Originally posted by alkuluku
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Originally posted by jason_c View PostWhich is why I said in all likelihood guilty, I did not say they were guilty beyond reasonable doubt. Legally a good lawyer could get them off. Morally the WM3 are miserable pieces of sh*t. Many of their supporters are little better. They have had no qualms about pointing the finger at one man who was certainly innocent, and another two who are almost certainly innocent.
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Originally posted by alkuluku View PostLet me guess. You're religious and dislike longhaired who dress in black?
This is going off-topic.
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Originally posted by barnflatwyngarde View PostIt seems to me that the an absolute prerequisite for wishing for the reintroduction of the death penalty is an overwhelming rage and hatred in those people who campaign for its reintroduction.
When Brady and Hindley were sentenced to life imprisonment, there was not the slightest chance of them ever being released into general society. So we need to ask ourselves what was the overriding emotion of those clamouring for their execution?
In my opinion the overriding emotions were those of a searing rage and hatred toward them.
There is no doubt that our judicial system is flawed in the way that very dangerous and evil criminals are allowed their freedom after a ridiculously short time in prison, but let us not allow this frustration drive us to even consider the barbarity of legalised murder.
It's very easy to be philosophical and 'liberal' when considering the murder of a stranger.
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Originally posted by Syclone View PostPat D. https://forum.casebook.org/core/imag...rt/reading.gif
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Von Konigswald: Jack the Ripper plays shuffleboard. -- Happy Birthday, Wanda June by Kurt Vonnegut, c.1970.
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Originally posted by Harry D View PostI've always liked the argument that only a complete and utter pacifist would oppose capital punishment. After all, invariably in war innocent lives will be lost but we don't let that stop us.
I have a cousin who is currently serving his last few years in the Israeli Army (he'll retire in three years after 30 years in).
We all believe in the military, because the Allies rescued members of my family from the Nazis, and just generally, we know people attack other people, and the strong have to defend the weak.
We are not pacifists, except that I suppose we do hope and pray for peace. We just know what humanity is capable of.
I still don't believe in the death penalty. Neither do most of the members of my family.
I have a lot of reasons, but my main one is that I think it punishes the family of the criminal more than the criminal himself. His troubles are over. But his mother, his siblings, his children, if he had them, they are scarred for life, and they are usually innocent parties to whatever the crime was.
Hell, even John Wayne Gacy's sister says she misses him.
And some people do lead productive lives in prison. The Manson women have led very productive lives, all things considered. I've not sure how well they'd function outside a strictly controlled environment, but they can function in prison.
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Originally posted by Syclone View Post
California has a high number of inmates, because it no longer performs executions, but still sentences people to death. It not longer can perform execution, because the DP stature requires the presence of a physician licensed in California, and the California Medical Ass'n has agreed not to serve in this capacity, so until the law is changed, there is a de facto moratorium.
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Originally posted by RivkahChaya View PostI have a lot of reasons, but my main one is that I think it punishes the family of the criminal more than the criminal himself. His troubles are over. But his mother, his siblings, his children, if he had them, they are scarred for life, and they are usually innocent parties to whatever the crime was.
Hell, even John Wayne Gacy's sister says she misses him.
And some people do lead productive lives in prison. The Manson women have led very productive lives, all things considered. I've not sure how well they'd function outside a strictly controlled environment, but they can function in prison.
I do support (if possible - and that is a big if) an intelligent use of the death penalty, as some figures (you mentioned Gacy for one) just deserve living at public expense until their body dies from natural causes. But it is rare for that situation to really occur (despite the effect of a sensation-driving media, the Gacys and Dahlmers and Bundys are the rare ones among killers, and note that Jeffrey Dahlmer went to life imprison, not execution, only to be killed by another prisoner).
But yes, the families of the condemned have to live with the stigma - if they are known as a result of the trial and condemnation.
When you mention how some killers sentenced to prison do end up leading productive lives, the most notable one was Robert Stroud, the "Birdman of Alcatraz" who became an expert on bird diseases. Another one was Nathan Leopold, who left prison in the 1950s, married, and became a nurse in Puerto Rico.
Jeff
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