J
jollyjacktar
Guest
Then we shall have to agree to disagree.

Brihard said:There is nothing inherently desirable or justifiable to society that execution or causing brain damage can accomplish that a true life sentence without parole and in isolation cannot. I don't give much of a shit for those who are guilty- my concenr is solely with the fact that the state is most certainly going to get it wrong from time to time, and such consequences as are imposed must be at least to an extend revocable when we discover that the justice system failed to exceed the competence of the weakest link in the chain at some point in a case.
jollyjacktar said:Then we shall have to agree to disagree.
Grimaldus said:Life in prison isn't a good option as far as I'm concerned- too expensive. How many lives could be saved if you took the cost of 12 "inmates for life" and turned that over into food and medicine?
Brihard said:Nope, fails the revocability test.
I'm a supporter of capital punishment. That said, one has to be careful when making "better one innocent one die than one guilty one get loose" argument.Grimaldus said:Is the death of one man by error of the state worth the lives of 10, 100 or 1000 innocent victims whom said reoccurring offender may kill once they are let out of jail?
I did not ask you to. I just won't agree with you in your beliefs on this subject.Brihard said:Doesn't mean I have to shut up about it.
You're free to be as stunned as you like as well.Brihard said:It stuns me
You're not the only parent I've heard sound off as strongly as you do (especially when talking about sex offenders with young victims), so you're in good company.Grimaldus said:I'm not sure why people are so afraid to support inhumane treatment for lack of a better phrase of these hardcore life destroying criminals. Maybe being a parent has changed my perspective but I'd really be happy to see a lot of these monsters hurt in very bad ways.
Just leave all the cute leather outfits at home .It's not considered professional if you've having too much fun! :nod:jollyjacktar said:Dungeons with all the accessories will be just fine for the likes of Picton, Bernardo et al. I'll even volunteer to be part of the staff... >![]()
Find a job you love any you'll never work another day in your life. ;DGK .Dundas said:Just leave all the cute leather outfits at home .It's not considered professional if you've having too much fun! :nod:
milnews.ca said:These guys were inhuman to someone else, so should all Canadians (the state) stoop to their level? I'm OK with spartan, minimalist and out of the way, but I'm guessing most people won't be for dungeons, even for these very, very, very bad folks.
Technoviking said:I've been hovering over this issue for quite some time.
For the initial post, the suggestion to give convicted murderers the rope to decide their own fate is an abhorrent way to treat those for whom we are responsible, irrespective of the crimes they have committed. If we as a society want them dead, then we as a society must make that decision, consciously. We cannot pretend to absolve ourselves of the responsibility by simply making the means available.
For the suggestion that DNA be the deciding factor, it's only one piece of evidence, and it only proves that a person's DNA is somewhere. It does not mean that the person was there. DNA can travel over space and time to end up somewhere by almost any means.
If we kill someone out of vengeance as a society, then we are killing someone for the wrong reason. If we are killing them as punishment "pour encourager les autres", well, maybe. But if we do decide to do so, then we ought not to pretend that we are acting in a humane manner with "lethal injections". No. We as a society must be uncomfortable with each and every killing we commit. Hang the convicted person by the neck until dead. And we as a society must be forced to watch, lest we think of something as simply "going away". We cannot allow a convicted person to simply "pass away in the night" in some far off cell. We must witness it, so that we never forget how painful of a decision it is to kill another human being.
Technoviking said:We cannot allow a convicted person to simply "pass away in the night" in some far off cell. We must witness it, so that we never forget how painful of a decision it is to kill another human being.
Should have been clearer - I was thinking in terms of confinement conditions, not execution.ballz said:I don't think wrapping a rope around their neck and letting them drop 15 feet is anywhere near their level, their victims would probably wish to trade places. I assume this is what you meant by spartan and minimalist? Quick, clean, and done?
Technoviking said:I've been hovering over this issue for quite some time.
For the initial post, the suggestion to give convicted murderers the rope to decide their own fate is an abhorrent way to treat those for whom we are responsible, irrespective of the crimes they have committed. If we as a society want them dead, then we as a society must make that decision, consciously. We cannot pretend to absolve ourselves of the responsibility by simply making the means available.
For the suggestion that DNA be the deciding factor, it's only one piece of evidence, and it only proves that a person's DNA is somewhere. It does not mean that the person was there. DNA can travel over space and time to end up somewhere by almost any means.
If we kill someone out of vengeance as a society, then we are killing someone for the wrong reason. If we are killing them as punishment "pour encourager les autres", well, maybe. But if we do decide to do so, then we ought not to pretend that we are acting in a humane manner with "lethal injections". No. We as a society must be uncomfortable with each and every killing we commit. Hang the convicted person by the neck until dead. And we as a society must be forced to watch, lest we think of something as simply "going away". We cannot allow a convicted person to simply "pass away in the night" in some far off cell. We must witness it, so that we never forget how painful of a decision it is to kill another human being.
I think it would be quite painless to sentence the truly dangerous to death as was earlier suggested, before it got derailed to include the run of the mill murderer by some here. Except for the die hard bleeding faint of heart I don't think you'd find too much sympathy among the Canadian populous for the likes Bernardo, Pickton, Olson et al getting their necks adjusted. And some, like me would be happy for them to be fed into a wood chipper, feet first. And as for cost, the sooner after the sentence the cheaper the cost to the state. The truly dangerous offenders out there will not be safely readmitted into society, nor I suggest will they find any worthwhile remorse of their crimes during a lengthy incarceration. So, what's the point/benefit of incarceration for these creatures?Technoviking said:We must witness it, so that we never forget how painful of a decision it is to kill another human being.