bkilbour wrote:If a man is a serial pedophile or rapist, there is no real way for him to repay or fix what he's done, and there is no likelihood of him changing his ways.
The only real way to have some sort of justice that satisfies anybody is to kill him off.
Yamamaya (post: 1439555) wrote:It costs more to sentence someone to death than it takes to keep them in prison for life. Not to mention the high rate of error that comes with the death penalty. We can spend our tax dollars on better things than the death penalty.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
blkmage (post: 1439624) wrote:3. I wasn't aware that Japan still had the death penalty, and I wonder what that means with their famously high, near-100% conviction rate.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1439634) wrote:I dunno, prison doesn't sound like that much of a punishment to me. Free rent, free food, free clothes, free cable...
However, if the person has committed an unbelievable crime, human trafficking for example, and has known friends in high places, it's better to end him
Reason being is that the prisoner on death row WILL find a way to get his message out or has already made plans on escape and continue his crime spree.
The result being an organization becoming disorganized and become sloppy. Make them easier to track and put them behind bars.
ShiroiHikari (post: 1439643) wrote:Uh, guys? I was kidding. But thanks for elaborating.
Yamamaya (post: 1439555) wrote:It costs more to sentence someone to death than it takes to keep them in prison for life. Not to mention the high rate of error that comes with the death penalty.
Nate (post: 1439641) wrote:One, I can assure you if the leader of a criminal organization was powerful enough to have friends in high places, he would never be put in jail in the first place.
blkmage (post: 1439650) wrote:This. It's been pretty well-studied that death-row inmates are almost pretty much guaranteed to be in the bottom tier socioeconomically speaking.
TopazRaven (post: 1439652) wrote:Eh, this is a touchy subject. I won't lie. At the current time I am not sure what exactly I think about the death penalty. However, I do have a relative who was in jail for many years in my childhood for drug dealing. He got a bible while he was in there and read it three times. It helped him keep going. There was also the fact that he was seperted from his family, his wife divorced him and then took the kids and left the state. No one visited him. He hardly ever sees his children (who are all older then me) even now, once a year if he's lucky. He's truly sorry for what he did and while he might not be the most religious of people I think the bible helped him get through his time in prison. People can change. The problem is they have to want to and sadly some people don't think they've done anything wrong even with severe crimes like murder or human trafficking. By the way, since I decided I want to read the bible all the way through for the first time in my life he's loned me his. So I always feel a bit sentimental now as I read it. I do have a bible of my own, but his is written in more modern speech so it's easier for me to understand. I'm not the sharpest end of the stick sadly.
Nate (post: 1439641) wrote:You're also (in my opinion) denying the power of God to change the hearts of people. If Saul of Tarsus became Paul, then how do you know another serial killer will not become a powerful witness for Christ? In fact, it seems that putting them on death row would merely encourage them to try harder to escape and/or send out a message to others. At least with life imprisonment, they wouldn't feel like their time was short.
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