Cynical Cat wrote:No shit it would be faster. The reason we don't is because we don't want to kill innocent men and we get innocent men on death row all the time. Illinois suspended the death penalty in 2000 because more men were getting exonerated off death row than executed since they restored the death penalty in the 70s. Out of 25 people on death row, 13 were found to be innocent and 12 were executed and that's in Illinois. Now imagine how its like in Texas, with its notoriously crappy legal system and express way to the death chamber. That's with the current system. You want to grease the rails and make it easier to execute innocent men?
No, I want the right goddamn men to be executed.
I'm sick and tired of this relativistic attitude towards the Death Penalty, like it's impossible to know the truth, therefore taking any action is immoral. We get innocent people in prison all the time? The solution is not to abolish the Death Penalty. The solution is to
fix the fucking justice system so that the right people are getting convicted in the first place. The Death Penalty is not the reason why innocent people are being locked up. Flawed and unfair trials, tainted juries, and incompetent defense attorneys are the reason for that. If we take the position that we have the mortal requirement to abolish a judicial punishment across the board because of mistakes made in convicting people, then why are we stopping at the Death Penalty? Because it's perceived as being irreversible? Ask some guy who's done thirty years in prison how 'reversible' his punishment was. If we're being moral and outraged about wrongfully convicted felons, then don't we have the same moral requirement to abolish life imprisonment as well? And long-term sentencing?
No, I'm sorry, it is
not a sufficient argument to abolish the death penalty based on the fact that justice is imperfect. If we are concerned that innocent men are being executed, then we should improve the justice system to the point where we are as certain as we can be that nobody innocent is being convicted. We do
not abolish the death penalty, we do not abolish
any sentencing on those guidelines.
Comrade Tortoise wrote:We can hand-wring about what rapists deserve all day. We wont get anywhere seeing as I know we have different views on what the nature of a prison system should be in our own ideal little worlds. The reality of the situation is that this is a policy question, and the reality of that is that you have solve problems within the system you have, not the one you would build from the ground up. We are not going to be able to fix the glaring problems of our court system due to inertia alone.
Getting rid of execution is the best we can do.
I absolutely, unequivocally,
utterly reject this notion, root and branch. By that logic, getting rid of execution is not the best we can do. Getting rid of
sentencing is. It is very easy to cynically wring one's hands in the air and claim that nothing can ever be fixed, that the system is impermeable and that the "glaring problems of our court system" can never be resolved. The notion that because the justice system is and forever will be corrupt, that the death penalty is immoral is a noxious fallacy as I see it. That is akin to declaring that because the DMV has been utterly unable to ensure that every person with a driver's license is absolutely qualified to drive and will not make egregious mistakes while doing so, Automobiles should be banned.
The best we can do is to fix the justice system so that innocent people are no longer convicted. It is not to throw our hands up and say "Since justice is impossible, we will no longer make even a pretense of trying to apply it."
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...
Havoc: "So basically if you side against him, he summons Cthulu."
Hotfoot: "Yes, which is reasonable."