Cap'n Cat wrote:grizzaholic wrote:
"Personally, I don't give two fucks. You get the death penalty, you die. SIMPLE. But bunny huggers like you wouldn't let that fly."


Cap'n Cat wrote:grizzaholic wrote:
"Personally, I don't give two fucks. You get the death penalty, you die. SIMPLE. But bunny huggers like you wouldn't let that fly."




We should be allowed to harvest the organs. I'm pretty sure the law currently prevents it, that law should be changed.89Hen wrote:I guess here's the second question... what is the benefit of capital punishment?

After seeing the OJ jury, I no longer trust juries. I realize that were not going to change the entire system, so we should continue to have juries as we do now, but I don't trust them with life and death decisions.Ivytalk wrote:I respectfully disagree. Juries are properly entrusted with the life- death decision, and defendants are protected if the required vote is unanimity or a supermajority. In Delaware, IIRC, there 's a statute allowing judges to make the decision if the non- unanimous jury vote is at a certain level. It's rarely used. There 's no evidence that judges are better able to evaluate the required " aggravating factors" than a jury. I'm for the death penalty.BlueHen86 wrote:
The standard to convict is "beyond a reasonable doubt". If we're going to have the death penalty the standard should be beyond any doubt. I also wouldn't trust the decision to a typical jury. Let the jury decide on guilt or innocence, but let a panel of judges review the evidence and make the decision on whether or not to execute.



Cap, if you want to argue for establishing some principle whereby a woman can do whatever she wants with whatever is in her body, that's fine. I would disagree with you but that's the way it goes.Cap'n Cat wrote:Bullshit. It is a fetus, nothing more than a gallbladder, inside the body of a voting, tax-paying member of society. It's her body, her choice.
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Cap'n Cat wrote:Bullshit. It is a fetus, nothing more than a gallbladder, inside the body of a voting, tax-paying member of society. It's her body, her orifice.
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But a black robe and a law degree guarantee no better decision. From a defense perspective, 12 votes are better than one.BlueHen86 wrote:After seeing the OJ jury, I no longer trust juries. I realize that were not going to change the entire system, so we should continue to have juries as we do now, but I don't trust them with life and death decisions.Ivytalk wrote: I respectfully disagree. Juries are properly entrusted with the life- death decision, and defendants are protected if the required vote is unanimity or a supermajority. In Delaware, IIRC, there 's a statute allowing judges to make the decision if the non- unanimous jury vote is at a certain level. It's rarely used. There 's no evidence that judges are better able to evaluate the required " aggravating factors" than a jury. I'm for the death penalty.

The Gallbladder will never breath air, learn, live a full life contributing to the tapestry of humanity, unlike the fetus, which miraculously will grow and become a geriatric doctor...Cap'n Cat wrote:Bullshit. It is a fetus, nothing more than a gallbladder, inside the body of a voting, tax-paying member of society. It's her body, her choice.
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Face it, John: you don't trust any facet of the legal system. None. And your posts prove it. You don't trust judges or juries. The judiciary remains the least dangerous branch. Alex Bickel was right.JohnStOnge wrote:I was against it when I was young based on the "if even one innocent person is executed" outlook then changed my mind. But when I changed my mind the caveat was that it should be applied in a way that had a reasonable chance to make it a deterrent. The idea was that if properly applied it could reduce the probability of being a victim of a captial crime and that your probability of being falsely executed would be "made up for" by through reduction in the probability that you'd be a victim of a capital crime.
Lately it's been more difficult because I do not have as much faith in the "accuracy" of the American legal system as I used to. I have come to believe that we have an unacceptably high rate of false convictions. Prosecutors, I think, look at convictions as trophies and I do not trust their objectivity in general. Not saying every prosecutor is suspect but I've seen too many instances in which they do things like try to keep DNA evidence that might exonerate previously convicted people from being examined. I've gotten the impression that some of them are more concerned about not being proven wrong than they are about finding the truth.
The scary thing is that we have absolutely no way to validate the "accuracy" of our judicial system. We have no idea as to the proportion of instances in which the guilty go free or or the proportion of instances in which the innocent are convicted. We all kind of live under the assumption that it is a reliable system. But we don't really know
What we DO know is that our system has convicted innocent people. Absolutely no doubt about that.


There is no such thing as a reliable deterrance study. LE academics know this, but you don't, apparently.dbackjon wrote:T-man - can you show me deterance studies?

Yeah, I'm pro-life so I have a hard time voting for republicans who support the death penalty but I can't support Democrats who want to keep abortion legal.Rob Iola wrote:Never understood people who are pro-life but in favor of the death penalty, or pro-choice but against the death penalty.
I don't shed tears when cop killers or baby killers or the OK City bomber or the DC sniper (experienced that one first hand) are executed, but:
Fundamentally since I'm pro-life I'm against the death penalty.
Pragmatically, if even 1 innocent person is executed that's too many.
Spiritually, where do you draw the line between a person who can redeem/rehabilitate themselves and a mad dog that you put down?
I say replace the death penalty with a cell at ADX Florence...


I agree.Cluck U wrote:Kill them. Cook them and feed their parts to the dogs.
The argument that capital punishment is too expensive is absolute bullshit. It has been made expensive by the very tarts that oppose it.


grizzaholic wrote:I agree.Cluck U wrote:Kill them. Cook them and feed their parts to the dogs.
The argument that capital punishment is too expensive is absolute bullshit. It has been made expensive by the very tarts that oppose it.



A fucking shame that you don't have an opinion, can't properly express an opinion, or that you dismiss any opinions that don't agree with you?Skjellyfetti wrote:What a fucking shame.
Not when her choice infringes on the liberty and incomes of others.Cap'n Cat wrote:Bullshit. It is a fetus, nothing more than a gallbladder, inside the body of a voting, tax-paying member of society. It's her body, her choice.
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Who are you to justify what "society" does based on your matters of principle? You only have to justify your own actions. And sweetie, justice is all about vengence...punishment in retaliation for an injury or offense.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:I'm against it. On general principle. I don't believe there is any justice in vengeance. While personally there are times where I'd love nothing more than to see someone die for the horrible things they've done, I cannot justify society killing someone for a crime - no matter how heinous, as a matter of principle.
While that can be tough to accept sometimes, especially when the emotions of a particular case run high - those are the moments when we need to turn to a system that is rooted in a principle of justice rather than vengeance.
It's all fine and well to talk tough and adopt a Dirty Harry attitude about it all, because in the abstract you are never the one standing accused, perhaps falsely, of a crime.

We live in a civil society - we make collective decisions based on shared interest. When we as a society tell people not to commit murder, then sanction murder and call it "justice" we undermine that message.Cluck U wrote:Who are you to justify what "society" does based on your matters of principle? You only have to justify your own actions. And sweetie, justice is all about vengence...punishment in retaliation for an injury or offense.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:I'm against it. On general principle. I don't believe there is any justice in vengeance. While personally there are times where I'd love nothing more than to see someone die for the horrible things they've done, I cannot justify society killing someone for a crime - no matter how heinous, as a matter of principle.
While that can be tough to accept sometimes, especially when the emotions of a particular case run high - those are the moments when we need to turn to a system that is rooted in a principle of justice rather than vengeance.
It's all fine and well to talk tough and adopt a Dirty Harry attitude about it all, because in the abstract you are never the one standing accused, perhaps falsely, of a crime.![]()
You decide to jail people for life their offenses...others prefer that those guilty of the worst of crimes be executed. Different strokes, but don't pretend that you are not handing out a form of vengence.![]()
Without justice/vengence, one would just turn the other cheek.
JSO once posted some quip about a person making a pact with the Devil about not being able to die...so that person spent eternity in prison...and the story went that he would rather die than spend his life in a box. Oddly enough, JSO says he is against the death penalty. The way I read his story is that life in prison is worse than death...so it is more cruel to keep a person caged than it is to end his life, so if the guy is innocent or guilty, you are doing him no favors in keeping him alive.
Kill them and be done with it. There is zero chance of escape, no chance for the person to commit another crime, no chance that the creep will spread his craft to other prisoners who will get out on parole, and there is less of an expense to the taxpayer.
We executed Bin Laden...yes we did...and most people cheered.![]()

Here's how our jury scenario was laid out:ASUG8 wrote:If you aren't in Texas, by the time you exhaust your appeals it can be 15+ yrs until your execution which for some equals a life sentence. I was once on a jury where we convicted a guy for murder and recommended lethal injection and he's still around today and I've never felt a moment's remorse for voting that way. After seeing how long it takes despite how horrific his crimes I'm not sure if my stance has maybe softened a bit.
One thing I really don't get are the concurrent life sentences or consecutive life sentences.