M
MH84
Guest
But the death penalty is not self-defence. Your comparisons are not much better.
Obviously you have not been in prison.Our prisons aren’t places of punishment anymore. We need to get rid of all the activities and comforts in the prison and keep the death penalty.
You are more naive than one should be. You need to investigate the number of people who have been condemned to death, and were subsequently shown in post conviction relief to have not committed the crime. Some were exonerated within weeks or days of their date of execution, which means, literally, years after they were convicted. And none of this addresses those who have been executed for a crime they did not convict.These days, that isn’t likely. When there is reasonable doubt, and I mean reasonable, then of course the death penalty shouldn’t be used. Then we have to decide what is “necessary.”
Do you believe soldiers sin when they kill in war? Police officers? What if a woman is about to be raped, does she have the right to kill her attacker? Capital punishment and abortion are very different, it’s really a bad comparison.
How many times after this commandment did God order the death penalty for XYZ offenses?Fifth Commandment. Thou Shalt not kill.
No matter how heines the crime by the law of the fifth commandment we can not put that person to death. God will deal with the Perpetrator when HE/She dies. Revenge is mine says The Lord. We understand that is what is meant by that saying.
A catholic and or christian Governer that is obeying the Fifth Commandment will not sign a Death Warrent no matter what because when they die they will have to answer to God just the same as the Perprtrator.if they sign a Death Warrent because the persons life is in their hands.
Mayo
Can I make the statement that we are too soft? I have seen it plenty. Specifically, we have so redefined the intitial concept of “cruel and unusual” to mean anything the current federal dircuit courts want to mean. In the current condition of prisons and all the “rights” granted prisoners to keep prisons from being too cruel for the little darlings, we have made it impossible to safely incarcerate the worst offenders without allowing them to continue their murderous ways.Obviously you have not been in prison.
If you are saying that we cannot lock up a murderer 24/7, well, yes, the feds to mandate that even murderes are allowed some exercise. Do murderers in prison kill others in prison? Yes, they do. whether that is a matter of not being able to lock them up sufficiently tightly, or a matter of the guards not doing their jobs is another matter.Can I make the statement that we are too soft? I have seen it plenty. Specifically, we have so redefined the intitial concept of “cruel and unusual” to mean anything the current federal dircuit courts want to mean. In the current condition of prisons and all the “rights” granted prisoners to keep prisons from being too cruel for the little darlings, we have made it impossible to safely incarcerate the worst offenders without allowing them to continue their murderous ways.
Rest assured I am very familiar with case law and how it has evolved over the last couple of years. And yes, prison systems do follow the law for the most part. And yes, I do consider the environment too free and too soft.As to your comment that the feds make cruel and unusual to mean anything they want it to mean, I would suggest that you review the case law on the matter; the prison systems don’t seem incapable of following the law, so it is not as Byzantine as you would imply.
Do you do any defense work?Rest assured I am very familiar with case law and how it has evolved over the last couple of years. And yes, prison systems do follow the law for the most part. And yes, I do consider the environment too free and too soft.
No. I am on the offense.Do you do any defense work?
So, you’ve been in prison have you? Your statement is rather presumptuous; you do not know my experiences, who I my close friends are along with there experiences. Prison is not as bad as some would like to think. There was a special a couple years ago on 20/20, 48 Hours…something like that, which investigated prisons and how much they’re improving to make life better for the prisoners. Prison is supposed to be a punishment, not a “time-out” in the playroom. Not all prisons are great, but they’re not punishments anymore.Obviously you have not been in prison.
Some were exonerated within weeks or days of their date of execution, which means, literally, years after they were convicted. And none of this addresses those who have been executed for a crime they did not convict.
Do soldiers sin when killing in war? Can you say My Lai?
Do poplice? Can you say “excessive force”?
Does a woman have a right to kill her attacker? Does she have other alternatives? Some do, some don’t. does a woman who has suffered excessive physical or emotional abuse have the right to kill her husband? Some juries have said yes; others have said no. And neither set of juries passed on the moral issues, but only the legal ones.
Those interested in this really ought to review some of the recent (and ongoing) threads over in the Social Justice forum (and the article by Karl Keating on this subject).That is not quite 100% correct. In America and the western world this may be true because we have the means to contain people for their entire lives.
Amen! It can’t be done. I would also add hardcore prison gang members and whacked sociopaths.Suffice it to say that the people who work in the criminal justice field vehemently disagree with the notion that certain types of criminals (serial killers with fan clubs and crime syndicate leaders) can be made “safe” by simply locking them up, particularly if those prisoners are allowed the freedoms / rights the Church itself says all prisoners should have (there is a real catch 22 there).
Those interested in this really ought to review some of the recent (and ongoing) threads over in the Social Justice forum (and the article by Karl Keating on this subject).
Suffice it to say that the people who work in the criminal justice field vehemently disagree with the notion that certain types of criminals (serial killers with fan clubs and crime syndicate leaders) can be made “safe” by simply locking them up, particularly if those prisoners are allowed the freedoms / rights the Church itself says all prisoners should have (there is a real catch 22 there).
Also, just a quick tally of the total number of executions in a year versus the total number of felony convictions makes it very clear that even in the popular scapegoat of Texas, the Death Penalty is already used very rarely overall.
Further, the Church has consistently taught that the authority to determine when the DP is necessary rests fully with the States. The Church can offer some guidance on how to make that determination, but cannot make a formally binding declaration that it is no longer necessary.
For that to be true not a single person working in criminal justice any where in the world (to include countries without a death penalty) could oppose your statement. I’ll bet against that being accurate. Second the Church as never recognized a license for the state to suspend or violate Natural Moral LawAmen! It can’t be done. I would also add hardcore prison gang members and whacked sociopaths.
First, no, at least in the English language. All that it would take for the statement to be true is “people” to vehemently disagree, not “all people”. The vast majority I know agree that life imprisonment is impractical and unable to keep violent offenders from harming others.For that to be true not a single person working in criminal justice any where in the world (to include countries without a death penalty) could oppose your statement. I’ll bet against that being accurate. Second the Church as never recognized a license for the state to suspend or violate Natural Moral Law
The statement is “Suffice it to say that the people who work in the criminal justice field vehemently disagree” I need not be an expert to understand SOME people who work in the criminal justice field will not disagree NOR vehemently disagree.For that to be true not a single person working in criminal justice any where in the world (to include countries without a death penalty) could oppose your statement. I’ll bet against that being accurate. Second the Church as never recognized a license for the state to suspend or violate Natural Moral Law
As pnewton said, the wording I chose (“people”) is not equivalent to a declaration of unanimity withing the group, but a consensus. Sure, there are outliers that work in the criminal justice field that believe that isolation is sufficient, for that matter I know a few personally, but they have a strange pattern of not liking to actually go to the security isolation areas. Added: “Out of sight, out of mind” is not a legitimate solution.The statement is “Suffice it to say that the people who work in the criminal justice field vehemently disagree” I need not be an expert to understand SOME people who work in the criminal justice field will not disagree NOR vehemently disagree.
I suspect that many people share this opinion of punishment but it is misplaced. The Church teaches that sin requires punishment. Even “Venial sin … merits temporal punishment” (1863) and furthermore that the punishment must be “commensurate with the gravity of the crime.” (2266)How can you be all anti-abortion (I read on another post) but now want the death penalty imposed to punish criminals? Not even as a “defense” mechanism for the community as some have argued, but to punish…remember we are all sinners.
“Outliers” is impromperly used term in the above statement.As pnewton said, the wording I chose (“people”) is not equivalent to a declaration of unanimity withing the group, but a consensus. Sure, there are outliers that work in the criminal justice field that believe that isolation is sufficient, for that matter I know a few personally, but they have a strange pattern of not liking to actually go to the security isolation areas. Added: “Out of sight, out of mind” is not a legitimate solution.
When doing so while brushing off a clarification, it suggests one is trying to be difficult for the sake of being difficult when insisting on applying a very restrictive interpretation to try to raise an objection that is not present in the straightforward reading.