P.S. We assume it is better to have a 100 serial killers go free than to have one innocent person executed. — James Riley
Why would we assume this? — DingoJones
P.S. We assume it is better to have a 100 serial killers go free than to have one innocent person executed. — James Riley
You have limited resources. Are they better spent trying to prove state fallibility in an effort to get the death penalty removed, or do you try to save a single life? — James Riley
or whether to use them to vindicate the dead. — BigThoughtDropper
However, to go back to what I was saying about the very murky and subjective concepts of law such as "guilt" and "innocence", due to current legal epistemological standards I am not sure proving the state killed an "innocent" person would be the smoking gun you make it out to be. — BigThoughtDropper
fallibility — James Riley
I agree. Now, how best to get the state to stop? Trying to make it work, where, when successful, it gets to say "see, it works!" Or proving it failed, by it's own standards, and has killed the innocent?
I can understand the desire to get after a case of an innocent guy on death row, especially if you are the guy, or his loved ones, or you have great empathy. But, from an objective view of 10k feet, I think people should dump a metric shit ton of time, money and resources into showing the state to be a killer of innocent people. — James Riley
It is not so much about abstract concepts. — BigThoughtDropper
I understand as a career lawyer you might be protective of the institution you are a part of and that is where you and I probably diverge - — BigThoughtDropper
I think Western common law has become an elitist sham that is molded by the upper echelons of society and excludes ordinary people. It is a system that works, but only insofar as it will not upset its fundamental tenats that belong in the 19th century. — BigThoughtDropper
In the modern world, the ancient form of justice, an eye for an eye is viewed as barbaric and, more to the point, a miscarriage of justice and yet, capital punishment, which is just that - an eye for an eye - has many strong supporters. — TheMadFool
Different arguments have been made support of punishment generally: Specific and General Deterrence, Incapacitation, Rehabilitation, Retribution (eye for an eye), and Restitution. The death penalty is not applicable to some of those, obviously, but the others still provide a reed to lean on for some folks. In the end, though, I think they could all be satisfied through life without parole. — James Riley
If you feel appalled by someone's hand getting chopped off for having done the same thing to another person, you should be equally, if not more, disturbed by executions for the crime of murder. — TheMadFool
That's not necessarily wise, though, since these released serial killers could end up murdering WAY more than just one innocent person! — Xanatos
strongest argument in favor of the death penalty is that people are literally hostages of their genes and biology to a certain--indeed, possibly even large--extent. — Xanatos
You have limited resources. Are they better spent trying to prove state fallibility in an effort to get the death penalty removed, or do you try to save a single life?
P.S. We assume it is better to have a 100 serial killers go free than to have one innocent person executed. — James Riley
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