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Death Penalty

I think there can be little doubt that, at least in the USA, the death penalty is not a deterrent to murder - in fact, having a death penalty seems to encourage murder.

I'm wondering why that could be? Perhaps a person who has killed and knows they are facing the death penalty, has nothing to lose by killing more people, so they are more likely to cap witnesses?
Notwithstanding your obvious tongue-in-cheekness, this is probably a classic case of disconnect between causation and correlation.

Most criminals don't expect to get caught. Indeed, most don't even ponder the likelihood, let alone weigh up the consequences.
 
Notwithstanding your obvious tongue-in-cheekness, this is probably a classic case of disconnect between causation and correlation.

Most criminals don't expect to get caught. Indeed, most don't even ponder the likelihood, let alone weigh up the consequences.

Yeah, it was a little tongue in cheek, but is not as if these stats are one off.

States with the death penalty consistently have higher rates of murder than those without over an almost 30 year period.... its irrefutable, the facts don't lie.

Its not a case of a small sample v a large sample either - 25 to 32 states had the death penalty over the period in question, 16 to 23 states didn't and two have the DP but had a moratorium that covers all or part of period in question (Oregon since 2011 & Pennsylvania since 2015) so their stats are included in the non-DP states as applicable.

Finally all those stats are on a year-by-year basis. Any state that abolished the DP during the period 1990 to 2019 was swapped in the stats to a non-DP state the following years.
 
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A barbarian punishment. And I even believe that in some states the relatives of the victim can come to watch the execution like this would be the bloody middle ages, ffs.
 
Better 10 guilty men go free than one innocent suffer.

William Blackstone c 1760
 
Better 10 guilty men go free than one innocent suffer.

William Blackstone c 1760

What about the cases where there is no doubt? And please, don't pretend that there are no such cases.

How about, say, John Wayne Gacy? Was his execution acceptable?
 
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There will be plenty of people who will try to equate "opposition to death penalty" with "bleeding heart liberal wants to set all child-molesters, rapists and murderers (proven or otherwise) free".

Uh...no. That's all sorts of logical fallacies right there, not to mention being wrong.

First, in my view, such convicts do need punishment. They are not good people, they don't deserve to live in society. But if they are dead then they cannot be punished any more. We can argue about what is cruel and unusual, but they need to be alive to be punished. Unless you are going to desecrate corpses which sounds fairly icky and antisocial, not to mention medieval. So execution is not punishment, it's a release from punishment.

Second, as has been mentioned many times, capital punishment is a one-way street that allows for no errors of judgement, no mistakes. Plenty of people have been convicted of horrendous crimes, including confessing to them, only to be fond not guilty many years later. Alas, some only long after they had been officially executed. Someone in jail can be set free and pardoned. Someone executed cannot.

Lastly, execution is not a deterrent. It really is not. The prevailing attitude of offenders is "may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb". And then they go on to commit unspeakable crimes knowing they will never be punished for them really. It's the equivalent of the defiant "You'll never take me alive, coppers!" followed by the killing of hostages and bystanders while a blazing gunfight ensues. Did the death penalty have any effect on this sort of crime? It would seem it has never been a factor for consideration.
 
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For me the idea of the justice system is to help safeguard society whilst trampling on as few rights as possible. The prison part of the justice should be about keeping society safe. Which means that it should be about 1) rehabilitation and when necessary, 2) keeping people away from society when we can't rehabilitate someone. (Of course this is not easy nor cheap.)

We know that the claimed deterrent aspect of prison sentences doesn't have any significant effect on whether someone will undertake a criminal act or not so the only reason to have the death sentence is 2) as of course it does ensure the person is kept away from society. But then you have the many, many mistakes that we know happen and have happened for people who would be eligible for a death penalty if it existed.

Lifelong imprisonment for a crime you didn't commit is of course a terrible thing however at least there is always some hope that your conviction will be overturned or quashed.

I know that society is not ready to move to a rehabilitation first model, we want punishment so I've never understood why people want the death sentence as it means the criminal will never be punished for their crime. It is an interesting contradiction.

I personally would be happy in giving criminals the option to kill themselves. Now of course this could mean innocent people will kill themselves as they can't face the years in prison similar to how we can't undo the death sentence if we find they weren't guilty. But with good safeguarding processes we could avoid a lot of that. (Yeah I know!)

So overall I can't see any reason to have a death penalty.
 
There will be plenty of people who will try to equate "opposition to death penalty" with "bleeding heart liberal wants to set all child-molesters, rapists and murderers (proven or otherwise) free".

Uh...no. That's all sorts of logical fallacies right there, not to mention being wrong.

First, in my view, such convicts do need punishment. They are not good people, they don't deserve to live in society. But if they are dead then they cannot be punished any more. We can argue about what is cruel and unusual, but they need to be alive to be punished. Unless you are going to desecrate corpses which sounds fairly icky and antisocial, not to mention medieval. So execution is not punishment, it's a release from punishment.

Second, as has been mentioned many times, capital punishment is a one-way street that allows for no errors of judgement, no mistakes. Plenty of people have been convicted of horrendous crimes, including confessing to them, only to be fond not guilty many years later. Alas, some only long after they had been officially executed. Someone in jail can be set free and pardoned. Someone executed cannot.

Lastly, execution is not a deterrent. It really is not. The prevailing attitude of offenders is "may as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb". And then they go on to commit unspeakable crimes knowing they will never be punished for them really. It's the equivalent of the defiant "You'll never take me alive, coppers!" followed by the killing of hostages and bystanders while a blazing gunfight ensues. Did the death penalty have any effect on this sort of crime? It would seem it has never been a factor for consideration.
You only mention punishment and deterrent as reasons for having the death penalty. Are those really the only reasons you can think of?
 
You want me to trust this government (and it's zombified citizens) to handle such an important matter? Hell no!

I am against capital punishment because humans are too stupid to be trusted with such things.

Same here. I have no problems with the death penalty itself, in theory, it's the practical application I find lacking.
 
Execution as a deterrent is just barbaric. You're going to kill somebody to teach abstract others a lesson?

But is it any less barbaric to throw them in a cage, taking away 95% of their human agency and stare at them till they die?

My primary objection is the chance of error, and that none of us should be playing God anyway. A young mass murderer like Nikolas Cruz from Parkland actually has the chance of redemption, and becoming a regular human. That opportunity shouldn't be snuffed out of a sense of revenge, which is what the death penalty is. It's not our job to seek an eye for an eye and spill more blood; it's our job to keep society as safe as we can.

But on the flip side yet again, Saddam Hussein got strung up, and the world cheered for whacking Bin Laden. We don't owe these people three hots and a cot on our dime, do we?
 
While the death penalty is exceptionally deranged and worthy of special consideration, it's probably wise to keep in mind the greater context that the USA is an incredibly punitive nation in general. We imprison more of our population with longer, more severe sentences than any of our peers.

This country has a raging hard-on for punishing people. A truly diseased society.
 
But is it any less barbaric to throw them in a cage, taking away 95% of their human agency and stare at them till they die?

Obviously actual life sentence is pretty barbaric too - there should always be possibility of rehabilitation to everyone. But there are prisons like American prisons (mostly bestial and primitive) and then prisons like Nordic ones (mostly not bestial and primitive).

This is not actually that typical for Finland - but just as a bit of a provocation to the more punishment minded:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l554kV12Wuo
 
Yeah, it was a little tongue in cheek, but is not as if these stats are one off.

States with the death penalty consistently have higher rates of murder than those without over an almost 30 year period.... its irrefutable, the facts don't lie.

Its not a case of a small sample v a large sample either - 25 to 32 states had the death penalty over the period in question, 16 to 23 states didn't and two have the DP but had a moratorium that covers all or part of period in question (Oregon since 2011 & Pennsylvania since 2015) so their stats are included in the non-DP states as applicable.

Finally all those stats are on a year-by-year basis. Any state that abolished the DP during the period 1990 to 2019 was swapped in the stats to a non-DP state the following years.
Living in a state that says it is ok to kill bad people, might also influence your views on killing ' who you think are ' bad people.
 
I think there can be little doubt that, at least in the USA, the death penalty is not a deterrent to murder - in fact, having a death penalty seems to encourage murder.

https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/facts-...y-states-compared-to-non-death-penalty-states

[qimg]https://www.dropbox.com/s/z7j1frolhi1cit1/State%20DPvMurder%20Rates.png?raw=1[/qimg]

I'm wondering why that could be? Perhaps a person who has killed and knows they are facing the death penalty, has nothing to lose by killing more people, so they are more likely to cap witnesses?
Or people in death penalty states are more prone to/accepting of violence.
 
I think there can be little doubt that, at least in the USA, the death penalty is not a deterrent to murder - in fact, having a death penalty seems to encourage murder.

https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/facts-...y-states-compared-to-non-death-penalty-states

[qimg]https://www.dropbox.com/s/z7j1frolhi1cit1/State%20DPvMurder%20Rates.png?raw=1[/qimg]

I'm wondering why that could be? Perhaps a person who has killed and knows they are facing the death penalty, has nothing to lose by killing more people, so they are more likely to cap witnesses?

Probably more to do with the general failure of right wing policies to meaningfully deal with crime or poverty in any constructive way. The states that support the death penalty are also the kind to gut social programs that would alleviate the most severe forms of poverty and reduce crime.

I doubt the death penalty has much impact, positive or negative, on criminality. Often it's administered in a totally arbitrary way. It's just a bit of state brutality for the sake of brutality.
 
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Probably more to do with the general failure of right wing policies to meaningfully deal with crime or poverty in any constructive way. The states that support the death penalty are also the kind to gut social programs that would alleviate the most severe forms of poverty and reduce crime.
I doubt the death penalty has much impact, positive or negative, on criminality. Often it's administered in a totally arbitrary way. It's just a bit of state brutality for the sake of brutality.

That is the best answer I have seen so far.

My opposition to the death penalty is not so much the actual execution of convicted murderers, it is the "edge" cases that concern me the most. Innocent people are on death row or have been executed because they were convicted on flimsy evidence, or when the prosecution withheld exculpatory evidence, or when witnesses lied or misidentified the killer. Once you execute someone, there is no way back if they later turn out to be innocent.

However, I have no problem with executing first degree murderers who pre-planned and carried out murders, and where there is zero doubt the person is guilty. For example, serial killers such as Ted Bundy, Gary Ridgway, John Wayne Gacy are the types of killers who ought to be removed from the population permanently and with prejudice. Same applies to irredeemable spree killers like Dylan Roof and James Holmes, and mass murderers such as Timothy McVeigh, Robert Chambliss, Thomas Edwin Blanton Jr., Bobby Cherry and David Lewis Rice.

Of course, the obvious problem arising from this is, what mechanism do we have for determining the difference between "reasonable doubt" and "zero doubt". I don't know the answer to that.
 

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