Lord of the Abyss wrote:I oppose it because I don't trust the justice system that much; the justice system is racist, sexist, and classist and which of those categories you fit into determines whether or not you get the death penalty; not what you crime you committed.
And also because it appears to me to be an overly expensive indulgence in indiscriminate vengeance. I say "indiscriminate" because so many of the death penalty supporters I run into don't seem to really care if the system is bigoted or if the death penalty does any good or not or even if the person being executed is actually guilty. They just want blood, and if that blood turns out to be innocent "that's just the price we have to pay".
Since I oppose the death penalty except in cases where the convict
demonstrably remains a threat to others even in prison... I don't think I qualify as part of this group.
Formless wrote:How many people are so dangerous that they lash out at anyone who comes within arms reach? Not that I disagree with the argument, but the way you present it is exactly what I'm talking about: blowing the problem out of proportion by appealing to an almost comically exaggerated stereotype.
I imagine there are extremely few people that dangerous. I also imagine that there are more than zero of them, though I'd be very happy to learn otherwise because it would slightly improve my overall faith in humanity.
-Imprisoning them is exceptionally expensive and difficult, again because of the danger they pose to others.
Except that, again, the real reason imprisoning people is so expensive because our system just throws everyone in jail for every minor offense, leading to a prison population that is unsustainable. In other words, this is a problem
now, but need not remain a problem in the future.
...Why would shrinking the prison population drastically cut the costs
per inmate? Especially for inmates who have to be kept in solitary and who thus aren't using the same facilities as the other inmates?
I disagree. When you get down to it, the reason government works at all (and the reason some people seem to resent its very existence) is its monopoly on force.
Self defense law disagrees with this over-simplification.
I do not think so. Self-defense is a specifically allowed exception to a general rule. One that exists for a number of very specific reasons:
1) The alternative is unenforceable. In a legal system that doesn't invoke hideous and utterly unjust punishments, you
can't make a law that will deter people from trying to resist being killed, any more than you can make a law that will convince them to leap off of cliffs. Since we can't make anyone stop doing it by having a law against it, having a law against it is just a way to encourage contempt for the law.
2) Individuals who kill in self-defense are unlikely to impinge on the government monopoly on force in
other ways, compared to individuals who kill for money, for hatred, or for pleasure. Each case of self-defense is an isolated, self-contained incident that does not increase the risk of similar incidents happening in the future, so there is no need to punish individual cases to prevent a general problem from arising.
3) There is also no need to rehabilitate people who kill in self-defense, because they haven't done anything that makes them a persistent long-term problem for society. They haven't done anything you need to make them stop doing, the way that a thief or an arsonist has. I mean yes they killed someone in self-defense, but they probably aren't going to do it again unless someone else attacks them again.
:facepalm: You've missed the point entirely. First, we live in a democratic society. The perceptions of the people directly impact public policy. Second, and building from this, is the fact that the culture we live in glorifies violence. You can see this in our media, you can in the very successful "tough on crime" rhetoric of our politicians (especially on the right) use, you can see this in the fact that we can barely go two decades without going to war with someone.
What makes you think all these things are causally linked to the execution of criminals? That
because we are willing to kill people we see as heinous criminals*, we
become willing to watch violent action movies, or to be tough on crime**, or to declare war on other countries?
*Including many I would argue should not be killed, because they would stop being a threat once thrown in prison because they're not complete maniacs...
**It's not like "tough on crime" always translates to "execute more criminals!" There are a lot of ways to be tough on crime without laying a finger on a single inmate, because inmates have a lot of rights to strip away other than "freedom from being killed."
The problem is NOT just that our system does not conform to your pie in the sky "carefully monitored government," its that the government is but a tool of society. A society that wouldn't know justice from a smoking hole in the ground where an Afghani village once stood.
Umm... did you notice the part where I don't trust the US government with the death penalty? Well, actually, the US
federal government teeters right on the edge of what I might consider trusting but probably wouldn't. Many of the
state governments in the US are completely untrustworthy.
Also, you're strawmanning. I am NOT advocating that the government should never use lethal force. I argued that it should limit its use of lethal force because the death penalty, being part of the culture of "tough on crime" bullshit that is endemic here in america, effects the larger perceptions of what the legal system is for. When people keep hearing about the serial killer under every bed, the child molester hiding behind every curtain, or the psychopath lurking in the shadows of every alleyway, there is no way you're going to convince the voters of the utility of rehabilitation.
How would not executing these people make the American public fear them less? Would we become
less afraid of the imaginary psycho in the alleyway if we knew that the crimes we imagine him to be capable of are not punishable by death under our laws?
All that would change is that the "tough on crime" blowhards would instead be advocating the resumption of the death penalty instead of its continuation. You're mistaking a symptom for a cause.
This is definitely an excellent case for limiting the death penalty sharply, especially in societies where the just treatment of people suspected of crimes is not guaranteed.
The degree to which a state should be trusted with the death penalty is more or less inverse to how good it is at protecting the rights of the citizen and at not punishing the innocent in general. In practice, of course, most of the states that are good enough about these things that I would trust them with the death penalty are the same ones that refuse to use the death penalty in the first place... which is probably the strongest argument against my position- I have to admit the possibility that this is not a coincidence.
... so you don't actually disagree with my larger point.
Well that depends. Is your point about American politics, or about the ethics of the death penalty in general?
Themightytom wrote:Oh come on you're not trying to pass off attitude inoculation as agreement are you?? You added a little rider that one would have to be "loath to be directly responsible for their death" which implies moral cowardice.
I don't think it does. I am loath to be directly responsible for someone drowning to death; that does not mean I would be a coward for hauling them out of the water.
But under some circumstances, while it would not be moral cowardice to haul someone out of the water for any reasonable definition of "cowardice..." it would still be an incorrect or at least a questionable decision. As in the classic lifeboat scenario: at some point, my trying to save more people from drowning has bad consequences that I am not considering. But I don't call that cowardice and I don't think you shouldn't either.
In your case, I think that keeping the most incorrigible criminals alive has bad consequences that you are not considering. I think that you are letting a natural revulsion for something no one
desires to see happen blind you to the consequences of preventing it from happening.
That's ridiculous, it would take more moral fortitude to support an ongoing system of rehabilitation than a system that provides the quick and easy solution execution represents.
And yet this I take exception with. It does not always require more courage to favor a difficult solution than to favor an easy one. The fact that X is more work, or more unpleasant, than Y does not make X the braver solution to the problem. You can't buy "bravery credit" at a fixed exchange rate by arbitrarily making your task more difficult.
The question is: what's the point? You object to my having a deficit of "commitment to ideals." What ideal is being served here? Is the ideal "nobody dies, ever, and failing that all deaths are prolonged to the very limit of our civilization's ability to provide resources to stave them off?"
The ideal would be that crime is a reversible phenomenon, obviously, the result of behaviors that can be rehabilitated. Capitol punishment is pretty much "Nope, some people are beyond hope and too much trouble to keep around"
Capital.
Spelling nitpicks aside, this strikes me as an article of faith, and of a faith that I'm not sure I should choose to join. Taken by itself it's just a statement: all crime is reversible. Why do you believe that to be true?
Because at that point you fall prey to some of the same arguments raised in the euthanasia debate: quality of life issues. Is it worth burning every last penny of an old man's savings to keep him alive as his body shuts down around him and his mind falls apart at the seams, even if he himself wished it otherwise?
Well
why be afraid of that discussion?
Because it might undermine your argument? If you are not necessarily doing someone a favor by keeping them alive, it undermines the claim that we should always and forever strive to keep everyone alive by any means available.
It does not, however, undermine the article-of-faith claim that all crime is reversible. I wasn't expecting you to take that tack, not least because it struck me as a less compelling argument than "death is bad so we should avoid it whenever possible by any means necessary." I can understand being opposed to death on general principles. I cannot understand assuming that all crime is reversible on general principles.
That is a strawman as you have substituted a more elaborate means of incarceration for actual attempts at rehabilitation.
Given a hypothetical criminal who
likes to kill and will keep trying unless he is doped into near-insensibility, what form would such an attempt take?
There are mentally ill people who medical science cannot cure. I do not think we should assume that the potential of medical science is unlimited, that
all mental illnesses are curable.
I like that you bothered to scale the definition of sane to the relative population, but i don't see why you decided to use it with such a permanent connotation in reference to a rehabilitation scenario. Mental health follows an illness model. Someone who is "insane" can become sane again, and unfortunately vice versa. When you assert that "not every member of the species is sane enough" you are accepting a point in time assessment that again completely misses the core tenet of rehabilitation. your argument boils down to "insanity isn't reversible" and I would love to see you produce evidence of that. beyond the obvious, its not reversible if you execute them.
Not all physical illnesses are reversible, even if they do not kill the patient. Why should all mental illnesses be reversible?
But if the ideal here is just "nobody dies, ever..." well, I don't really have a lot of respect for that ideal, not when it puts us in situations that come out as a net utilitarian bad in any system that doesn't define death as infinite and utter evil that is worth paying any price to avoid.
You are talking an entirely different language from me. I said I don't see execution has having any value, not "death is evil."
I know. Instead your reasoning is something different, and frankly something I respect even less: an absolute faith in humanity's power to cure all ills. "Death is evil" may be irrational in some cases, but at least there's a core to it I can empathize with: death is
usually bad. But "we can fix everything!" doesn't have such a core: there is no other field of human endeavour where we turn out to be omnipotent if we just try hard enough, so I don't understand why you expect psychology to be the first.
Well it could be about that, but you've been seriously on about who "can" be rehabilitated and who "can't". What kinds of criminals are "too dangerous" which obviously begs the question as to which crimes are worse. You are arguing on two fronts here, quality of life during treatment, and risk management.
Yes, I am, because they're connected. If, to adequately manage the risk posed by a criminally insane person, we must place them under conditions so miserable that they might reasonably prefer death, AND if there is no real likelihood of their rehabilitation... then at some point, executing them becomes a utilitarian net good.
Rehabilitation is the main mission of a good prison system. But where rehabilitation isn't possible, the secondary goal must be neutralization: we must protect those we can rehabilitate (or those we don't need to) from those we can't rehabilitate. If keeping a prisoner neutralized requires placing them under pitiful conditions (locked in a cement box and pumped full of sedatives) at great expense, then, again, we're in a different situation.
Apparently we have moved into a situation where life has a dollar value now... so, quality of life, risk management, and expense are your objections.
Pretty much.
Keeping someone alive
and miserable at great expense may not be justified, because no one benefits. They aren't benefiting because they're no better off alive than they would be dead; we aren't benefiting because they aren't contributing anything (they're kept locked up in solitary under sedation, remember?) and we're having to pay for it anyway.
It's one thing to keep someone alive when they are
doing something, or might be doing something in the future, or are enjoying their life, or might enjoy it in the future. But when there is no prospect of their life ever being a net positive, either in terms of business OR in terms of pleasure, at that point, one has to wonder about the wisdom of expending resources to sustain life. Unless life is arbitrarily defined as an intrinsic good, such that the world is always better with more people in it no matter what, that has to stop making sense sooner or later.
Simon Jester wrote:Is that objectively true? Is that an accurate statement about reality, that we can treat every person in ways that will teach them not to behave badly? Or is that just an article of faith for you?
Thanks for wasting my time with a no true Scottsman fail. i don't have to prove that everyone in the world can be saved, I only have to prove that mental health treatment can be effective, in order to justify a model that proceeds on that assertion. because the your converse argument would be that execution is more effective treatment for the subject. Good luck with
that one...
Nonsense.
First of all, your claim that my argument is a "no true Scottsman fail" is blatant nonsense, because at no point have I claimed that you or your argument is not a "true" anything. Your argument is not part of a category. It stands or falls alone, on its own merits.
Second, proving that "mental health treatment can be effective, in order to justify a model that proceeds on that assertion" is absurdly vague.
Imagine, hypothetically, that there was a horrible disease that we could cure with a medicine when right-handed people had it, but that the medicine did not work on left-handed people. You would have to be a complete fool to say that "because the medicine is effective, we should use it on everyone." The medicine
is effective: it cures the disease in something like 90% of patients. But on the other 10% it is useless, and there is no conceivable reason to give them the medicine, because it does not work on them.
Likewise, mental health treatment may be effective on 90%, or 95%, or 99%, or even 99.999% of all patients... and yet still useless on the tiny minority remaining.
So when you say that you advocate "a model that proceeds on that assertion" that "mental health treatment can be effective," you are ignoring a critical point: that your model advocates keeping
all mentally ill people around for treatment, regardless of whether treatment works on them. Which makes your statement even more nonsensical, because it misrepresents your own position.
Third and finally, your argument that "because the your converse argument would be that execution is more effective treatment for the subject. Good luck with
that one..." is likewise nonsense, and not just because of its interesting grammatical content.
You completely overlook the fact that a treatment may be more effective
for society without being more effective
for the patient. For instance, in the 19th century, no one knew how to cure infectious diseases like scarlet fever. The usual response was "quarantine:" barring the patient from contact with others, for fear they would catch the disease. This was not effective for the patient: placing you under quarantine does not make you get well faster. But it
does affect the danger your illness presents to others, because they can't catch it from you if they aren't there.
Thus, quarantine is a very effective way to limit the damage caused by infectious diseases, while doing nothing whatsoever for the patients who already have them.
Likewise, execution is an extremely effective way to keep incorrigibly violent people from being violent, while doing nothing whatsoever for the incorrigibly violent person... except, perhaps, saving them from a long stint of being trapped in a cement box and pumped full of sedatives to no good effect.