Is The Death Sentence Really Needed In Laws?

Claymantan

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Gonna stop you right here. The right to live is indeed an inherent right. Everyone is born with the right to live. Once you take someone else's life without justification or damage the value of theirs beyond repair(rape, torture, etc.) then you lose this right.

The moral authority means there's no reason it can't be a legal authority, especially when coupled with the logical authority.

Unfortunately, I wasn't arguing against the idea that the right to live is an inherent right. I was pointing out that whether or not it can be taken away by the state, for any reason, isn't self-evident.

Since we don't use the death penalty on every single murder case, it's obviously not a logical authority that the state takes for granted. Eye for an eye is not how the legal system is framed. So the state does not even take the tact of moral authority the way you're framing it. For the state, the moral authority to execute people is usually reserved for exceptionally severe crimes. So it's not "You took a life, so your life is forfeit." You need to frame the logic in a different way for it to make sense. It's closer to "You committed a very grotesque crime, and the only way we can make you pay for it is to kill you."


Already showed that it's not self-evident, and that your logic isn't adopted by the state to begin with (the state does not conceive of legal and moral authority according to your personal view). The state accepts the capacity to limit the rights of convicts, but it does not generally do so in terms of tit-for-tat.

As Joker said before, there's no need for all that. Trials are expensive and a necessity anyways so there's no way to make it inexpensive. Just shoot em.

Like I said, the cost of the death penalty doesn't significantly come from how the execution is performed. It comes from the trials and due process, which you can't do away with without making the death penalty even more inaccurate and ineffective. So the death penalty will always be expensive.

It's not meant to deter crime, it's meant to provide punishment.

We could go in circles here. The purpose of punishment is generally to deter behavior. Purposeless punishment, or punishment solely for the sake of punishment (personal vengeance), doesn't really seem to have a place to me in a public system that we're all paying for.
 

Punk Hazard

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Unfortunately, I wasn't arguing against the idea that the right to live is an inherent right. I was pointing out that whether or not it can be taken away by the state, for any reason, isn't self-evident.

Since we don't use the death penalty on every single murder case, it's obviously not a logical authority that the state takes for granted. Eye for an eye is not how the legal system is framed. So the state does not even take the tact of moral authority the way you're framing it. For the state, the moral authority to execute people is usually reserved for exceptionally severe crimes. So it's not "You took a life, so your life is forfeit." You need to frame the logic in a different way for it to make sense. It's closer to "You committed a very grotesque crime, and the only way we can make you pay for it is to kill you."



Already showed that it's not self-evident, and that your logic isn't adopted by the state to begin with (the state does not conceive of legal and moral authority according to your personal view). The state accepts the capacity to limit the rights of convicts, but it does not generally do so in terms of tit-for-tat.



Like I said, the cost of the death penalty doesn't significantly come from how the execution is performed. It comes from the trials and due process, which you can't do away with without making the death penalty even more inaccurate and ineffective. So the death penalty will always be expensive.



We could go in circles here. The purpose of punishment is generally to deter behavior. Purposeless punishment, or punishment solely for the sake of punishment (personal vengeance), doesn't really seem to have a place to me in a public system that we're all paying for.
I don't often say this, but agree to disagree then.
 

slimreaper

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I agree that the death sentence is nothing more than a waste of time and money though

More expensive, ineffective

In what universe is it more expensive to kill someone than to feed and clothe them for life?
 

slimreaper

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Read further down the thread

that's hilarious. we could literally kill people for the cost of a pole, chair and rope and it would pay for itself eventually.


Too much red tape now
 

Claymantan

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that's hilarious. we could literally kill people for the cost of a pole, chair and rope and it would pay for itself eventually.

Too much red tape now

Can't say I didn't answer your question, though
 

demon of the leaf

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If it is without a reasonable doubt then im for death row by the hangmans noose or the electric chair because that person is a killer of innocent people

If there is a reasonable doubt life till proven otherwise and if proven innocent the government owes said person for the years and suffering they went through
 

Aimee Sky

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Yeah I think it's pretty cruel and inhumane to inflict a death sentence on someone who may have done something wrong in the eyes of the law :(
I mean, that person did something wrong but it doesn't make him/her a bad person :happy:
I guess maybe people need to re-look at their practices and reconsider their actions then perhaps finally come to a compromise?
:bouncy: :happy: :happy:
 
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Pukkake Pokayo

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Yeah I think it's pretty cruel and inhumane to inflict a death sentence on someone who may have done something wrong in the eyes of the law :(
I mean, that person did something wrong but it doesn't make him/her a bad person :happy:
I guess maybe people need to re-look at their practices and reconsider their actions then perhaps finally come to a compromise?
:bouncy: :happy: :happy:

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Claymantan

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there is no justifications for death row lasting longer than 2 years for those convicted

Can't say I disagree, honestly. But then, you always hear about those cases (and this happened relatively recently). So clearly, the system is hugely inefficient and sh*tty. It should at least be way more transparent than it is.

I'd rather have no system for the death penalty in place than this hugely crappy money and time waster that we have. It's completely indefensible from the standpoint of "does this thing do the thing it's supposed to do."
 
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DominiqueX

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Yeah I think it's pretty cruel and inhumane to inflict a death sentence on someone who may have done something wrong in the eyes of the law :(
I mean, that person did something wrong but it doesn't make him/her a bad person :happy:
I guess maybe people need to re-look at their practices and reconsider their actions then perhaps finally come to a compromise?
:bouncy: :happy: :happy:

Unfortunately, the real world is totally different than Disney. :/
Many people are monsters to the core, nothing will ever be able to change that fact or the people themselves . And these monsters have to be removed from society once and for all in some way. I don't think death penalty is a good way. The system is executed in a very very poor way anyway. But going easy on them is even worse imo.
 

Avani

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(We basically legalize murder)

You need to look up definition of murder.

Murder is the killing of another human being without justification or valid excuse, and it is especially the unlawful killing of another human being with malice aforethought. This state of mind may, distinguish murder from other forms of unlawful homicide, such as manslaughter. Mens rea- it's a very important factor in determining an action.

If no such distinction is made then - then there would be no distinction between intentional and unintentional or accidental killing of anyone by the hand of other. Even self defence excuse won't be valid.

Whether or not the state itself even has the moral authority to authorize the execution of a criminal is a question that we should be asking ourselves. It's not self-evident. If the state can kill, what else does it have the right to authorize?

It can and it should be able to make such decisions in extreme cases or exceptional cases at least. What next? Do you think chanting 'Om shanti om' or some similar peace chant when an enemy attacks you, would be of any use? An invading army is an enemy of a country. Similarly, a criminal attacks the society by breaching it's rule- a crime is not deemed a crime just against that individual but against the society too since every citizen living in there and even foreigner while at the soil is under it's protection. Or is supposed to be. A crime that threatens a member and endangers him/her, is not to be taken lightly.

Just as the U.S. Bill of Rights holds that certain rights cannot ever be denied to humans, it is possible that the right to life is another such inalienable right that the Founding Fathers did not at the time perceive as necessary. Many other countries do however forbid the death penalty based on these grounds.

Not an American so I'm not commenting about USA specifically but on legal principals. Many countries that forbid is do more so because of religious convictions.

The law is, ideally, founded upon inalienable principles which are above the state (i.e. the state is accountable to the rule of law, not the other way around), and beyond the capacity for the state to legislate and invalidate. E.g.: The United States cannot unilaterally remove due process, because this goes against the constitutional principle that people are entitled to a trial by jury - regardless of public support for removing due process or for legislative decisions/proposals.

Law is ideally founded upon legal theories and principles and there are different opinions regarding which of them are to be alienated and which one to be accepted and when how much. They are not always absolute and have been changed though out the history.

State makes the rules and laws even if it too is bounded by it. As far as I know only restriction on it would be the constitution and even constitutions may be changed or get edited.

Whether or not we feel that personal vengeance is a justified reason for execution ("threat to society" doesn't really hold valid; if you want to lock somebody up, you can damn well keep them locked up in the modern world), it's irrelevant if the state does not have the legal authority to execute people.

The Common Law principles do not support death penalty on principle of person vengeance but because it's considered a crime against society. That's why you are bound to get tried and penalized by law even if the victim's family forgives you. Some other laws like Islamic Law may let you off in lieu of blood money. But in common law if no one reports a case, state will on behalf of the victim. It's not seen just a loss of family members of the victim. Family member may forgive due to multiple reasons e.g. personal whims or money or religious reasons, that doesn't have to be for the sake of victim.


If the state does not have the moral authority to conduct executions, then yes, all state-sanctioned executions are the equivalent of murder.

It does. Otherwise it's a crippled state. Is it there only to run business and traffic? What do you think is more basic and foremost purpose of the state?

If it cannot conduct execution for the safety of it's citizens what it's going to do during war? On what principle it will fight against the enemy from outside? Wouldn't that too be mass murders?


But this is a grey area (nothing is self-evident), so that's why I mainly argue against the death penalty on the pragmatic grounds of what it actually accomplishes (wasting a lot of money, deterring no crime whatsoever, and providing closure to only a few after a decade or so).

Keeping them in jail is costlier. Even at worst, it is no less deterrent than a jail time, akthough I would argue that it's more effective. If severity of penalty is not a deterrent then jail time is of no use either. It's just a confinement house where actually violent and criminal minded rarely get reformed.
 
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Claymantan

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I said this in at least one of my posts, but generally, I mean only to talk about the U.S. when I make arguments like this.

It can and it should be able to make such decisions. What next? Do you think chanting 'Om shanti om' or some similar peace chant when an enemy attacks you? An invading army is an enemy of a country. A criminal attacks the society- a crime like murder is not deemed a crime just against an individual but against the society too since every citizen living in there and even foreigner while at the soil is under it's protection. Or is supposed to be.

During wartime generally every legal principle gets suspended for the sake of self-defense, so I wouldn't use the comparison of war here. Anyway, this is only an argument for society defending itself, which we pretty easily do without killing (when we're not talking about war; we're talking about apprehending criminals). It's mostly not life-and-death when we're talking about apprehending and incarcerating murderers; it's not like we hear all these stories about how one more life could have been saved if only the cops had just killed the dude while apprehending him, or if the murderer had been sentenced to death. Incarceration does the job just fine.

We're not talking about like, detecting people's mindsets before they commit the crimes, and it's an issue of killing them before they kill someone. The crime's already been committed, we're just trying to stop them from committing another one, and ideally, we're trying to correct their behavior.

Not an American so I'm not commenting about USA specifically but on legal principals. Many countries that forbid is do more so because of religious convictions.

Sure, it doesn't really matter though. Legal principles can come from anywhere.

Law is ideally founded upon legal theories and principles and they are different opinions regarding which of them are to be alienated and which one to be accepted and when.

State makes the rules and laws even if it too is bounded by it. As far as I know only restriction on it would be the constitution and even constitutions may be changed or get edited.

Yeah, I said "ideally" for a reason. Usually we try to adhere to the ideal as much as possible, and that's why it's very difficult in the United States to amend a constitution, and there is no system in place for outright rewriting it.

The Common Law principles do not support death penalty on principle of person vengeance but because it's considered a crime against society. That's why you are bound to get tried and penalized by law even if the victim's family forgives you. Some other laws like Islamic Law may let you off in lieu of blood money. But in common law if no one reports a case, state will on behalf of the victim.

Yeah, I was aware of this, and I don't deny that the death penalty is a crime against society, but only in the sense that it's a crime that damages the social fabric of society. If someone murders someone else, or a lot of people, or whatever, the exceeding majority of the country is not impacted, and is only interested in being safe, which execution is not necessary to accomplish. So I don't necessarily feel like it makes sense to have such an expensive system that we're all obligated to pay into when the vast majority of death penalty cases also happen to be cases, as far as I know, where there are only a few interested persons.

The theory makes sense, but in practice, it doesn't really seem to operate this way.

It does. Otherwise it's a crippled state. If it cannot conduct execution for the safety of it's citizens what it's going to do during war? On what principle it will fight against the enemy from outside? Wouldn't that too be mass murders?

Like I said, wartime principles are highly different from peacetime principles, and war is a very different thing from everyday crime. I don't really feel like I need to defend this position all that much; during a war, the vast majority of your population (or at least, this used to be the case; nowadays it's not the case, especially for the U.S.) is at risk, so obviously you defend it. This isn't the same thing with a criminal. Like I said, we don't hear about this rash of incidents that could have been prevented if they'd just killed the criminal. Apprehending and incarcerating is more than enough to ensure the safety of and to defend the population. If you can show me that killing is necessary, I'd change my mind.

Keeping them in jail is costlier. At worst is no less deterrent than a jail time. If severity of penalty is not a deterrent then it's no use either.

Only for some life sentences. A 25-to-life sentence in the U.S. is nowhere near the average cost of a death penalty case, and the average life sentence actually served is usually within a few years of that, around 29 to 30. I showed earlier in this thread that, in the States at least, it's not cheaper to sentence someone to death. If we had a system that did it more efficiently, at the cost of due process (the right to appeal), maybe it'd be different, and I'd have a different opinion.
 
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Avani

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I said this in at least one of my posts, but generally, I mean only to talk about the U.S. when I make arguments like this.

USA follows common law principles, doesn't it?


During wartime generally every legal principle gets suspended for the sake of self-defense, so I wouldn't use the comparison of war here.

You were questing state's authority. Now you accept it has authority in a situation it sees a threat to it's existence as it is. State also has a responsibility to secure the society of its citizens from the enemy within.

Anyway, this is only an argument for society defending itself, which we pretty easily do without killing (when we're not talking about war; we're talking about apprehending criminals). It's mostly not life-and-death when we're talking about apprehending and incarcerating murderers; it's not like we hear all these stories about how one more life could have been saved if only the cops had just killed the dude while apprehending him, or if the murderer had been sentenced to death. Incarceration does the job just fine.

In what sort of cases the death penalty is issued in USA? Exactly how many cases have you studied and actually looked at the data to reach that conclusion? Also how effective is incarceration? And what are challenges when keeping serious violent criminals inside?

We're not talking about like, detecting people's mindsets before they commit the crimes, and it's an issue of killing them before they kill someone. The crime's already been committed, we're just trying to stop them from committing another one, and ideally, we're trying to correct their behavior.

Do you have any idea exactly what your argument is here? For I don't. This is what OP said:

I mean i know they're are pyschooaths and sociopaths etc etc.

I know that there are people who have no regard for human life.

But why not settle for life in prison?.
..

We are talking about psychopaths and sociopaths- and usually they are put on trial only after they have committed a violent crime- that already caused severe harm to victims. Yes the state of their mind, at the time of the crime, is always a consideration - Mens rea must be established.
It is often one of the excuse they make while prosecution tries to prove that they knew what they were doing and were indeed a danger if they are let back in the society.

Sure, it doesn't really matter though. Legal principles can come from anywhere.

They can but when the reason is personal belief in a particular religion, you cannot treat is as a universally accepted and absolute one.

Yeah, I said "ideally" for a reason. Usually we try to adhere to the ideal as much as possible, and that's why it's very difficult in the United States to amend a constitution, and there is no system in place for outright rewriting it.

Ideals too are subjective. Ideally people shouldn't be committing crimes in the first place. USA still has plenty of amendments and no one outright rewrites one. Even the ones who claim to impose a brand new. They just change something that changes nature of government and type of ruler and still may be keeping like 80% of old principles and structure.


Yeah, I was aware of this, and I don't deny that the death penalty is a crime against society, but only in the sense that it's a crime that damages the social fabric of society. If someone murders someone else, or a lot of people, or whatever, the exceeding majority of the country is not impacted, and is only interested in being safe, which execution is not necessary to accomplish. So I don't necessarily feel like it makes sense to have such an expensive system that we're all obligated to pay into when the vast majority of death penalty cases also happen to be cases, as far as I know, where there are only a few interested persons.

Death penalty isn't a crime against society. :| A murder is a crime against society.

Society always feels the impact. It directly affects law and order situation and feeling of safety within. And don' be surprised if people start feeling the impact as a country even.

A rape case in Delhi got people up in arms - and instead of recognizing the public outrage over it Delhi and India was declared a rape capital by the countries with worse record. And yes as Indians even after 4 years, people as a whole are tarnished- Germany opens it's gates for refugees where even criminals can just walk in without check, not just legit ones. On the other hand, a German University refuses admission to a normal Indian student with no criminal background at all, saying it cannot risk it's female students. Now many feel talking against rape and making it an issue made the ones who were protesting, backfired at them, without committing any crime.

If criminals are treated lightly, other criminals also feel safer committing it and normal citizens who do not have to live in fear more and also deal with crap like that university professor. It can have long term effects.

It doesn't help that one of the Delhi rape case convicts is already free-- since he was only 17 years and 8 months olds- technically a minor at the time. The guy only inserted an iron rod in victim's anus and puled out her 95% of intestines that had to be cut off and even if she survived she wouldn't have been able to eat any food normally again. Her brother said most difficult was to answer her question in hospital when she was still in pain but hadn't realized how severe her injuries were and asking for food. He couldn't tell her the truth why they couldn't give her food. And the criminal is walking free just after 4 years.

I guess we can pray he is 'reformed' and be happy state didn't murder him.

The theory makes sense, but in practice, it doesn't really seem to operate this way.

Nah theory of reform hasn't shown expected results either. Too often people get bail and repeat the same crime even while going through the said reforms. It depends on individual cases so the option to deal with different types of criminals should be there too.

Like I said, wartime principles are highly different from peacetime principles, and war is a very different thing from everyday crime. I don't really feel like I need to defend this position all that much; during a war, the vast majority of your population (or at least, this used to be the case; nowadays it's not the case, especially for the U.S.) is at risk, so obviously you defend it. This isn't the same thing with a criminal. Like I said, we don't hear about this rash of incidents that could have been prevented if they'd just killed the criminal. Apprehending and incarcerating is more than enough to ensure the safety of and to defend the population. If you can show me that killing is necessary, I'd change my mind.

War time measures are different because of level and nature of threat. Keeping people and their property safe is responsibility of the state in both cases..

Only for some life sentences. A 25-to-life sentence in the U.S. is nowhere near the average cost of a death penalty case, and the average life sentence actually served is usually within a few years of that, around 29 to 30. I showed earlier in this thread that, in the States at least, it's not cheaper to sentence someone to death. If we had a system that did it more efficiently, at the cost of due process (the right to appeal), maybe it'd be different, and I'd have a different opinion.

Life time sentence in India means 20 years max and usually it's 14 years and in practice most of them are out within 7 to 10 years. OP didn't say he was talking about just USA. But keeping people in Jail is costly.

Here is another example :



The guy weighed like 45 KG when he was caught and some 80KG when he was released- getting fat on public money while he keeps his record of causing more deaths.
 
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GreyWizard93

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Who gave us the authority to decide what's worthy of living and what's not? Do you really think it's man's place to be the judge over life and death? Is that not a self given title? It's quite selfish to give ourselves that level of importance.

Your very first sentence really. Do we not slaughter millions of animals for our self gain? Do we not cage them for entertainment? For thousands of years we've played god and chosen who lives and who dies so why it should stop now because some people can't handle the idea is nonsense.

The person who took a life clearly took upon themselves to decide whether that person lived or not. so why should he/she get to live?
 

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I mean, that person did something wrong but it doesn't make him/her a bad person :happy:
So killing someone doesn't make them a bad person?

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ToshiZO

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I mean, that person did something wrong but it doesn't make him/her a bad person :happy:
I guess maybe people need to re-look at their practices and reconsider their actions then perhaps finally come to a compromise?
:bouncy: :happy: :happy:

LMFAO wtf is this?

Are you Uzumaki Naruto? Is that person the coolest guy to you?
 

Claymantan

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USA follows common law principles, doesn't it?

I just said that to cover that I'm specifically talking about America when I talk about the death penalty, because sometimes I forget to bring that up when I talk about data/trends.

You were questing state's authority. Now you accept it has authority in a situation it sees a threat to it's existence as it is. State also has a responsibility to secure the society of its citizens from the enemy within.

I'm saying that it can do this just fine with incarceration, whereas in the case of something like war, usually you do actually need to kill people in order to protect citizens. I don't think the state's authority should circumscribe all matters of life or death unless it can be shown that it is in fact necessary to do so.

In what sort of cases the death penalty is issued in USA? Exactly how many cases have you studied and actually looked at the data to reach that conclusion? Also how effective is incarceration? And what are challenges when keeping serious violent criminals inside?

Clarifying that my point is that if you're charging someone on a capital crime case, that means they're not coming out either way. So it doesn't really matter all that much if you kill them or if you let them live - there's not all that much at stake, as far as I can tell.

For death penalty cases: aggravated murder, so killing someone + something else to make it worse (killing children, murder-robberies, murder-rapes). There was a controversial ruling back in 2008 where the Supreme Court said you can't impose the death penalty for a non-homicide case, but I don't know how much the states have adapted to this, or if that ruling will stick.

As far as the effectiveness of incarceration goes, I mean you can't really study that for lifetime imprisonment or death row, can you? They never get out, unless they're exonerated after the fact. xD But for regular homicide, or rape, recidivism rates are pretty low. I don't know what you'd consider tolerable, but it's in like, the low single digits (1-3%). I don't really know what you mean by "how effective is incarceration," since the alternative to the death penalty is usually framed as life imprisonment, in the U.S. anyway.

Do you have any idea exactly what your argument is here? For I don't. This is what OP said:

My argument is what I said in my response to your previous quote, in the first paragraph.

We are talking about psychopaths and sociopaths- and usually they are put on trial only after they have committed a violent crime- that already caused severe harm to victims. Yes the state of their mind, at the time of the crime, is always a consideration - Mens rea must be established.
It is often one of the excuse they make while prosecution tries to prove that they knew what they were doing and were indeed a danger if they are let back in the society.

Sure, but like I said, I don't see how killing them makes a difference from just locking them up for life. Doesn't matter how psychopathic or violent they are (although, if they were super violent, they'd probably be incarcerated separately from everyone else, obviously). I'm looking at this in terms of "death penalty vs. life sentence," since that's the choice OP gave, not "death penalty vs. walk." They both accomplish the same thing. Society is protected (it's not like these dudes are escaping), and statistics on incidents of violence with lifers versus statistics of violence with death row inmates, afaik, don't exist (probably because it's not like death row inmates can really do all that much, given the circumstances of their incarceration separately from everybody else, from what I've read).

They can but when the reason is personal belief in a particular religion, you cannot treat is as a universally accepted and absolute one.

My original point was that there should be legal principles held above all else under which a country operates, and even though these legal principles are obviously constructed, we should try to emulate the ideal of the rule of law as closely as possible. I agree that all legal principles are constructed. My argument is that the absence of such a legal principle in the United States constitution doesn't mean that it shouldn't exist.

When I said this, I was responding to someone who I believed took it for granted that the state has the right to take the right to live away from those who take it away from someone else. My point was that it's not something that can be taken for granted.

Ideals too are subjective. Ideally people shouldn't be committing crimes in the first place. USA still has plenty of amendments and no one outright rewrites one. Even the ones who claim to impose a brand new. They just change something that changes nature of government and type of ruler and still may be keeping like 80% of old principles.

Not sure what you're trying to communicate to me here. I don't really disagree with anything that's being said in this quote, anyway. As far as ideals being too subjective goes - well, there has to be some kind of ideal. The debate is on what the ideal is, yeah? This is starting to feel very abstract, so I'm willing to drop this point unless I'm reminded of what the relevance was. xD

Death penalty isn't a crime against society. -_- A murder is a crime against society.

Explained to you in VMs that I typoed when I said that. xD My bad. I agree with this, basically.

Society is the one that feels impact. It directly affects law and order situation and feeling of safety within. And don' be surprised if people start feeling the impact as a whole. A rape case in Delhi got people up in arms - and instead of recognizing the public outrage over it Delhi and India was declared a rape capital by the countries with worse record. And yes as Indians even after 3 years people as a whole are tarnished- Germany opens it's gates for refugees where even criminals can just walk in without check, not just legit ones. One the other hand a German University refuses a admission to a normal Indian student with no criminal background at all, saying it cannot risk it's female students.

I'm well aware of this. I've said in other threads that in the States, Indian dudes can't really get into clubs (maybe this seems minor, but I'm saying that I'm extremely aware of how these stereotypes can pervade into other societies down to the most mundane levels xD) as easily as people of other ethnicities because of stereotypes arising from situations like this (even before that controversial case occurred). I also don't disagree with you about Germany and its handling of refugees, because . They should have checked themselves before coming at India so hard. Semi-feel like I'm going off topic though.

But India felt the impact from the international backlash, not as much from the crime itself (correct me if I'm wrong, but this is what you described, basically). I don't feel that this is comparable to your average death penalty case in the United States.

If criminals are treated lightly, other criminals also feel safer committing it and normal citizens who do not have to live in fear more and also deal with crap like that university professor. It can have long term effects.

Death penalty vs. life sentence =/= lightly, imo. Anyway, death penalty has no noted deterring effects as it is instituted in the U.S. Don't know if there's data on how much it deters crime elsewhere.

And one of the Delhi rape case convicts is already free-- since he was only 17 years and 8 months olds- technically a minor. The guy only inserted an iron rod in victim's anus and puled out her 95% of intestines that had to be cut off and even if she survived she wouldn't have been able to eat any food normally again. Her brother said most difficult was to answer her question in hospital when she was still in pain but hadn't realized how severe her injuries were and asking for food. He couldn't tell her the truth why they couldn't give her food. And the criminal is walking free just after 4 years.

Argument is about life sentence vs. death penalty. If you want to use the scenario of this case, I would say they should have locked him up for life. Cases with minors are a whole different debate, though.

I guess we can pray he is 'reformed' and be happy state didn't murder him.

I can concede that if rape was a death penalty case, rapes would (hopefully, honestly, I'm actually not all that convinced that they would...maybe murder-rapes would go up instead, and I'm not joking :|) plummet. xD Is it ever a death penalty case in India? In the United States, it would have to be cases involving minors, but I don't know if that's still legal.

The debate isn't really about whether or not rape should be a death penalty case. But, if you want my opinion, it should be held to the same standard as murder, and I think it's wrong that it isn't held to that standard. But I think this is off topic.

That said, despite the perception that rapists are gonna rape, recidivism for rape is in the single-digits. This might have something to do with the *** offender registry in the United States, and I don't know what systems exist elsewhere. The issue seems to be more about punishing rapists at all rather than whether the punishment works (since way too many rapists never even are apprehended). But again, verging on off-topic.

Nah theory of reform hasn't shown expected results either. Too often people get bail and repeat the same crime even while going though said reforms. It depends on individual cases so the option to deal with different types of criminals should be there too.

For minor cases, yes. Not as much for cases like rape and murder (like I said, recidivism in the single digits). We're not gonna start killing people or locking them up for decades over burglaries, I hope.

War time measures are different because of level and nature of threat. Keeping people and their property safe is responsibility of the state in both cases.

I agree, and like I said, I don't know that keeping people and their property safe requires the death penalty, because it hasn't really been convincingly shown to me that this is the case.

Life time sentence in India means 20 years max and usually it's 14 years and in practice most of them are out within 7 to 10 years. OP didn't say he was talking about just USA. But keeping people in Jail is costly.

Yeah, this is why I specified that I was talking about the U.S. I don't know how it really goes in other countries, or what the numbers are. In the U.S., at least, there are other factors besides actual time served; inmates on death row are significantly more expensive to care for than inmates in regular/lifetime incarceration, and litigating their cases is more expensive. I don't know what the time spent on death row is in other countries (where there are death rows, anyway).

I know that in the U.S. you're pretty much saving quite a bit of money if you abolish the death penalty entirely and replace all those cases with life imprisonment cases, and I posted on this earlier in the thread with the sources and such.

Some final points:

  • I think you mentioned something about how since criminals are different due to intent, the punishments available should be different, and death penalty should be an option when it's clear that the criminal is a true psychopath and only exists to murder, rape, and plunder (not in these words, obviously)? I can't find the quote for some reason, but I'm pretty sure I read it. Just in case, as far as what I think about that goes: still not really convinced that life incarceration doesn't solve the problem. Like I've been saying, in the United States, at least, monetarily, it's not a question of it being more expensive.
  • Recidivism is often prevented not only by the fact that we threw people in jail, but by the fact that once they're out of jail, they aren't ever going to be a full citizen again. Felons will always be felons in the US system. Their mobility in the country is limited, their status is going to be recorded and known by their employers most of the time, etc. So it's much harder to get into jail for something felonious (like murder, and especially like rape), come back out, and get away with or consider doing the same thing twice. It's not just about the punishment rendered by the court. And if you're on trial for a capital crime case, you're not getting out, death or life, either way. So this is kind of OT, but it addresses some of what you're talking about.

In summary, the sense of safety you're talking about - I don't see why just keeping that person locked up for life isn't enough to maintain it. Life imprisonment vs. death penalty isn't a question of reform. Reform them to do what? Be in prison more?
 
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Deadlift

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You need to look up definition of murder.

Murder is the killing of another human being without justification or valid excuse, and it is especially the unlawful killing of another human being with malice aforethought. This state of mind may, distinguish murder from other forms of unlawful homicide, such as manslaughter. Mens rea- it's a very important factor in determining an action.

But at these points, who does decide when it's right or wrong to kill? The state? I don't see much difference, as in an execution you have a totally disarmed, fastened and often sedated person against a crew of executioners who kill him/her in painful ways (lethal injection is still a novelty, you usually have lapidations, hangings and electric chairs).

If no such distinction is made then - then there would be no distinction between intentional and unintentional or accidental killing of anyone by the hand of other. Even self defence excuse won't be valid.

I agree, but if the state is the first to commit murder, what face would it make while making laws against murdering?

It can and it should be able to make such decisions in extreme cases or exceptional cases at least. What next? Do you think chanting 'Om shanti om' or some similar peace chant when an enemy attacks you, would be of any use? An invading army is an enemy of a country. Similarly, a criminal attacks the society by breaching it's rule- a crime is not deemed a crime just against that individual but against the society too since every citizen living in there and even foreigner while at the soil is under it's protection. Or is supposed to be. A crime that threatens a member and endangers him/her, is not to be taken lightly.

I don't know that song, but you will agree with me that to find a peaceful way on one who wants to brawl is way better than fighting with him. You'd even play at his game if you accept to fight him. Not saying it's always possible to not fight him back, but well, I live near a couple of gypsy families and rhetoric saved my butt several times in such situations.
The parallelism you made with an army trying to invade your country grazes the nonsense. You say that someone who breaks the rule is like a military who tries to invade a country because it attacks the law. What? The danger of a aggressive war is billions of times major than the one of a guy who maybe killed somebody. And even in those cases, a peaceful end should be the best solution, as you don't want to let bloodsheds happen among the civil population. But a state that kills you is like an invaded state, there death penalty is 100% active.

Not an American so I'm not commenting about USA specifically but on legal principals. Many countries that forbid is do more so because of religious convictions.

Uhm..no?
Europe is super secular, way more than every single state of USA, as well as Canada, Australia, UK and lots of others. Where death penalty is off.
The thing that makes me curious is that you have lots of preachers who speak in favor of death penalty.
But one of the persons my country can be more proud, Cesare Beccaria, lived during Enlightenment and spoke against death penalty, inspiring thousands of people worldwide. Don't know if he was religious but for sure you couldn't cling to religion in any way during those times in Europe.

Law is ideally founded upon legal theories and principles and there are different opinions regarding which of them are to be alienated and which one to be accepted and when how much. They are not always absolute and have been changed though out the history.

And thank God for that! or we would have been living under the Hammurabi code. Made about 5000 years ago which appointed death penalty.

State makes the rules and laws even if it too is bounded by it. As far as I know only restriction on it would be the constitution and even constitutions may be changed or get edited.

Dictatorship much? Laws should be based upon justice, not vice versa. If you give the state the power of creating justice then you must justify Nazism, Fascism and every absolutism or dictatorship ever existed.

The Common Law principles do not support death penalty on principle of person vengeance but because it's considered a crime against society. That's why you are bound to get tried and penalized by law even if the victim's family forgives you. Some other laws like Islamic Law may let you off in lieu of blood money. But in common law if no one reports a case, state will on behalf of the victim. It's not seen just a loss of family members of the victim. Family member may forgive due to multiple reasons e.g. personal whims or money or religious reasons, that doesn't have to be for the sake of victim.
Bold: I hope you were kidding here.
Imagine a little kid whose dad gets killed by the state. You give him money so you can say "hey, we slaughtered daddy! but it's OK, now with these you can buy every ice cream you want!".
How do you deal with his old parents? Who need help for everything and now they're forced to go in a retirement home without their son? Who probably get an infarct when you go say them you killed their son?
How do you deal with his wife? Who has always loved him and without him has to grow a family and take care of economy alone? You pay her a permanent gigolo?

It does. Otherwise it's a crippled state. Is it there only to run business and traffic? What do you think is more basic and foremost purpose of the state?

No, a crippled state is the one which selects who lives and who dies. Such a state should really concentrate more about its business and traffic, since a good 90% of the states which use death penalty are underdeveloped.

If it cannot conduct execution for the safety of it's citizens what it's going to do during war? On what principle it will fight against the enemy from outside? Wouldn't that too be mass murders?

I believe I already answered this but.. have you noticed that the country which really won every single war on its territory, a.k.a Russian Federation, doesn't have death penalty? And the country which always won every war it made (not counting colonial secessions, obviously) a.k.a England, doesn't use war penalty? I don't know where you took your information that not using death penalty = militarily weak but I can assure you it's not the case.

Keeping them in jail is costlier. Even at worst, it is no less deterrent than a jail time, akthough I would argue that it's more effective. If severity of penalty is not a deterrent then jail time is of no use either. It's just a confinement house where actually violent and criminal minded rarely get reformed.

What about forced labors? Or socially-useful works? Those are way more useful than both jail and death and you're not being barbaric to anyone.
 
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