Alphawolf55 wrote:Yeah but does it actually work? Norway for example has I believe a 21 year limit for sentencing with 30 for a crime against humanity and would anyone say they're less safe for it?
Again, I think it's not just about safety, it's about making a public commitment that there are 'ordinary' crimes and then there are unforgivable ones. That no, it is
not OK for Anders Breivik to get out of jail in 21 years after what he did, to take a high profile, recent, Norwegian example. That something like that is simply not within the bounds of what "our people" do.
ThomasP wrote:This is the retributive justice argument, and it has two points of view. One is the deterrence angle, which you note here, with a slant towards preventing crimes. The other is punishment-as-justice, where you "right" the wrongdoing in an Old Testament eye for an eye sense.
...not quite.
It's more subtle than that, I think: the idea that there is a class of exceptionally heinous people such that we define ourselves partly in terms of
not being like them. I think there is a legitimate social role for the idea of crimes great enough to exclude an individual from the body politic, for the sake of promoting a public morality which rejects those crimes.
Arguably this should be applied not just to mass murderers, but also to people who manage to cause nation-scale harm- if you can find the malefactors behind a big enough economic crisis, putting them in prison for life might be far from the worst way to establish for the record that your society
is committed to ensuring that the public good isn't overruled by merchant princes.
And this isn't limited to deterrence. For example, a nation with a custom of tyrannicide is protected not just against bold, ruthless people who might want to become a tyrant, but also weaves that into the traditions of the state- that arbitrary power is bad, that it is right to punish people for seeking it out, that the state will not bow to foreign tyrants any more than domestic ones.
It's the kind of insight that, well. I would call it conservatism, but it's not recognizable as the 21st century American right, or for that matter the global 'right wing.' I think there's a
reason to have irrecoverable punishments for severe crimes, although I'm happier if we have a punishment we can undo should the accused turn out to be innocent later.
It's not just to scare people straight, it's to define civil society and the state in opposition to the sort of people who do such things- which is all the better reason to do it to people who commit hate crimes.
A lot of our criminal justice principles derive from 18th and 19th century thinkers, names like Beccaria and Bentham and such, and are based on classical ideas of free will and rational choice. It makes perfect sense to use deterrence for crimes where rational choice factors in. But with the emerging view of neuroscience and psychology it's easily argued that crimes like murder, and especially a racially-motivated murder as in this case, have little if any involvement of "rational" thought processes.
In any population, you'll have some percentage of people who are biologically inclined not to respond to deterrence simply because their impulse control is impaired (clinical psychopaths) or because they have overactive sensation-seeking impulses (Zuckerman's sensation seekers). The concept of being caught and punished doesn't even enter the equation at the time of the offense, even if they are explicitly aware of it...
I don't care if they're afraid of being punished. I'm for punishing them for the salutary effect on
everyone else- and not in the "ooh we get to watch people be punished sense," either.
At some point, it's not just about individuals anymore, it's about societies.
Thanas wrote:The Duchess of Zeon wrote:Broomstick, my stance is based on the fact that numerous studies have shown that sustained deprivation of regular contact with other humans causes psychosis, and is therefore torture.
That sounds more like a criticism of the conditions in US prisons than of lifelong confinement in itself. Would you also say this about the EU programs of life sentences?
Her objections are to solitary confinement in particular, not lifelong confinement.
Broomstick wrote:Except that firing squad and/or guillotine would never be that quick and simple in the US. Carrying out a death sentence is quite ritualized (that's true of most cultures, not just the US). Any execution is proceeded by hours of ritual and procedure during which the condemned can suffer. It may start as early as the night before with a last meal.
I really don't understand why we need a three-part cocktail for lethal injection - simply administer a massive overdose of any anesthetic. Much simpler.
Unfortunately, they don't do it that for some reason- they strap you to a gurney and roll you around and hunt for veins and so on.
I think I see her argument- it's not just that there's so much ritual and protocol around executions, it's that the final phase of the ritual involves being tied up, manhandled, tied down, examined medically, forced to
wait for long periods, and so on. You want to minimize that as much as possible, to reduce the period during which the body is experiencing physical sensations of stress and fear and "oh shit I'm going to die" on top of the existing mental sensation of "oh shit I'm going to die."