Matteo Martini
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 4,561
And yet that's exactly what you did in the opening post of this thread. Was it not 100% fair then?
Maybe, it was not 100% fair too.
And yet that's exactly what you did in the opening post of this thread. Was it not 100% fair then?
Yes, it is capable. So, in light of that I don't understand your objection to my last post.I assume your point is that death penalty does, indeed, something good.
Yes, is it realistic? I don't know how else to ask the question. I don't think it is realistic. Experts in the field tell us that such efforts consume a lot resources and often turn inmates into animals.You can prevent inmates from having sex and using drugs, if you want.
You can having inmates living in partial isolation, with limited access to contact with other inmates.
So, I have to come to the US, pay taxes there, in order to be qualified to talk?
Which authority do you have, to speak in behalf of the British population?
Proving my point.
Every country is different.
No, lots of Americans pay no taxes, but they do buy mattresses.
Don't go silly on me. I lived there for quite a few years. Call it an opinion if you wish. What's yours based on?
Which is why not every comparison is relevant to every situation. But I knew that. Did you?
Yes, it is capable. So, in light of that I don't understand your objection to my last post.
Yes, is it realistic? I don't know how else to ask the question. I don't think it is realistic. Experts in the field tell us that such efforts consume a lot resources and often turn inmates into animals.
So, again, is it realistic?
I've told you. There is not much more that I can tell you. I can't make you see what you don't want to see.I have yet to see what is the good coming out from sending an inmate to death
Then you are rather naive about the realities of penal systems.I do not see how it can be difficult to control an inmate, in order to have him not consume drugs and not perform sex.
Somehow I don't think you are everyone.BTW..
I would not qualify becoming a drug addict and having sex with a big bubba as " enjoying the pleasures of life "..
I've told you. There is not much more that I can tell you. I can't make you see what you don't want to see.
Then you are rather naive about the realities of penal systems.
Justice. Sending a person who forces children to watch their parents die and then tortures the children and then kills the children isn't justice.Where did you tell me?
I can only tell you what the experts say. In America we have what is called supermax prison but a person can't be sent there simply because that person murders people. In America we have prohibitions against cruel and unusual treatment. In order to recieve such incarceration a person must be a danger to himself or others.Please, give me a rational answer of why you can not seclude an inmate, excluding any contact between him and other inmates.
Justice. Sending a person who forces children to watch their parents die and then tortures the children and then kills the children isn't justice.
I can only tell you what the experts say. In America we have what is called supermax prison but a person can't be sent there simply because that person murders people. In America we have prohibitions against cruel and unusual treatment. In order to recieve such incarceration a person must be a danger to himself or others.
I respect that.This particular way of thinking about justice, is not my way.
I don't know how to repair dead people.Justice, in my opinion, should be useful to repair something wrong that happened in the past, and to avoid its occurrence in the future.
As I have said countless times. I'm opposed to the death penalty. It's just that I'm opposed to it for different reasons.If you have to choose to send him to death or there, I would suggest to send him there
I see.
Then, I have to buy mattresses in order to be qualified to talk
If you aknowledge that this is just your personal opinion, that is OK.
I wrote ( very ungrammaticaly ):
" I see the OK police change fron non-armed to armed hardly as a prove of anything. "
Should have been:
" I see the police change fron non-armed to armed hardly as a proof of anything.
If you say it is, well, provide evidence.
Then, we should stop to make comparison between situations in different
:sigh:
Then, we should stop to make comparison between situations in different
:sigh:
This thread looks like it is winding down but I would like to throw one more thought out for consideration.
For you people who were arguing about how many people sentenced to death were subsequently found innocent and released or pardoned (i.e., the system worked, even if it took a long time),
why not look at the other side of that situation?
First, if they had simply been sentenced to life in prison, how many would still be in prison without anti-death-penalty advocates, lawyers, and investigators pushing for certainty?
Second, out of, say, the last 100, or 1000, people executed in the United States, how many were innocent? Each of them had the same endless supply of lawyers, advocates, judicial appeals, and even some independent investigations. So, how many were innocent? Any?
I respect that.
I don't know how to repair dead people.
As I have said countless times. I'm opposed to the death penalty. It's just that I'm opposed to it for different reasons.
I'm opposed to the death penalty because it demonstrably is not administered in a fair and impartial manner. Rich people don't get the death penalty. Poor black people do. The death penalty appears to be based on biases and prejudices.
That is not acceptable.
The system worked, for those who were innocent and have been found innocent.
Since it seems there have been quite a number of people on the death row, who have been later found innocent, it is legimitate to think, if it has never been the case that an innocent ( or more than one ) has been sent to death, and he/she was not found innocent afterwards.
You can push for certainty even if the inmate is not sent to death.
Who knows?
Maybe 1, maybe 3, maybe 50....
Sometimes extra evidence was found, sometimes not.
Some times the re-opening of the process was granted, sometimes not.
But, since when extra-evidence was found, and the re-opening of the process was granted, sometimes the guy was found innocent, it is legitimate to think that, even when re-opening of the process was not granted, sometimes the guy was not found innocent, some of the guys could have been innocent too.
Justice is not perfect, you know..
BTW..
I would not qualify becoming a drug addict and having sex with a big bubba as " enjoying the pleasures of life "..
Justice, in my opinion, should be useful to repair something wrong that happened in the past, and to avoid its occurrence in the future.
Death ( of the victim ) can not be repaired sending the criminal to die, as sending the criminal to die do not take back the victim` s death
I'm sure that big bubba would disagree with you. He's an inmate and apparently he's enjoying the pleasures of life.
Well, since you admit that the death of the victim can not be repaired, then the only thing left from your above opinion is avoiding its occurrence in the future. The death penalty certainly does that much better than life in prison.
A
How?
If a person is in prson for life, how can he kill people in normal society ( i.e. outside prison ), unless he manages to escape ( quite difficult, it seems )?
You mean..
" Then, we should stop to make comparison between situations in different countries "?
People make comparisons between countries all the time, and I think this is pretty legitimate, as long as we keep in mind that, different countries are, er, different..