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gracepoole
Guest
It actually doesn’t seem that complex or difficult to me. Our methods of confining inmates are more successful today than previously. If a country is able to successfully imprison criminals and reasonably demonstrate the ability to keep the general population safe from them, the death penalty is not a moral option.I think where I personally struggle with the Church’s drift in position on the death penalty is what EXACTLY is it about modern society that has changed to merit such a shift in position? And keeping in mind that society having sufficient means to render the unjust aggressor harmless against others is difficult to define. How do we know when a society and its penal code is sufficiently advanced? And who’s society are we talking about anyway? The United States or Swaziland? Are we talking about Japan or Syria? Some societies are decades or even centuries behind certain advanced nations, so is the death penalty permissible in these less-advanced or underdeveloped societies.