Cheeseman531
New Blood
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2005
- Messages
- 17
I was wondering what everyone here tought of capital puishment? As a staunch advocate of it, i'd like to hear someone else's point of view.
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One vote for it.I was wondering what everyone here tought of capital puishment? As a staunch advocate of it, i'd like to hear someone else's point of view.
What he said.One vote against.
There's a variety of reasons. One of them is that it hasn't adequately been shown to be a deterrent. The most important reason, though, is that there have been mistakes in the past. People have been released from death row after DNA evidence showed their innocence. What if they hadn't discovered that evidence? What if they had discovered it a year or two after they were executed? We would all be complicit in the cold blooded murder of an innocent person.
My opinion is, well, we have to err on the side of "not killing innocent people."
One vote against.
There's a variety of reasons. One of them is that it hasn't adequately been shown to be a deterrent. The most important reason, though, is that there have been mistakes in the past. People have been released from death row after DNA evidence showed their innocence. What if they hadn't discovered that evidence? What if they had discovered it a year or two after they were executed? We would all be complicit in the cold blooded murder of an innocent person.
My opinion is, well, we have to err on the side of "not killing innocent people."
One vote against.
There's a variety of reasons. One of them is that it hasn't adequately been shown to be a deterrent. The most important reason, though, is that there have been mistakes in the past. People have been released from death row after DNA evidence showed their innocence. What if they hadn't discovered that evidence? What if they had discovered it a year or two after they were executed? We would all be complicit in the cold blooded murder of an innocent person.
My opinion is, well, we have to err on the side of "not killing innocent people."
Capital punishment should logically be a deterrent. At least—no less of a deterrent than imprisonment.
One vote against.
There's a variety of reasons. One of them is that it hasn't adequately been shown to be a deterrent. The most important reason, though, is that there have been mistakes in the past. People have been released from death row after DNA evidence showed their innocence. What if they hadn't discovered that evidence? What if they had discovered it a year or two after they were executed? We would all be complicit in the cold blooded murder of an innocent person.
My opinion is, well, we have to err on the side of "not killing innocent people."
I have to disagree with that. it stands to reason that the threat of the state putting you to death is a credible deterrent, compared to—say—no punishment at all.It's no deterrent
Really? I would have thought that the (economic) cost of lifetime incarceration is higher than the cost of execution (to the state, that is).it's more costly than imprisoning the person for life
Would you support capital punishment if innocent people did not get wrongly executed though?the cost of mistakening executing an innocent person is too high.
I have to disagree with that. it stands to reason that the threat of the state putting you to death is a credible deterrent, compared to—say—no punishment at all.
Really? I would have thought that the (economic) cost of lifetime incarceration is higher than the cost of execution (to the state, that is).
Generally it is. But Katana wrote "It's no deterrent."Sure, but generally this is framed as a "put'em to death" vs. "lock'em up for life" discussion, not a "hang'em high" vs. "let'em go" discussion.
"more to do with [. . .] than" suggests that the severity of punishment has something (non zero) to do with deterrence though—even in your wordsAs far as I understand, the chances of getting caught has more to do with the deterrent factor than the severity of punishment.
Do you think that the economic cost of life imprisonment is higher than the cost of execution, inclusive of all state expenditure?The appeals process can cost really big bucks. The grub & striped shirt costs for one inmate aren't that high.
And, if properly incarcerated includes guaranteed, felony charges *if they ever do, permanent prison stay (assuming no evidence comes up proving innocence) and assuming the crime is not against a friend, family member, etc. of mine maybe. In our catch and release system, it is needed - more than it occurs.What he said.
I'd like to see a few logical reasons why capital punishment should exist. I know I'll see this one...
- the criminal will never commit another crime or harm another person.
Then again neither would a properly incarcerated person.
Anything else?