18-Till-I-Die wrote:No it's a miracle, also most of these cases were rape cases, which dont carry the death penalty. See where i'm going?
No. The difference between death penalty cases and normal cases is substantial. You cannot claim that the false conviction rate on non-capital crimes is somehow proof that false convictions for capital crimes are a ginormous problem that's resulted in innocent deaths--it hasn't.
Hardly, indeed the sheer number of wrongful convictions, especially in cases of minorities both in the past and the present, for obvious reasons implies that these cases exist. This...
A total of 69 people have been released from death row since 1973 after evidence of their innocence emerged. Twenty-one condemned inmates have been released since 1993, including seven from the state of Illinois alone. Many of these cases were discovered not because of the normal appeals process, but rather as a result of new scientific techniques, investigations by journalists, and the dedicated work of expert attorneys, not available to the typical death row inmate.
For example makes me see littel strength in your argument, since it implies a larger number of people (pre-DNA, pre-new science techniques) were probably executed for nothing at all. But i'm sure the victim's families felt great and that's what really matters right...
Alright, 18, how come all of the anti-death penalty lobby can't find a SINGLE CASE in which someone was wrongly executed? It's not for lack of trying, but even in their test cases, where they decided that the evidence was weakest, they haven't found a single one. Why is this, if the system is such a disaster waiting to happen? Again, this is very compelling evidence that the system of appeals is effective.
Yeah, only the appeals process has less to do with most of these cases than progressing technology and sheer luck. And frankly i just find it illogical to presume that we've never executed an innocent man, that WOULD imply the system is perfect and thats a whole 'nother kettle of fish.
Then find one. Oh, wait, you can't. Even with the test cases they keep trying, they haven't found a single guy who was innocent. This is pathetic.
No you asked me if someone committing a lesser kind of murder is as diserving of punishment as someone who is a serial killer. As i am not arguing in favor of the death penalty, i was not suggesting it and i think you know that. I was however suggesting that, yes, murder is murder weather by spur of the moment or by a serial killer.
Yet your claim was that all murderers should be treated equivalently--this claim is instantly invalidated if you recognize moral gradations of the condemnation that is appropriate between murderers--something that is captured by my analogy.
In terms of simple imprisonment, morality doesnt enter into the equation. We have laws, the reason these laws are enforced is to maintain order not to sit on a high horse and talk about morality.
In other words, the law is not answerable at all to morality. Including in sentencing? Again, aren't you the one who's trying to portray your opponents as "inhumane?"
If i accidentally bash in your skull during a bar fight i just murdered you. I cannot be allowed to go free simply because i felt bad about it, because this may signal a pattern: kill someone for a really petty reason but by accident, and you get 25 years...kill someone cause you need to jizz off in the slit you put in their neck and you get a needle. There is no difference in the net result, only how the public feels about the killing and that feeling is irelevent.
No, it's not. The laws are designed to enforce the values of society, among their other roles. Sentencing for virtually all crimes is variable because the law recognizes gradations in the degree of punishment that should be assigned, even within a similar class of crime. None of this clues you in to the fact that social views are an important component of establishing criminal punishment? Or would you simply do away with judge and jury discretion with regards to sentencing altogether?
What you're describing is basically pick and choose justice where punishment...i'm sorry, "retribution" is "meted out" at random based on why someone died.
Nonsense. Serial killers are executed more often than people who have only killed once, and people who kill in particularly brutal fashions and are obviously unrepententent are also killed more often. That's not "random."
What i'm suggesting is we take the death penalty off the table and have different prison sentences for different crimes based on severity, with murder carrying the most severe: life in prison. Parole will be decided upon, with parole being available for your hypothetical murderous bar-fly, and not available for say Ted Bundy.
In other words, you want death penalty off the table but you ALSO want to maintain subjective views of various crimes... which pretty much means you have absolutely NO basis for rejecting death penalty, other than the fact that you don't like it. Face it: under your system, by your own standards, the sentencing would allegedly be random as it would vary even within the same class of crime. Yet this claim is so obviously false even you reject it as a conclusion.
And it barely works as it is, largely because of outside forces such as the Innocence Project who step in because the state could give less of a fuck.
Ah, yes. The same "Innocence Project" that keeps trying all of these test cases and finding out that, no, in fact the justice system got the right guy after all.
I did no such thing.
Punishment serves, in my mind, to prevent others from doing the same. People respond to pain, if they feel that doing something, say stealing a car, will cause them pain then they will not do it. This is how we maintain law and order, it has nothing to do--IMO--with revenge or retribution, but with making sure we dont end up in the Mad Max-ish, anarchist world some pricks would like us to. If these people dont respond properly that simply means they're mentally ill and need to be imprisoned where they cannot enter society again and do damage, not killed. Though they may serve the same purpose, imprisonment, if done properly, is more ethically sound and--as much as i hate to dumb it down to sheer cost--economically sound as well.
Yet, as I have already pointed out, capital punishment serves a deterrent function above and beyond life sentences. Moreover, in the scenario I posited there was no deterrent function that could be served, since no one would ever find themselves in similar circumstances, again.
No i mean, making the justice system fair and universal is logical, not revenge. I dont give a fuck if anyone feels "better" or if the public feels "safer", all i care about is if everyone understands the consequences of their actions and those who cant are imprisoned so we need not worry about them "acting out", as it were.
You don't think that the law should serve to keep people feeling safe? What values, precisely, do you think we should look to in formulating laws? You have already rejected society's moral judgment, and now you reject the public's social well-being as a valid motive for formulating laws. Again, how is it that your opponents are being "inhumane?"
Indeed, but enforcing the rules properly and creating sufficient deterrence also involves executing convicted felons of particularly egregious crimes.
The hell it does.
It absolutely does. Do you deny that the death penalty is on the books in various US states?
In fact that just gives people less reason to surender peacefully as now they have only death to look forward to. If they even think they may get parole, they'll probably think twice.
And you don't think that the legislatures are capable of weighing these various harms against the benefits they perceive from death penalty?
And the people that wouldnt are too fucked up to care so we're not aiming it at them, we're talking to the normal folks who do things not because they're fucked up but because circumstance and stupidity and greed made them do something...well, stupid and greedy.
Once again: capital punishment serves a demonstrated deterrent effect against people who commit capital crimes--the very population we are trying to deter. You have no answer for this argument, other than to trot out some vague moral condemnation (while simultaneously rejecting EVERYONE ELSE'S VALUES, often to self-contradictory ends).
You're argument is that it makes the family feel better. If that is the main purpose then the state has no business in it, but you and i both know that is not the main purpose that's just emotional bullshit pro-DP folks pull out to try and bolster their argument because at heart they know it's just about revenge and nothing more. Ethically, economically, logically there is no reason...all you have is "law is retribution" and "it makes them feel better", an ethically unsound observation and an appeal to emotion, respectively.
You've got to be kidding me. Apart from the fact that one of the central purposes of the law is to make people feel good about the society in which they live, making people feel better is a socially responsible goal. Or do you not view "letting other people feel good" as being ethical?
Know how i know...cause i used to be pro-DP, and i used all these same arguments. Now that i realize how stupid they are, it's kind of passe.
So... because you're a complete idiot I should subscribe to your idiocy? This is a stunning appeal to your own stupidity.
There's something satisfying about a blowjob, what's your point? The STATE!!! was not created to make people feel satisfied it was created to maintain order and prevent anarchy and internecine warfare, all of which it can do with trival ease with nary a lethal injection in all of Christendom.
Yes, indeed. You are, in fact, arguing that the state has no legitimate purpose in helping people feel good? The absurdity of your position shows through at every turn.
It's just as unrealistic to expect the government to as well, as countless false convictions will show.
False convictions=/=false executions. We are dealing with the death penalty, and capital cases have very different procedural rules and processes than even normal murder cases.
I was trying to show you how idiotic the idea of "it makes them feel better" is, because it's basically asking the state to preform vigilante justice for them. I was comparing your statement to the idea of vigilantism, not honestly suggesting it. And you know what i'm pretty sure i made that clear when i said "But they wont. Because they dont want to kill anyone they just want to watch someone die, anyone, as long as it makes them feel they have closure" and "Why not just grab someone off the street and convict them sans trial...tell no one, make them think you caught the perp, and you'll acheive the same effect of making people "feel better" for pennies on the dollar".
Yes, and the prison system is basically a form of vigilante justice, too? You cannot equate punishments meted out by the state with the same punishment meted out by a normal member of society.
But, moreover, many victims HAVE tried for vigilante justice, and we have a long history in this country of victims and their families ACTUALLY KILLING PEOPLE when the law does not get involved. All of this you totally ignore. You also ignore that these revenge killings still, occasionally, take place both in our country and in others. This is clear evidence that you are wrong in your view of people, as well as being blatantly, shockingly wrong about the role of the government in society and society itself.