The Central Scrutinizer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2001
- Messages
- 53,097
I like it! Where can I buy one?
China.I like it! Where can I buy one?
If expense is important to them, why don't they just beat the condemned to death with a big stick?
I like it! Where can I buy one?
Since people are speculating on what I meant:As for BPSCG, I'm not sure what point he was trying to make other than a snide retort to AH.![]()
...implying some hypocrisy on the part of people who favor the death penalty. AH, you may correct me if that conclusion is wrong, in which case everything that follows here is irrelevant.Its funny how death penalty advocates are only in favor of it if they dont have to see it.
Injections leave the whole body intact and require participation of doctors. Organs can "be extracted in a speedier and more effective way than if the prisoner is shot," says Mark Allison, East Asia researcher at Amnesty International in Hong Kong. "We have gathered strong evidence suggesting the involvement of (Chinese) police, courts and hospitals in the organ trade."
Its funny how death penalty advocates are only in favor of it if they dont have to see it.
but given that China had previously been shooting dissidents, how does implenting "deathmobiles" make it worse?It's funny how death penalty opponents cannot seem to tell the difference between a proper execution of a murderer and a state executing its political opponents.
It's funny how you beg the question by assuming that the execution of a murderer can ever be "proper."It's funny how death penalty opponents cannot seem to tell the difference between a proper execution of a murderer and a state executing its political opponents.
It's big business there, apparently. And it encourages the system to find people guilty and condemn them to death.
I can approve of something without wanting to be a close participant.
I approve of eating meat. Does that mean I want to watch a cow be slaughtered and butchered? No. But just because I personally don't want to witness the slaughter and butcher of a cow, does that mean I'm a hypocrite for liking to eat meat? I don't think so.
Similarly, I favor the death penalty. Does that mean I want to watch an execution? No. But just because I personally don't want to witness an execution, does that mean I'm a hypocrite for believing the death penalty should be on the books? I don't think so.
It's funny how you beg the question by assuming that the execution of a murderer can ever be "proper."
I can't see how that's not painfully obvious, but the begged question was "Can the execution of a murderer ever be proper?"What question was begged?
I can't see how that's not painfully obvious, but the begged question was "Can the execution of a murderer ever be proper?"
the question you "begged" was whether an execution can ever be proper. James Dillon was using the term "begging the question" in it's original meaning , rather than the newer meaning of "raising the question".Ok...and what's the question?
We've had that discussion before: If the death penalty (let's not be wimpy and call it "capital punishment" - it's penalizing people by killing them, OK?) acts as a deterrent, why not have public executions? Why not make the executions as gruesome as possible?
Noooooo.....
I'm a member of society, and I'm more revolted by a sovereign state engaging in the systematic execution of its subjects than by anything any one of those subjects might have done. The state should hold itself to a higher standard.Who said it was just a deterrent? It also serves "to express society's revusion at particularly horrific acts."
In any event, there are death penalty advocates who do think it should be done more publicly.
Ok...and what's the question?