would assume a yes. But I don't know for sure.
Do you understand that it is not the point I am making?
Do you understand that whatever point you might be making is irrelevant if he was treated justly and within the law?
My answer to your question is contingent on your answer to my question.I answered your question. Answer mine:
Do you understand that it is not the point I am making?
My answer to your question is contingent on your answer to my question.
Do you understand that whatever point you might be making is irrelevant if he was treated justly and within the law?
PS - Why are you screaming?
As I said before, my answer to this question is contingent on your answer to the following question:That is completely irrelevant to the point I am making. Do you understand that?
Of what relevance is that if he got a just, lawful trial?It isn't my contention that it was illegal that Mumia got a lawyer he didn't want. I am saying that he was forced to have a lawyer he didn't want.
As I said before, my answer to this question is contingent on your answer to the following question:
Do you understand that whatever point you might be making is irrelevant if he was treated justly and within the law?
Of what relevance is that if he got a just, lawful trial?
(Note that this is just a rephrasing of the question you are having such a hard time answering. Perhaps you will be able to answer it now.)
Allow me to jump in here and say that I understand that it's a separate question - whether he was forced to use a lawyer he didn't want is separate from whether the legal rules were followed.And I answered it, several times. Do you understand that it is completely irrelevant to the point I am making? I am not contesting the legality, I am saying that Mumia didn't get the lawyer he wanted.
Here are your responses to me after I asked that question:And I answered it, several times.
I answered your question. Answer mine:
Do you understand that it is not the point I am making?
That is completely irrelevant to the point I am making. Do you understand that?
Because, as I have said twice before and will repeat a third time now, my answer to that question is contingent on your answer to the question you keep pseudo-answering with more questions. Why are you having such a hard time understanding that?Do you understand that it is completely irrelevant to the point I am making? I am not contesting the legality, I am saying that Mumia didn't get the lawyer he wanted.
Do you understand this, yes or no? Why do you have such a hard time answering this simple question?
Actually, that's the definition of "just".Because a "just, lawful trial" does not necessarily mean that he got what he deserved.
Evidence?Just take a look at the rate of people who have been exonerated from death row. 1 in 9 is innocent.
We are not talking about some vague "1 innocent guy", we are talking specifically about Wesley Cook. And you believe that Wesley Cook got a just, lawful trial. Therefore you must believe that it was neither unjust nor illegal for him to be forced to have a lawyer he didn't want.Do you think the 1 innocent guy got what he deserved?
I know that is what you are saying.I have answered it many times now.
I do not contest the legality of Mumia being forced to accept a lawyer against his will. I am saying that he was forced to accept a lawyer against his will.
Actually, you are saying the exact opposite: that he did get a lawyer he didn't want.Now, answer my question:
Do you understand that I am not contesting that that Mumia got a lawyer he didn't want, but that I am only saying that he didn't get a lawyer he didn't want?
Yes or No?
The Danish Court System.Name one organization (or person) that doesn't make mistakes.
Unfortunately, Pennsylvania does not follow that rule. If you defend another against what turns out to be a police officer, your beliefs are irrelevant. You have no affirmative defense. You are not allowed to defend another from a police officer.
Mumia did. In that state, it was a crime. The fact that he used deadly force only tells us which crime.
Evidence?
The Danish Court System.
From the smallest of the Byretten to the Højesteret and Rigsretten themselves.
As my evidence, I present to you every decision they have passed down since their inception. Each decision has been utterly, absolutely, unambiguously, unarguably, fair and moral and just and legal.
If you claim otherwise, provide evidence to prove your claim.
If you do not claim otherwise, retract your insinuation that all organizations or people make mistakes.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics has just released the 2005 version of its annual report on the death penalty in the U.S. The report notes that both the number of death sentences and the size of death row were down for 2005, and that this represents a trend over the past 5 years. The report states that there were 60 executions in 2005, all by lethal injection, and that the time between sentencing and execution was longer in 2005 than in 2004.
Source
Texas is sending fewer to death row
Texas may lead the nation by far in the number of executions carried out each year, but figures released last week suggest that support here for the ultimate punishment may be on the wane.
Over the last 10 years, the number of death sentences imposed in the state has dropped 65%, from 40 in fiscal 1996 to 14 in 2006, according to statistics compiled by the Texas Office of Court Administration. In that time, murders have remained about the same: State crime statistics show 1,476 murders in 1996 and 1,405 in 2005.
The figures are in line with a national decline in death sentences, and show that "Texas is catching up with the trend," said Richard Dieter, executive director of the Death Penalty Information Center.
A growing number of wrongly convicted inmates across the country and the use of DNA evidence to exonerate the innocent have made jurors increasingly reluctant to impose the death penalty, Dieter said.
...
"There has always been the idea of Texas being tough on crime, but I think as people see how much potential there is for mistakes, they're less inclined to be so heavy handed," said Vicki McCuistion, program director of the Texas Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty.
...
Dianne Clements, president of the Houston-based victims rights group Justice For All, said the decline had more to do with U.S. Supreme Court decisions limiting the kinds of cases eligible for the death penalty than a major shift in thinking.
Could you please take this political diatribe to the politics subforum?Whatever the reason, the death penalty is on its way out. Welcome to the civilized world.
But he did get the lawyer he wanted.I am saying that Mumia didn't get the lawyer he wanted.