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Gabu
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« Reply #25 on: December 17, 2006, 04:02:49 PM »

The death penalty is like Raid for murderers.  It kills them -- dead.  No need to worry about those cockroaches further after that.

The thing about the death penalty is that it's Raid for everyone who gets convicted, not just for murderers.  The main issue I have with it is the fact that you can't exactly go "oops, we screwed up" if you execute a guy and then find out he was innocent.  I think far too many conservatives simply take it as a given that convincted people are definitely guilty and never even consider the fact that a guy on death row might not have done what he was accused of.

If you have 100% conclusive proof beyond a shadow of a doubt, fine, but with any less strong proof, I would be very wary at using the death penalty.  If you're scared about a guy getting parole, then make it harder to get parole.  It's not a dichotomy between killing the person and setting him free.
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Alcon
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« Reply #26 on: December 17, 2006, 04:04:20 PM »

My personal pleasure in seeing justice served.  And I would prefer to use execution methods discarded over the past half-century.

That's disgusting.

Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would.

Pleasure is less important than seeing justice is served (which includes, if the man happens to be innocent, having room for his release) and not giving them the easy way out. 

My personal pleasure in seeing justice served.  And I would prefer to use execution methods discarded over the past half-century.
What, do you have some kind of torture fetish?

What, do you have some sort of attraction to convicted murderers?   

Oh, come on, you know what a load of crap that is.  Supporting life imprisonment instead of the death penalty means you have an "attraction to convicted murderers"?  How the hell does that work?

It's rather annoying when death penalty supporters claim that their position is the only anti-crime one, without explaining how life in prison is "easier."
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Alcon
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« Reply #27 on: December 17, 2006, 04:07:26 PM »
« Edited: December 17, 2006, 04:09:55 PM by Alcon »

The death penalty is like Raid for murderers.  It kills them -- dead.  No need to worry about those cockroaches further after that.

The thing about the death penalty is that it's Raid for everyone who gets convicted, not just for murderers.  The main issue I have with it is the fact that you can't exactly go "oops, we screwed up" if you execute a guy and then find out he was innocent.  I think far too many conservatives simply take it as a given that convincted people are definitely guilty and never even consider the fact that a guy on death row might not have done what he was accused of.

If you have 100% conclusive proof beyond a shadow of a doubt, fine, but with any less strong proof, I would be very wary at using the death penalty.  If you're scared about a guy getting parole, then make it harder to get parole.  It's not a dichotomy between killing the person and setting him free.

Unless you have 100% conclusive proof beyond the shadow of a (reasonable) doubt, you aren't supposed to convict of murder in the first place.  There is no higher standard of guiltiness applied to the death penalty; only of heinousness.  There is no real way that a higher standard could be applied.

There have been documented cases where innocent people have been killed.  Radelet found that at least 23 innocent people were put to death since 1900; in addition, 119 people were released from Death Row since 1973.

I don't care about the catharsis that people get from seeing people put to death.  That's too many innocent lives.  Period.  Once one innocent person is put to death, the "let's see justice done" attitude that many here encourage goes from noble to potentially dangerous, in my mind.

Oh, and by the way, I wouldn't really feel "immense pleasure," Frodo.  Because killing that man would do nothing but end a virtually meaningless life.  It wouldn't bring back the dead.  It wouldn't have any meaning beyond basic gut instinct to see those we hate hurt.  And I can suspend my more animalistic tendencies in favour of what I know is right.
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Gabu
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« Reply #28 on: December 17, 2006, 04:11:18 PM »

Unless you have 100% conclusive proof beyond the shadow of a (reasonable) doubt

I didn't mean beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard for a usual conviction; I meant beyond virtually any doubt.
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Frodo
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« Reply #29 on: December 17, 2006, 04:12:32 PM »

My personal pleasure in seeing justice served.  And I would prefer to use execution methods discarded over the past half-century.

That's disgusting.

Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would.

Pleasure is less important than seeing justice is served (which includes, if the man happens to be innocent, having room for his release) and not giving them the easy way out.

How can you be so sure that putting them to death would be the 'easy way out'?  I'm sure deep-down they rather fear being put to death would be a swifter way of sending them into the eternal torment of hell, as opposed to to spending the rest of their earthly lives rotting in a prison at taxpayer expense.  Neither is pleasant, but one is a lesser evil than the other.   

My personal pleasure in seeing justice served.  And I would prefer to use execution methods discarded over the past half-century.
What, do you have some kind of torture fetish?

What, do you have some sort of attraction to convicted murderers?   

Oh, come on, you know what a load of crap that is.  Supporting life imprisonment instead of the death penalty means you have an "attraction to convicted murderers"?  How the hell does that work?

I was being deliberately a jerk -surely you would have known that. 

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I already have. 
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Alcon
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« Reply #30 on: December 17, 2006, 04:16:59 PM »

Unless you have 100% conclusive proof beyond the shadow of a (reasonable) doubt

I didn't mean beyond a reasonable doubt, which is the standard for a usual conviction; I meant beyond virtually any doubt.

But how can we ask that a jury and judge distinguish between "beyond reasonable doubt" and "virtually any doubt"?  That's kind of a tall order.  Having a judge say that something is "beyond reasonable doubt" but NOT beyond "virtually any doubt" is kind of setting up for a reversal of conviction.  And, frankly, how much of a difference is there?

Would someone who had already extended to "beyond a reasonable doubt" have all that much trouble in virtually every case of extending it to "virtually any doubt"?  I can't really think of an instance where I wouldn't.

How can you be so sure that putting them to death would be the 'easy way out'?  I'm sure deep-down they rather fear being put to death would be a swifter way of sending them into the eternal torment of hell, as opposed to to spending the rest of their earthly lives rotting in a prison at taxpayer expense.  Neither is pleasant, but one is a lesser evil than the other.

With appeals, it costs the taxpayers more to send someone to death, if I recall correctly.

And how is 70 years in jail followed by forever in Hell any better than immediate forever in Hell?  Of course, this is kind of a moot point for those who may not believe in Heaven and Hell.  Some of us more agnostic folk might like to assure that they have their torture while the torture is hot, so to speak.

And again, what about the innocents?

I was being deliberately a jerk -surely you would have known that.

Sorry, that's why I was kicking around your ass a little - I thought that was a bit out of character for you.  Tongue
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Gabu
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« Reply #31 on: December 17, 2006, 04:19:06 PM »
« Edited: December 17, 2006, 04:20:59 PM by Gabu »

But how can we ask that a jury and judge distinguish between "beyond reasonable doubt" and "virtually any doubt"?  That's kind of a tall order.  Having a judge say that something is "beyond reasonable doubt" but NOT beyond "virtually any doubt" is kind of setting up for a reversal of conviction.

Well, if it's beyond reasonable doubt but not beyond virtually any doubt, the guy gets a life sentence rather than death, simple as that.  I'm not suggesting you let the guy go free if you can't put him to death.

The picture I have in my mind is some nutcase who goes on a rampaging killing spree, admits to it, expresses pleasure in having done it, and says that he'd do it again if he had the chance.  I have no problem with killing someone like that.  For me, the sentence isn't even so much about punishment for the criminal; it's about the safety of the public, and that includes striking some sort of balance between ridding the world for good of unrepentent murderers who obviously are guilty and yet not killing people who might be innocent.
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Alcon
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« Reply #32 on: December 17, 2006, 04:21:10 PM »

But how can we ask that a jury and judge distinguish between "beyond reasonable doubt" and "virtually any doubt"?  That's kind of a tall order.  Having a judge say that something is "beyond reasonable doubt" but NOT beyond "virtually any doubt" is kind of setting up for a reversal of conviction.

Well, if it's beyond reasonable doubt but not beyond virtually any doubt, the guy gets a life sentence rather than death, simple as that.  I'm not suggesting you let the guy go free if you can't put him to death.

The picture I have in my mind is some nutcase who goes on a rampaging killing spree, admits to it, expresses pleasure in having done it, and says that he'd do it again if he had the chance.  I have no problem with killing someone like that.

I'd certainly have a lot more qualms there, although I still have a moral qualm with the state being sanctioned to kill as they see fit.

But certainly, that would address all the other issues.  But that's definitely not how the system is instituted right now.
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Gabu
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« Reply #33 on: December 17, 2006, 04:22:43 PM »

But certainly, that would address all the other issues.  But that's definitely not how the system is instituted right now.

Well, yeah, it's not.  I'm not arguing that the death penalty is okay right now.  I certainly don't think it is, and I was illustrating something along the lines of what I think would make it better, although the details are, of course, sketchy, given that I'm not a lawmaker.
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Alcon
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« Reply #34 on: December 17, 2006, 04:25:36 PM »

Hmmm. Interesting question. I guess I'm more for a punishment that will make 100% sure that evil criminals will never hurt anyone again. My intense dislike for rapists and child predators must be a holdover from my days as a conservative.

And...by the way...I don't want to go back to an old post that I've already replied to, but again, just because I don't like the death penalty doesn't mean my hatred for rapists and child predators is any less intense.  Tongue
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Ebowed
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« Reply #35 on: December 17, 2006, 04:25:58 PM »

Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would. 

Why would you do anything with the pieces?  He's already dead by that point.

Unless you're some sort of necrophiliac.
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Frodo
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« Reply #36 on: December 17, 2006, 04:27:36 PM »

How can you be so sure that putting them to death would be the 'easy way out'?  I'm sure deep-down they rather fear being put to death would be a swifter way of sending them into the eternal torment of hell, as opposed to to spending the rest of their earthly lives rotting in a prison at taxpayer expense.  Neither is pleasant, but one is a lesser evil than the other.

With appeals, it costs the taxpayers more to send someone to death, if I recall correctly.

I'd like to see that study or article.

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Well, why do we fear death?  We do all we can to prevent it, and to extend our lives as much as possible so as to forestall the inevitable.   

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For those of us that do believe in them, whether you believe in it or not is irrelevant -the fact of the matter is they exist for the believers and the non-believers alike.

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I support any measures necessary to weed out the guilty from the innocent, as would any other (mainstream) death penalty proponent. 

I was being deliberately a jerk -surely you would have known that.

Sorry, that's why I was kicking around your ass a little - I thought that was a bit out of character for you.  Tongue

Glad we got that all cleared up. 
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Frodo
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« Reply #37 on: December 17, 2006, 04:28:54 PM »

Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would.

Why would you do anything with the pieces?  He's already dead by that point.

Unless you're some sort of necrophiliac.

Huh? 
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Alcon
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« Reply #38 on: December 17, 2006, 04:33:46 PM »

I'd like to see that study or article.

Gladly.

Well, why do we fear death?  We do all we can to prevent it, and to extend our lives as much as possible so as to forestall the inevitable.

And we don't fear being trapped the same way?  Death is only more frightening on one scale because it is immediate.  Personally, I would rather die than spend 70 years in isolation.  Who wouldn't?  Death is quicker.

For those of us that do believe in them, whether you believe in it or not is irrelevant -the fact of the matter is they exist for the believers and the non-believers alike.

Moving on, since you're arguing personal religious beliefs with no factual basis.

I support any measures necessary to weed out the guilty from the innocent, as would any other (mainstream) death penalty proponent.

That's a non-answer.  Either account for the 100+ people who have been wrongly killed, or admit that you have no solution.
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Ebowed
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« Reply #39 on: December 17, 2006, 04:36:52 PM »

Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would.

Why would you do anything with the pieces?  He's already dead by that point.

Unless you're some sort of necrophiliac.

Huh? 

Sorry, I misunderstood your post.

Either way, how do you get immense pleasure from any sort of execution?  How many cases are there like you just described?  How come countries with no capital punishment seem to get along just fine?

When you capture an arsonist, you don't go and burn his house down; when you capture a rapist, the warden doesn't rape him; when you capture a pedophile, you don't molest his own children.  Why is there such a fascination with killing a captured killer?
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Sam Spade
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« Reply #40 on: December 17, 2006, 04:41:22 PM »

Main issue I have with life imprisonment right now is that criminals have access to many leisure activities, and even though they are separated from society, they are treated extremely well and many of them do have private interaction with other people.  For all the complaints of Amnesty International (other idiots, etc.), American prisoners have some of the best conditions in the world (you should see what the French prisoners get, for example; of course they don't stay in prison very long).

I would be fine with a system with no death penalty that made the murderers work in manual labor 15-16 hours a day with no leisure activities, on basic food and water and base sleeping conditions, with no interpersonal activity. (and probably a little torture too Smiley). 

But that's not going to happen because of one major reason:  The USSC would probably rule it unconstitutional due to violation of the 8th Amendment "cruel and unusual punishment" provision.

So, the alternative is clearly better, first because talk and references to the death penalty in the Constitution are numerous (and are therefore unlikely to be viewed as immaterial), unless we get more Brennans or Marshalls on the court (egads!), and because death is never a nice thing for a prisoner.  I doubt it's a way out except for only the weirdest criminal minds and most of those people would have committed suicide at one point or another, anyway, so its no loss.
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Alcon
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« Reply #41 on: December 17, 2006, 04:47:43 PM »

Main issue I have with life imprisonment right now is that criminals have access to many leisure activities, and even though they are separated from society, they are treated extremely well and many of them do have private interaction with other people.  For all the complaints of Amnesty International (other idiots, etc.), American prisoners have some of the best conditions in the world (you should see what the French prisoners get, for example; of course they don't stay in prison very long).

I would be fine with a system with no death penalty that made the murderers work in manual labor 15-16 hours a day with no leisure activities, on basic food and water and base sleeping conditions, with no interpersonal activity. (and probably a little torture too Smiley). 

But that's not going to happen because of one major reason:  The USSC would probably rule it unconstitutional due to violation of the 8th Amendment "cruel and unusual punishment" provision.

So, the alternative is clearly better, first because talk and references to the death penalty in the Constitution are numerous (and are therefore unlikely to be viewed as immaterial), unless we get more Brennans or Marshalls on the court (egads!), and because death is never a nice thing for a prisoner.  I doubt it's a way out except for only the weirdest criminal minds and most of those people would have committed suicide at one point or another, anyway, so its no loss.

Again, you're working on the assumption that everyone subjected to the death penalty is innocent.  And you are ignoring the fact that most people who get the death penalty stay on Death Row for much of their lives.  But without that, we'd have fewer appeals, fewer opportunities to make sure justice was served and - as a result - more innocents killed.  Either way, the death penalty is going to end up costing more, whether it be money or innocent lives.

The 15-16 hours a day thing sounds fine; torture, not so much.  15-16 hours plus isolation with no leisure is enough to instill misery.  Not because I don't hate the guilty, mind you, but because of the potential for innocent.
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« Reply #42 on: December 17, 2006, 06:24:50 PM »


Wouldn't you feel immense pleasure and satisfaction watching a man who butchered his mom, raped his baby sister, and then cut them into little pieces, and froze them in a freezer swinging from the gallows on a wire or being fried in an electric chair?  I would. 
 

I'd rather see our society not create the kind of people that would do those horrible things.  And I'd be especially disturbed to see men or women swinging from the gallows on a wire if they were innocent and only convicted due to racism.
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Beet
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« Reply #43 on: December 17, 2006, 06:42:02 PM »

I guess I'm more for a punishment that will make 100% sure that evil criminals will never hurt anyone again.

Are there statistics on how many convicts have escaped from life imprisonment/solitary confinement and escaped to kill again? It seems like an unlikely proposition.

I don't know the statistics, but I have seen cases in the news in which a liberal judge has overturned a life sentence and ordered the release of a convicted murderer, and not on the grounds of actual innocence.

One recent case was a man who murdered a Lodi, NJ police officer in 1963.  He was supposed to get the death penalty, but that was commuted in exchange for a life sentence.  A liberal judge ordered his release.  Disgraceful.

Charles Manson could be released on parole if they got a liberal enough parole board who would buy into whatever garbage reason was being put forth for his release.  The fact that he, who was also sentenced to death, should even be considered for parole is disgraceful.  What is the point of a life sentence for a mass murderer if parole is going to be considered?  And what good is a life sentence under those circumstances?

The death penalty is like Raid for murderers.  It kills them -- dead.  No need to worry about those cockroaches further after that.

Dazzleman it seems like you're trying to either use the death penalty as a blunt instrument to fix problems you perceive in the parole system, or use problems in the parole system as an excuse to keep the death penalty. I don't think that's possible. Only a small fraction of violent criminals end up on death row anyways, so unless we start executing people in Chinese numbers it wouldn't be possible to fix any systemic problems in the parole system via the death penalty. Nor do I think the death penalty should be used for that purpose. Any problems in the parole system ought to be dealt with directly.

Also, this argumentation-by-anecdote that characterizes the conservative movement is one of the more negative trends in political dialogue in recent decades, because you can find an anecdote to prove just about anything. Anecdotes are simple little stories that jingle around in your head like a commercial tune, and they make for great political meme starters. I think Ronald Reagan was the first to master this kind of rhetoric and conservatives have been emulating him over it ever since. But the replacement of argumentation with anecdote is condescending, misleading-- especially if you don't have the statistics to back it up-- and may not even be truthful on its own terms.
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Kevin
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« Reply #44 on: December 17, 2006, 09:35:59 PM »

I guess I'm more for a punishment that will make 100% sure that evil criminals will never hurt anyone again.

Are there statistics on how many convicts have escaped from life imprisonment/solitary confinement and escaped to kill again? It seems like an unlikely proposition.

I don't know the statistics, but I have seen cases in the news in which a liberal judge has overturned a life sentence and ordered the release of a convicted murderer, and not on the grounds of actual innocence.

One recent case was a man who murdered a Lodi, NJ police officer in 1963.  He was supposed to get the death penalty, but that was commuted in exchange for a life sentence.  A liberal judge ordered his release.  Disgraceful.

Charles Manson could be released on parole if they got a liberal enough parole board who would buy into whatever garbage reason was being put forth for his release.  The fact that he, who was also sentenced to death, should even be considered for parole is disgraceful.  What is the point of a life sentence for a mass murderer if parole is going to be considered?  And what good is a life sentence under those circumstances?

The death penalty is like Raid for murderers.  It kills them -- dead.  No need to worry about those cockroaches further after that.

Dazzleman it seems like you're trying to either use the death penalty as a blunt instrument to fix problems you perceive in the parole system, or use problems in the parole system as an excuse to keep the death penalty. I don't think that's possible. Only a small fraction of violent criminals end up on death row anyways, so unless we start executing people in Chinese numbers it wouldn't be possible to fix any systemic problems in the parole system via the death penalty. Nor do I think the death penalty should be used for that purpose. Any problems in the parole system ought to be dealt with directly.

Also, this argumentation-by-anecdote that characterizes the conservative movement is one of the more negative trends in political dialogue in recent decades, because you can find an anecdote to prove just about anything. Anecdotes are simple little stories that jingle around in your head like a commercial tune, and they make for great political meme starters. I think Ronald Reagan was the first to master this kind of rhetoric and conservatives have been emulating him over it ever since. But the replacement of argumentation with anecdote is condescending, misleading-- especially if you don't have the statistics to back it up-- and may not even be truthful on its own terms.

The system is pretty much effective. If we woory about exacuting the wrong guy then I think we should do more DNA tests to confirm the condemed person's guilt. 
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Alcon
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« Reply #45 on: December 17, 2006, 09:40:38 PM »

The system is pretty much effective. If we woory about exacuting the wrong guy then I think we should do more DNA tests to confirm the condemed person's guilt. 

Again, your argument is misplaced.  There is not a higher standard for conviction than for sentencing to death, and it would be almost impossible to make one.
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Emsworth
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« Reply #46 on: December 17, 2006, 10:37:01 PM »

Why is parole such a horrible thing? I would, in fact, advocate the complete abolition of life without parole. Every prisoner should be eligible for (but not automatically entitled to) parole. Firstly, this gives the prisoner some incentive to behave appropriately in prison. If he has even a faint glimmer of hope for freedom, then he is much less likely to misbehave. Secondly, if the prisoner truly has been rehabilitated, and is not going to produce any further harm to society (a fact to be determined by the parole board), then there is clearly no reason to force him to remain in prison. And if he hasn't been rehabilitated, then there is still no harm in allowing him to at least apply for parole, and be denied.
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John Dibble
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« Reply #47 on: December 18, 2006, 12:41:46 AM »

Frankly I couldn't give a crap about about the death penalty as a form of 'justice' when it comes down to it. Don't get me wrong, I like it when people reap what they sow, but the end goal of the justice system to me is to remove dangerous people from society at large and deter others from further victimizing the innocent. (whether the death penalty is a sufficient deterrent is another argument) For the cases where the death penalty would be justifiably applicable, at the very least it results in the criminal not being a threat to anyone anymore. Life in prison without parole is pretty close to that as well. After the goal of removing the threat is met, you can discuss the finer details of what constitutes a just punishment all you like, but removing the threat is more important to me.
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HardRCafé
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« Reply #48 on: December 18, 2006, 03:10:48 AM »

I was drunk when I gave that response, so forgive me.....Tongue

There are some people that I can actually see taking that position....that's the scary part....Tongue

I am sarcastic here much more than I would like.  I guess I should just be glad no one agreed aloud.
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Beet
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« Reply #49 on: December 18, 2006, 06:25:46 PM »

I guess I'm more for a punishment that will make 100% sure that evil criminals will never hurt anyone again.

Are there statistics on how many convicts have escaped from life imprisonment/solitary confinement and escaped to kill again? It seems like an unlikely proposition.

I don't know the statistics, but I have seen cases in the news in which a liberal judge has overturned a life sentence and ordered the release of a convicted murderer, and not on the grounds of actual innocence.

One recent case was a man who murdered a Lodi, NJ police officer in 1963.  He was supposed to get the death penalty, but that was commuted in exchange for a life sentence.  A liberal judge ordered his release.  Disgraceful.

Charles Manson could be released on parole if they got a liberal enough parole board who would buy into whatever garbage reason was being put forth for his release.  The fact that he, who was also sentenced to death, should even be considered for parole is disgraceful.  What is the point of a life sentence for a mass murderer if parole is going to be considered?  And what good is a life sentence under those circumstances?

The death penalty is like Raid for murderers.  It kills them -- dead.  No need to worry about those cockroaches further after that.

Dazzleman it seems like you're trying to either use the death penalty as a blunt instrument to fix problems you perceive in the parole system, or use problems in the parole system as an excuse to keep the death penalty. I don't think that's possible. Only a small fraction of violent criminals end up on death row anyways, so unless we start executing people in Chinese numbers it wouldn't be possible to fix any systemic problems in the parole system via the death penalty. Nor do I think the death penalty should be used for that purpose. Any problems in the parole system ought to be dealt with directly.

Also, this argumentation-by-anecdote that characterizes the conservative movement is one of the more negative trends in political dialogue in recent decades, because you can find an anecdote to prove just about anything. Anecdotes are simple little stories that jingle around in your head like a commercial tune, and they make for great political meme starters. I think Ronald Reagan was the first to master this kind of rhetoric and conservatives have been emulating him over it ever since. But the replacement of argumentation with anecdote is condescending, misleading-- especially if you don't have the statistics to back it up-- and may not even be truthful on its own terms.

Enough anecdotes put together can form or illustrate a trend.

Nope. I'd rather have the hard facts, or statistical inference at a minimum. Intention isn't the issue here.

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If people already believed those things there would be no need for Reagan-or anyone- to repeat them. And the so called 'judical outrages' are actually enlightened decisions by highly educated individuals insulated from the hue and cry of the mob, which stepped in to protect civil liberties and equal justice when the so-called system would not.
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