He volunteers, but he does not place the value of the criminals above his own safety.
I mentioned my brother worked in a prison (true) because from your earlier posts I suspected you werew a prison officer. Your profile almost confirmed this and this final post certainly does.
This means I am now “on your ground” so to speak. In this cae I will avoid from contradicting you in the particulars.
In fact, the priority of the job is: protect others first, yourself second, the offender third. Yes, care of the inmates is a priority, but it never takes precedence over the duty to protect society, hence why prisoners may be shot if necessary to prevent escape, or over oneself, which is why entry to intervene in a riot is not made as soon as inmate’s are being harmed, but only after the riot may be broken up with reasonable officer safety.
True, but shooting a prisoner in a hostile situation, or even a suspect in one, as your previous experience as a law officer will remind you, is not an execution, either in the eyes of the law, nor morally speaking. A soldier does not “execute” an enmy soldier. This is self-defense. Let us not muddy the waters. An execution, by definition, is only possible when the subject is sudued; i.e.helpless.
One does not equate the shooting of a bank robber in pursuit or in an exchange of fire with his electrocution in an electric chair.
Moreover, on a case by case basis, an officer is required to protect his own life (as self defense)but he still, when he assumes the duty, recognises that he puts himself in harms way and will, furthermore, conform to procedures that may protect a suspect even at risk to his own life. For example, shouting a warning before opening fire.
Yet, there must be a balance. As you pointed out, there is no such thing as absolute safety. This is why we can not execute everyone that poses some risk, but only where the risk of future harm is great.
And this is where bivalent logic breaks down. The line between “great” danger and any other degree of danger cannot be determined objectively because it falls foul of the Sorites paradox.
plato.stanford.edu/entries/sorites-paradox/
The best measure of this would be past history of violence, specifically toward those in authority.
Er…why those in authority, specifically?
Surely crimes against the meek and helpless are more despicable.
Blessed are the whom, exactly?
You asked if I had any statistics to back my “strawman.” Of course no such statistics are ever calculated on such minutia. All I can offer is anecdotal evidence, which explains but does not back my opinion. The last time I heard this sentiment was 2 weeks ago from an ADA. He had dropped an assault case against an officer based on the fact that the event was just “part of the job.” It is not that I believe this do be a common sentiment. I don’t. But I do not consider it a strawman, but rather relative to the restriction on the death penatly placed by the CCC. “Safely incarcerated” should extend to those guard inmates as part of society
It is a strawman because it is a point of view I did not express, support, or even introduce and yet you felt the need to refute it.
A straw man argument is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent’s position.[1] To “set up a straw man” or “set up a straw man argument” is to describe a position that superficially resembles an opponent’s actual view but is easier to refute, then attribute that position to the opponent (for example, deliberately overstating the opponent’s position).[1] A straw man argument can be a successful rhetorical technique (that is, it may succeed in persuading people) but it carries little or no real evidential weight, because the opponent’s actual argument has not been refuted.[2]
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straw_man
Yup.