Oh, yes, we include people who run red lights too!
Do you have any more straw men you want to assault?
What straw men? I am going with what you say.
But, of course, if you are joking, sure...
Oh, yes, we include people who run red lights too!
Do you have any more straw men you want to assault?
That's precisely what I went with: One percentage was twice as large as the other. 1:2.
Now, I know that you just wrote a lot of zero's and thought it looked impressive. It does, but not the way you thought.
Now, if you say there is a 0.00000002% of being murdered, it means that, out of a population of 300 million, there are 0.06 homicides in all. So, you have already eradicated homicides as a possible crime. The basis of your calculation is equivalent to 1 homicide each 16 years.
Your percentages are not just grabbed from thin air, they are also totally unrealistic.
I have a feeling this is coming down to the number of wrong convictions (unknown) vs the deterrent effect (unknown)
Not really helping is it?
Yes my numbers were invented for illustrative purposes. UNfortunately your math was just wrong.
I didn't talk about the chance of being killed.. I talked about the REDUCTION in chance of being killed.
The two figures I quoted don't divide to mean anything. Please stop killing math fairies with your bizarre statistics.
Not quite.
We know that the deterrent effect is....well....not there.
One known factor (no deterrence) vs an educated guess (there are innocents on death row).
Does that help?
Don't criticize me for going with your fairytale figures.
Well that would be an argument against allowing them to have contact with other people or for greater security in prisons.
I'm pretty sure you could design a prison that eliminate these 2 issues though I'm not sure how human rights friendly they would be.
Well that would be an argument against allowing them to have contact with other people or for greater security in prisons.
I'm pretty sure you could design a prison that eliminate these 2 issues though I'm not sure how human rights friendly they would be.
I have a feeling this is coming down to the number of wrong convictions (unknown) vs the deterrent effect (unknown)
Not really helping is it?
Well thats basically why I am anti-death penalty right now. However, I don't believe those studies to be conclusive which is why I am open to evidence/arguments such as I hope Darth Rotor would provide but didn't.
I do not argue for moral absolutes such as '1 innocent person killed cannot be justified'
No..please go with them. Just don't mangle them like you did.
Since both figures I used are unknown.. do you have better estimates?
What straw men? I am going with what you say.
But, of course, if you are joking, sure...
Nope. I prefer that convicted serial killers not be allowed to kill again.
I don't think so. No, I'm certain that it is not a fundamental idea of modern legal systems.Is it not a fundamental idea of modern legal systems that no innocent must be in jail (let alone be executed)?
I didn't assume that you were. I asked how many innocent people executed you find acceptable. Care to answer?
Well if you are only considering the outcome then moral or immoral are meaningless. The fact is that in the one case the intent was very different to the other. One did not intend to kill an innocent person and the other did.
NO it doesn't mean 'better' ... where are you getting this nonsense?
It means that its been generally agreed by society and that it is open to inspection and 'change' is people object to the way things work. Vigalante justice is not open to this. Your specific case is meaningless as it is not in any way representative of any murder case ever tried or ever will be.
I'm at a complete loss. I guess I will have to read the other posts but where have you demonstrated anything? Is your argument simply an appeal to individual sense of morality? If so then you have demonstrated nothing.
Perhaps you simply want to discuss the issue. If so I'm not very taken with your example. It doesn't really present any profound moral dilemmas. It's simply a garden variety one caused by the application of societal rules and the understandable hurt and traumatized state of a person who witnessed that which he most loves destroyed. We might as well discuss the ocean tides.
Do you have a better example?
Oh, BTW, let me answer your question. It's a simple one that is not at all controversial.
To society the action is immoral.
To the individual the action is both rational and moral.
Any more questions?
How many wrongful executions do you accept, then?
Says who?Morality is one.
It depends on your relative point of view. Moral or immoral to whom?Did the husband behave in a moral or immoral way?
Moral to whom? It is immoral to society. It is in the interest of society to to see vigilante justice as immoral. It is not necessarily in the best interest of the individual.We know all the details, if his behaviour was moral, then, when caught, he should not be sent to death, or jail for a long time.
Innocence is a legal concept. If I see my father murder my mother and he is found "not guilty" I don't have to pretend that it didn't happen. Nor to I have to pretend that it is moral or just that my father got away with killing my mother.But, this way, you would condone a person who murdered an innocent ( the burglar, who, for the law, was innocent ).
Immoral to whom?If the husband behaviour was immoral...
You are trying to reconcile two different view points. They cannot be reconciled....then, you have to tell why, if the jury did sent to death the burglar, that would have been " moral ".
How many wrongful incarcerations do you accept?One is too much