Civilized nations don't kill people
Ffs what a witch!
So difficult this one....
If someone tortured, raped then casually murdered your Wife, Husband, Son or Daughter would you not want them to pay for pointlessly and senselessly ending the life of someone you love in the most horrific fashion? Knowing their last hours on this earth were in agony and humiliation...
Would you really want the person who did that to them to spend the rest of their life watching TV in a warm cell, being fed three square meals a day, having exercise, studying, playing pool, having laughs - whilst WE paid for it out of the taxes we work bloody hard to pay.
I don't care if you say "Well, their liberty has been taken away... that's the biggest punishment!" because it's not.
Death is.
So, if they are 100% stone cold guilty - no doubts whatsoever, and they ended the life of someone I love, then I'm afraid I'd most likely wish the same fate upon them.
The argument against is that miscarriages of justice could occur. Yes, in the video Ian Hislop talks about wrongful convictions but the law, forensics, CCTV, crime scene investigation has all moved on in leaps and bounds. Would we really be that slapdash in 2022?
Then you have the moral argument. Who are we to take the life of a human? What right do we have to murder someone, even in the name of the law? All very commendable, but did the murderer ask him or herself "Who am I to take the life of a human. What gives me that right?"
The next argument is asking if it would make a murderer think twice about killing (assuming the person wasn't of unsound mind) if the thought of their own death would be the outcome? Maybe even that consideration would prevent some tragic outcomes...
I'm not completely in the "Hang the b*stards" camp, but I'm quite far away from the "they have human rights and should be locked up" one either....
So difficult this one....
If someone tortured, raped then casually murdered your Wife, Husband, Son or Daughter would you not want them to pay for pointlessly and senselessly ending the life of someone you love in the most horrific fashion? Knowing their last hours on this earth were in agony and humiliation...
Would you really want the person who did that to them to spend the rest of their life watching TV in a warm cell, being fed three square meals a day, having exercise, studying, playing pool, having laughs - whilst WE paid for it out of the taxes we work bloody hard to pay.
I don't care if you say "Well, their liberty has been taken away... that's the biggest punishment!" because it's not.
Death is.
So, if they are 100% stone cold guilty - no doubts whatsoever, and they ended the life of someone I love, then I'm afraid I'd most likely wish the same fate upon them.
The argument against is that miscarriages of justice could occur. Yes, in the video Ian Hislop talks about wrongful convictions but the law, forensics, CCTV, crime scene investigation has all moved on in leaps and bounds. Would we really be that slapdash in 2022?
Then you have the moral argument. Who are we to take the life of a human? What right do we have to murder someone, even in the name of the law? All very commendable, but did the murderer ask him or herself "Who am I to take the life of a human. What gives me that right?"
The next argument is asking if it would make a murderer think twice about killing (assuming the person wasn't of unsound mind) if the thought of their own death would be the outcome? Maybe even that consideration would prevent some tragic outcomes...
I'm not completely in the "Hang the b*stards" camp, but I'm quite far away from the "they have human rights and should be locked up" one either....
The main reason that capital punishment was abolished was simply that juries were increasingly reluctant to find someone guilty.
Times have changed and there's even more reluctance to convict. Certainly, if I were a juror where the accused was facing a capital charge I'd find him or her not guilty automatically - I know there are large numbers of people who feel the same. There's the very real possibility that all murder trials would end up as hung juries, and the system would grind to a halt. That's why it will never be brought back.
The main reason that capital punishment was abolished was simply that juries were increasingly reluctant to find someone guilty.
Times have changed and there's even more reluctance to convict. Certainly, if I were a juror where the accused was facing a capital charge I'd find him or her not guilty automatically - I know there are large numbers of people who feel the same. There's the very real possibility that all murder trials would end up as hung juries, and the system would grind to a halt. That's why it will never be brought back.
So difficult this one....
If someone tortured, raped then casually murdered your Wife, Husband, Son or Daughter would you not want them to pay for pointlessly and senselessly ending the life of someone you love in the most horrific fashion? Knowing their last hours on this earth were in agony and humiliation...
Would you really want the person who did that to them to spend the rest of their life watching TV in a warm cell, being fed three square meals a day, having exercise, studying, playing pool, having laughs - whilst WE paid for it out of the taxes we work bloody hard to pay.
I don't care if you say "Well, their liberty has been taken away... that's the biggest punishment!" because it's not.
Death is.
So, if they are 100% stone cold guilty - no doubts whatsoever, and they ended the life of someone I love, then I'm afraid I'd most likely wish the same fate upon them.
The argument against is that miscarriages of justice could occur. Yes, in the video Ian Hislop talks about wrongful convictions but the law, forensics, CCTV, crime scene investigation has all moved on in leaps and bounds. Would we really be that slapdash in 2022?
Then you have the moral argument. Who are we to take the life of a human? What right do we have to murder someone, even in the name of the law? All very commendable, but did the murderer ask him or herself "Who am I to take the life of a human. What gives me that right?"
The next argument is asking if it would make a murderer think twice about killing (assuming the person wasn't of unsound mind) if the thought of their own death would be the outcome? Maybe even that consideration would prevent some tragic outcomes...
I'm not completely in the "Hang the b*stards" camp, but I'm quite far away from the "they have human rights and should be locked up" one either....
You’d vote not guilty in the case of the terrorists who decapitated a soldier in London and then wandered down the road with the blood stained implements? Wow
Yep. Because I have a strong set of principles that I believe in and try to live by. One of those principles is that taking human life is wrong and I want no part of it.
It's sad that you feel that living by set of moral principles is somehow wrong. Too many people feel that way - that's how we've ended up with a mendacious, venal, lecherous narcissist as prime minister.
Anyone voting for option three care to explain their rationale?
Are some human lives worth more than others?
You’d vote not guilty in the case of the terrorists who decapitated a soldier in London and then wandered down the road with the blood stained implements? Wow
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