C
cardinalsrule
Guest
I think the Holy Father is mistaken is his call for a universal end to capital punishment. There are instances when it is justified. The following should be considered:
- Knowing that his, or her, life is soon to end would be a strong motivation for repentance. A life sentence without the possibility of parole is not. In fact,
- The type of person who find themselves on death row would likely be motivated in just the opposite direction–to continue doing acts of mayhem and violence in prison. I guess, though, they could put him, or her, in permanent solitary; basically, in a cage. How humane is that?
- The pope is assuming that other countries have our level of keeping monsters locked-up. I remember reading about drug cartel jefes who managed to escape from Mexican jails.
- The prison population might be none to safe from such monsters–whose humanity has been severely compromised. The pope also seems to assuming that his influence in the outside world ends with incarceration.
I agree that it should be extremely rare, but doable. We would have to have absolute (or a close to it as is humanly possible) certainty that he, or she, is guilty. Also, the crime would have to be heinous–like the rape and murder of a child, or the slaughter of scores of people.
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