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We must pay the price of keeping the streets safe.
No. No no no. People who think this way terrify me; nothing should justify the death of an innocent person at the hands of the state. It is a very slippery slope from there.
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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
We must pay the price of keeping the streets safe.
'ultraviolet' is lowercase, if you please c:Pwnemon said:Well, it's directed at Ultraviolet...
that's not at all what I'm claming; I'm saying that you can't possibly use 'that's the way it's always been!' as an argument for human rights. if you use this logic that if something's 'always been that way, it shouldn't be changed', then you're also advocating slavery, sexism, racism and all kinds of things that 'always were'. I assume that you don't support any of those things - but you can't use that argument to support the death penalty but not slavery.Pwnemon said:...claiming that we should change the principle of popular sovereignty just because it has always been that way.
Of course, Pwnemon is wrong
how nice. please answer the question.Well, it's directed at Ultraviolet claiming that we should change the principle of popular sovereignty just because it has always been that way.
I don't really believe that "We pay that price for keeping the streets clean," for heaven's sakes I'm the one arguing against the government having hardly much power at all. But honestly, if we've put one innocent person on death row, that's a fault of our legal system and the only thing that could stop condemning the innocent is the invention of a truth serum or the discontinuation of criminal justice.
The fact of death versus life in prison is all that you seem to care about here, but I see two specific times in which "A life in prison is hardly different from death" (Where you still haven't responded to my claim that it's actually fifteen or forty years) and that "The average time on death row is 12-14 years." You can't argue those two points and then turn around and say that an Incorrect sentence for life in prison is so much worse than one for death.
I could also say you can't condemn the Tea Party for a few nutcases on display and turn around and say not to condemn Muslims for a few nutcases on display but that is for a different thread.
Whoopsie NWT to answer the question change g the constitution =\= bad but trampling on it = bad.
Criminals definitely get sentenced to jail for life without parole in the U.S. (for example, the Unabomber is currently doing so). "Life sentence" might be a euphemism for a shorter time period, but there are also actual life sentences.(Where you still haven't responded to my claim that it's actually fifteen or forty years) and that "The average time on death row is 12-14 years."
I don't know what you're trying to say here. Can you rephrase this?You can't argue those two points and then turn around and say that an Incorrect sentence for life in prison is so much worse than one for death.
That was half the point of my argument; that you'll most likely still have twelve to fourteen years for new evidence to surface. If it doesn't by then, chances are it won't.
PREMISE #1: in the past, evidence has turned up decades later that has gotten people out of both life sentences and death sentences
PREMISE #2: on a per-year basis, keeping people on life sentences is much cheaper than keeping them on death row
CLAIM: because evidence is unlikely to turn up, a few government-executed innocents is a-okay
ARGUMENT(S) A: The death penalty is racist. Or; The death penalty punishes the poor.
These are basically the same argument. What it boils down to is "the death penalty is not applied fairly." This cannot be an argument against the death penalty. If it were, then it would be an argument against all punishments. To argue that the death penalty is to be abolished because it is not fairly imposed is to admit that if it were imposed fairly it would be okay. This is not an argument against the death penalty but an argument to improve the justice system. Is the system unfair? Fix it. What is unfair is not that the black and poor prisoners get what they deserve. What is unfair is that the rich and white prisoners do not.
June 6, 2001- Justice Department finds that there is no bias in application of death penalty.
ARGUMENT B: The death penalty is not a deterrent against violent crime.
The death penalty as a deterrent to crime is not the issue. Capital punishment is, pardon the redundancy, a punishment for crime. As a punishment, the death penalty is 100% effective--every time it is used, the prisoner dies.
Additionally, the death penalty is actually 100% effective as a deterrent to crime: the murderer will never commit another crime once he has been executed. While there is no proof that any innocents have been executed in this century, there is an abundance of evidence that prisoners who either escaped or were released early murdered innocent victims again. Professor Paul Cassell points out that:
"Out of a sample of 164 paroled Georgia murderers, eight committed subsequent murders within seven years of release. A study of twenty Oregon murderers released on parole in 1979 found that one (i.e., five percent) had committed a subsequent homicide within five years of release. Another study found that of 11,404 persons originally convicted of "willful homicide" and released during 1965 and 1974, 34 were returned to prison for commission of a subsequent criminal homicide during the first year alone.
Even those who are not released but still serve life terms murder again. Cassell further notes that, "At least five federal prison officers have been killed since December 1982, and the inmates in at least three of the incidents were already serving life sentences for murder." Had these prisoners been executed, innocent lives would have been saved. The death penalty is, without question, a deterrent to murder."
(Seven recent studies make it clear that executions deter murders and murder rates increase substantially during moratoriums.)
ARGUMENT C: The death penalty is cruel and unusual punishment.
The death penalty is not cruel and unusual punishment. The framers of the Constitution supported the death penalty, and in fact constructed laws in order to carry it out, so it is ridiculous to claim that cruel and unusual punishment refers to the death penalty. Justice Antonin Scalia observed,
"The Fifth Amendment provides that '[n]o persons shall be held to answer for a capital...crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury...nor be deprived of life...without the due process of law.' This clearly permits the death penalty to be imposed, and establishes beyond doubt that the death penalty is not one of the 'cruel and unusual punishments' prohibited by the Eighth Amendment."
The American draftsmen were primarily concerned with proscribing "tortures" and other "barbarous" methods of punishment. The U.S. Supreme Court noted in Gregg v. Georgia that
"In the earliest cases raising Eighth Amendment claims, the Court focused on particular methods of execution to determine whether they were too cruel to pass constitutional muster. The constitutionality of the sentence of death itself was not at issue... (emphasis mine)."
The Senate Judiciary Committee once noted,
"[m]urder does not simply differ in magnitude from extortion or burglary or property destruction offenses; it differs in kind. Its punishment ought to also differ in kind. It must acknowledge the inviolability and dignity of innocent human life. It must, in short, be proportionate."
The very notion that one could be cruel while punishing a guilty murderer for murdering an innocent victim is laughable.
Actually, it seems to be fairly easy to get out of jail when you murder; 11,404 murderers were released in a span of 9 years alone.Another study found that of 11,404 persons originally convicted of "willful homicide" and released during 1965 and 1974, 34 were returned to prison for commission of a subsequent criminal homicide during the first year alone.
I honestly don't see what cost matters; sure, the American people pay for the execution
That money could be spent towards all sorts of things that would better society more than killing somebody off would