Duncanthrax
Scholar
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2009
- Messages
- 68
I hold the position that the death penalty is only justified when certain dangerous people cannot be incarcerated without a reasonable possibility of them escaping. Sort of the El Chapo situation where he had enough support on the outside, and the government employees are so corrupt, that he just had his henchmen dig a tunnel to escape. But like in the El Chapo situation, I think that simply means that they should be incarcerated in another country.
I did think of one situation for which I would support the death penalty. If there is a justified guerilla war, like the resistance to the Nazis, then it is a situation when they do not have ability to effectively incarcerate someone dangerous and imprisonment outside the country is not a reasonable possibility. So if the person committed a serious crime, even short of murder, I can see that the death penalty may be the least bad option.
I'd even tend to favor that if the established government is in danger of being overthrown, provided there is a substantial possibility of the dangerous prisoner being released by the guerilla army, again provided that another country will not take the prisoner.
I did think of one situation for which I would support the death penalty. If there is a justified guerilla war, like the resistance to the Nazis, then it is a situation when they do not have ability to effectively incarcerate someone dangerous and imprisonment outside the country is not a reasonable possibility. So if the person committed a serious crime, even short of murder, I can see that the death penalty may be the least bad option.
I'd even tend to favor that if the established government is in danger of being overthrown, provided there is a substantial possibility of the dangerous prisoner being released by the guerilla army, again provided that another country will not take the prisoner.