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23-10-2008, 00:02 | #1 | ||
Sofa Boy
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Wield of the Shire
Posts: 701
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The death penalty
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Edit: I should add that this is hardly a debate that has not gone round in circles 1000s of times before, and the first reposte will be "it costs more to kill someone than to keep them alive", to which I would respond that in a guess such as the first, where there is NO doubt in the court's mind, then there should simply be no appeal process. Bullets are cheap, and highly effective. Court cases are expensive, and rarely effective at all. If he was unable to prove diminished responsibility during sentencing, then he should face the chair, injection or a firing squad. Last edited by PvtPyle; 23-10-2008 at 00:06. |
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23-10-2008, 00:12 | #2 | |
Sofa Boy
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Wield of the Shire
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Food for thought:
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23-10-2008, 00:16 | #3 | |
Sofa Boy
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Wield of the Shire
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... And some more candidates for real justice, and not a 9 month layover period learning to weave baskets and wash bed linen.
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23-10-2008, 08:32 | #4 | ||
Long Island Iced Tea
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 274
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... or perhaps you do?
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23-10-2008, 09:24 | #5 |
The Night Worker
Join Date: Jul 2006
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Derek Bentley
close thread/ |
01-11-2008, 19:39 | #6 |
I'm Free
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Tyneside
Posts: 3,061
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A very good example. His mate who pulled the trigger was not hanged for the murder of Pc Sidney Miles ironically enough.
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" Well, old bean, life is really so bloody awful that I feel it’s my absolute duty to be chirpy and try and make everybody else happy too." David Niven, 1910-1983. |
23-10-2008, 09:59 | #7 |
Baby Bore
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Svalbard
Posts: 9,770
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Hmmmm, its a tough call
In the UK the jury is asked to convict on a basis of 'beyond reasonable doubt', for me personally this would not be enough to go ahead with the death penalty, 'beyond reasonable doubt doesn't mean 100% they did it, it means that the acuseds guilt is pretty damn certain, as far as I am concerned that is not enough. Of course there is one way to be sure and that is if the supect openly admmits guilt but this is usually rewarded with a more lenient sentence, there isn't really a more lenient version of death :/ So if you want it then the only way I as a citizen would be willing to accept it is if you change the fundamentals of the legal system to include a jury decision of '100% no doubt about it guilty as hell' which would substantially upset the legal system as anyone who has been convicted 'beyond reasonable doubt' would be wanting a retrial because there aren't deregations of guilty one either is or is not guilty and so the argument goes around in circles. One thing is for certain, people have been sentenced to death had the sentence carried out and then been found to be innocent. The way this is reduced in the US is to hold people on deathrow for 10s of years before they carry out the sentence. Because of their sentence deathrow prisioners are very expensive to house because quite frankly many of them are happy to kill and mame guards and fellow inmate, lets face it what have they got to lose. Deathrow cases attract numerous retrial some at the highest courts of appeal which are very very expensive to conviene and attract huge ammounts of media attention and make anti-heroes of some of the most evil members of society this in turn leads to huge protests from anti death sentence protesters and pro death sentence protesters which have to be policed. In my eyes its not worth the hassle, just let them rot in jail, if there is a mistake then let them out and compensate them, at the end of the day its a lot cheaper not to kill than it is to do so and if you cock it up you don't have to go cap in hand and say sorry we killed Billy we thought he was a bad lad. By all mean bring back hard labour and greul and change prisons from holiday camps in to hell holes but don't argue that the death penelty is a cheap solution because it isn't. MB |
23-10-2008, 09:59 | #8 |
iCustom User Title
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,250
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For me it boils down to whether or not I trust the state with the ability to execute people. I simply don't. Some cases might be clear cut, the correct man is brought to "justice" but what if there are cock ups? We mess up sending innocent people to prison, why couldn't we mess up sending an innocent man to death? As much as sending an innocent man to prison is harsh, the sentence could always be overturned, or basically I'm saying, at least he has a good chance of coming out again. With death you can't. Oh, we had the wrong man all along, oops.
I seriously don't trust the system enough for that, and cost would be an obvious factor in then improving the reliability and accuracy of the system.
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24-10-2008, 13:47 | #9 | |
Sofa Boy
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Wield of the Shire
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/s...re/7688929.stm
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24-10-2008, 13:55 | #10 | |
Baby Bore
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Svalbard
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MB |
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