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Oh yes... because prisoners aren't people so it doesn't matter if they don't die.His Divine Shadow wrote:Atleast he's magically incapable of murdering people outside of jail when he's magically inside it.Stofsk wrote:Uh... what? He's magically incapable of murdering people inside jail?mr friendly guy wrote:Oh I don't know. Maybe because while he is in jail there is an even less chance he can do it again.
Thats a revolting thing to say but each to his own.The Guid wrote:Oh yes... because prisoners aren't people so it doesn't matter if they don't die.His Divine Shadow wrote:Atleast he's magically incapable of murdering people outside of jail when he's magically inside it.Stofsk wrote: Uh... what? He's magically incapable of murdering people inside jail?
Please provide a guarantee to us all that no innocent person has ever been executed in the U.S, and that no innocent person ever will be executed in the U.S. Oh, you can't? I guess it's still immoral to execute people.EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:As to why he isn't already dead like he would be in Texas or Utah, it is the willful obstruction of the execution process by assholes like your self that make the process unworkable. It is unfeasable because people like your self MAKE it unfeasable, so don't offer the arguement that it's unfeasability makes is immoral.
I do happen to know what fallacy (Note that there are two l's in fallacy, not one) you are referring to, which is the Black and White fallacy. Of course, when you are dealing with an absolute punishment such as execution, I see absolutely nothing wrong with demanding absolute perfection in its application. Or would you rather we execute all the David Milgaards of the world just so that you can feel that you've had your revenge.EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:The 100% standard? No room for error? What falacy is that again?
Then perhaps you shouldn't have started hijacking it in the first place.This thead will need to be split if it is going to be hijackied into a Deathb penalty debait.
Would you please not outright lie about what you wrote? In amongst the horrible grammar, terrible mispellings, and other general indicators of a lack of education, you left this little gem: "unfeasability makes is immoral. "Note that I said unworkable, not immoral. read more closely next time.
I see. You are simply dismissing all such arguments out of hand because they destroy your position.EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:Parial quotes, taken out of context.
The FULL quote is "so don't offer the arguement that it's unfeasability makes is immoral." Clearly I am not making this arguement, I am asking it not to be make. If you have seperate arguement, make it.
I admit, I was confused by the horrible mess that you posted, since it's virtually impossible to extract what you actually meant to post.Who exactly is lying here?
Perhaps you'd notice, if you were capable of basic reading comprehension, that I did address your arguments. I'll assume that you're conceding since you offered no counterargument whatsoever.Please address my arguments, as stated, not spelling
If you don't care enough to spellcheck and grammar check your posts, then I can hardly be expected to bother reading them carefully.The concept, not the execution of verbage. Please do not lie while accusing me of lying either.
actually ex-girlfriend and guy he thought she was boinking, is by definition not a "Cold Blood" crime but a "hot blood" crime. he wasn't motivated by profit, he was motivated by jelousy and the law tends to go easier on those types.SpacedTeddyBear wrote:Because change doesn't excuse nor does it dampen the fact that he purposely murdered 2 people in cold blood.I do not see why he shouldnt be released on parole.
1980 was 26 years ago, that is long time, sufficient time indeed for him to change.
So when the parole board is sufficently sure that he is no danger why shouldnt he be released ?
That would call into question the whole concept of a prison term. Why sentence a man/woman to X amount of years at all durring sentencing? If the parol boards are to take on more weight as an expert panel of when these people are 'rehabilitated', then when some one is sentences after trial, should they be therefore sentenced until a parole board deems them ready?Pick wrote:I think the greater question is why keep expending the resources to keep them in jail if we have no intent of ever letting them recover from their past actions? If we've basically decided that we will never accept recouperation, why not just shoot them?
I'm not arguing either side, I just don't see the point of sticking them in a jail and keeping them there forever regardless of what the criminologists claim. We're either willing to let them contribute in society again or we're investing in nothing. Petty "revenge" by keeping them alive is just expensive.
I don't care about this case or the general argument, I'm just saying that the logical fiscal reasoning says you're either investing in their ability to pay back into society later, or you're wasting your cash.
No, we're not, retard. We are inflicting something on the guilty that makes them NOT DO IT AGAIN, you stupid retarded cocksucking motherfucker.EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:No YOu are the stupid fucker her.Dominus Atheos wrote:You are a stupid fucker. What is the point of punishment? To make sure they don't do it again, fucknuts. If the parole board is sure he won't do it again, what's your problem, asshat?
Punishishmnet is just that PUNISHMENT. It is completely unrelated rehabilitation, and public safety. It is punishmnet. We are inflicting something on the guilty that makes them suffer.
You're the one who doesn't grasp the concept of punishment. We give tickets to speeders so they DON'T DO IT AGAIN, fucking moronic asshat.That you don't grasp the very concept of punnishment make you a stupid fucker. Why are people fined in traffic tickets? It doesn't make them better drivers like traffic school does, so why fine them? PUNISHMENT!
EXACTLY! That's exactly it. My god, you have one brief shining moment of clarity, and then back to your idiotic ramblings. You hit the nail on the head with that statement, the point of punishment is to attach unpleasant/painful consequences to an action you wish to discourage, so they DON'T DO IT AGAIN. Then you release them when you are sure they won't do it again, which the parole board was sure of. This allows them to be functioning members of socity again, repaying their debt incurred during their incarceration, pigfucker.The very idea of punishment is to attach unpleasant/painful consequences to an action you wish to discourage. You obviously don't like the concept as applied to law, but most of us do. You can't wish it away by pretending you don't understand, thus "Proving" you point that it is unethical because you don't get it.
Unfeasible and immoral are two very different concepts, retard. Execution is unfeasible because it's a monetary black hole. If we imprision someone for 20 years, we can rehabilitate them, and make them functioning members of society, and they can pay taxes for 40 years, and the government recupes it's losses. If we execute however, we gain nothing.As to why he isn't already dead like he would be in Texas or Utah, it is the willful obstruction of the execution process by assholes like your self that make the process unworkable. It is unfeasable because people like your self MAKE it unfeasable, so don't offer the arguement that it's unfeasability makes is immoral.
I can always tell when I'm winning when the other person resorts to personal attacks without any substance.snip Ad hominem
I would support that. Don't let them out until they're rehabilitated, not before, and not after.Knife wrote:That would call into question the whole concept of a prison term. Why sentence a man/woman to X amount of years at all durring sentencing? If the parol boards are to take on more weight as an expert panel of when these people are 'rehabilitated', then when some one is sentences after trial, should they be therefore sentenced until a parole board deems them ready?
Bullshit. That's part of it, of course, but no one would obey speed limits if there wasn't some sort of penalty for it.The Yosemite Bear wrote:Like prostitution in the old west we know that people will speed and vitually nothing will stop this behaviour. So we give people tickets to fund the governement. it's not to discourage this behaviour, in fact some places will go out of their way to make it next to impossible for someone to react in a timly manner to a change in the local speed laws. In order to get finaincial reward for the community.
Imprisonment has both a punishment and rehabilitation angle to it. Depending on the current political environment, one can predominate over the other. From everything I've read about the US system, it is very much punishment with minimal rehabilitation.Knife wrote: That would call into question the whole concept of a prison term. Why sentence a man/woman to X amount of years at all durring sentencing? If the parol boards are to take on more weight as an expert panel of when these people are 'rehabilitated', then when some one is sentences after trial, should they be therefore sentenced until a parole board deems them ready?
That sounds more like deterrent.EmperorChrostas the Cruel wrote:The very idea of punishment is to attach unpleasant/painful consequences to an action you wish to discourage.
It wasn't a crime of passion. Daniel Wehner threatened to kill the victim months before the actual crime, wrote “bang, bang you’re dead” on the wall of her apartment, followed her to Davis and killed her there. It was definitely premeditated. Also, what makes you think the motive was jealousy? He said the other victim just got in the way and was innocent, if you look at the second article on the previous page.The Yosemite Bear wrote:no
like prostitution in the old west we know that people will speed and vitually nothing will stop this behaviour. So we give people tickets to fund the governement. it's not to discourage this behaviour, in fact some places will go out of their way to make it next to impossible for someone to react in a timly manner to a change in the local speed laws. In order to get finaincial reward for the community.
Secondarily what we see here is a case of a hot blooded "crime of passion" type murderer, whom the parole boards felt was no threat to the community being kept inside to expidite a political fiction, and for the gain of the govenor.