For the last century around the first world especially, there has been a growing distaste for the death penalty precisely because it is not reflective of the proper unity and civility that people recognise as beneficial to their common life. Statistics are just so minimally helpful in expressing the true vision shared by the collective heart. The crime figures which more often than not are overrepresented by certain sections of society that struggle to take an equal place as a rule…tell a story of more than just the act of the crime. Societies understand that if they fail to address this side of things… true justice is not served at all. The growing appreciation of mans equality and true dignity, makes these issues more clear and demanding. It is in this light, that it can clearly be seen that recourse to execution is not redressing the disorder and that there is a community demand to be sparing with death to promote the value of the life of human beings. That is justice being served and the disorder being redressed within the context of the common good.
The problem is that is not what was being discussed.
It was by the error within EV and CCC, the false statement that:
" "Today, in fact, given the means at the State’s disposal to effectively repress crime by rendering inoffensive the one who has committed it, without depriving him definitively of the possibility of redeeming himself, cases of absolute necessity for suppression of the offender ‘today … are very rare, if not practically non-existent.’
The death penalty spares more innocent lives and neither the EV nor the CCC came remotely close to reality with their " very rare, if not practically non-existent."
If their premise is wrong, their conclusion is wrong, which they both are, therefore the change in teaching is based upon a falsehood, which it provably is.
Reality matters. The CCC, as EV, simply and sadly, made a huge error of fact, which was easily found by the most bascic of fact checking.
As I detailed and as no one rebutted:
The reality is that it is “very rare, if not practically non-existent.’” for the State “to effectively repress crime by rendering inoffensive the one who has committed it.”
One of so many sad realities that I, previously, presented, that EV and CCC, somehow, missed:
The following suggests that some 200,000 innocents were murdered buy those criminals the US released from custody, just since 1973, which does not include the staggering numbers of additional innocents harmed by non lethal violent crimes, such as rape and robbery.
“Of these (repeat offender state) prisoners, (imprisoned in 1991), 45% had committed their latest crimes while free on probation or parole.”
“When “supervised” on the streets, they inflicted at least 218,000 violent crimes, including 13,200 murders and 11,600 rapes (more than half of the rapes against children).”
This is just from a review of state (and no federal) prisoners for one year - 1991! . . .