Dudley - I read them, but it’s just that I don’t buy what you are selling. .
It’s not what I am selling. You simply do not understand deterrence and what it means, in the context of crime rates or murder rates. That is clear. I am just trying to get you to the starting block. You won’t get there.
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The bottom line for me is this:
- that killing people to prove that killing people is wrong does not compute.
- the state asking people to kill on behalf of the state in situations where the person can be kept safely is wrong.
- a poorly funded and designed and organized justice/prison system in the richest country in the world is no excuse for capital punishment. - of course the USA can keep prisoners in such a way that they are no danger to others - the fact that it does not cannot be a rationale for the death penalty
- you will never find a rich white man on death row - I don’t even have to explain why this is proof that the whole capital punishment industry is morally wrong
And I have a ton more arguments against NOT LEAST that the papacy has come out against it. - but the bell has rung and I have to go teach.
You show a rational misunderstanding of those issues.
- We don’t kill people to show that killing is wrong.
Folks know that murder is wrong, even with no sanction. The morality tells us that the crime is wrong, not the sanction. The sanction tells us the measured degree with which we judge the harm and our sanctioned response to it.
- The sanction is based upon justice, not safety.
It would be immoral to sanction based upon safety if the criminal did not deserve the sanction based upon both their guilty and the harm caused. Enhanced safety is both a secondary and expected outcome of sanction, not the reason for it.
If you must, immorally, base sanction in safety, then you would have chosen execution over a life sentence.
Execution/the death penalty offers 3 forms of enhanced safetyy for innocents over that which is provided by a life sentence, as detailed, here:
The Death Penalty: Saving More Innocent Lives
prodpinnc.blogspot.com/2012/03/death-penalty-saving-more-innocent.html
- The US is #7 on the most wealthy per capita list, based upon GDP. However, that leaves out the fact that the US is $16 trillion dollars in debt, with, I believe, $80 trillion in unfunded mandates. My guess is with those considerations, the US may be way down the list in per capital wealth, when properly balancing per capita GDP and per capita debt.
I suspect all who do balance sheets would agree.
The idea that national wealth and not justice should be the determining factor seems irrational when dealing with just sanctions.
- In the modern era, yes, there have been and will continue to be wealthy folks on death row.
Thomas Capano from delaware, from one of the richest and most powerful families in Delaware was sent to death row in that state, but had his case turned to life, via appeals, just as 37% of all death row inmates have their cases overturned.
Garza, a wealthy drug dealer was executed under the federal death penalty statutes.
I haven’t ever counted the wealthy on death row or executed, but I do know a number of other cases where executions did occur.
I am told that 90% of those who are on death row had public defenders, leaving 10% who were privately defended, indicating that some definition of wealthy may apply to that 10% on death row.
However, one must also consider:
A very small perentage of poor murderers are sent to death row and executed. I doubt a lower percentage of the wealthy are, dependent upon how you define “wealthy”. A very very small percentage of the wealthy will be committing either robbery/murder or rape/murders, the two most common death row crimes, just as a very small perentage of poor folks commit those crimes.
- Well, yes, the last two popes were against the death penalty. I don’t believe any other popes have spoken against it. So, if numbers matter . . . . the papacy has, as an institution, been, overwhelmingly, in support of the death penalty.
In addition, there is a 2000 year record of Catholic Saints, Popes, Doctors of the Church, religious leaders, biblical scholars and theologians speaking in favor of the death penalty, a record of scholarship, in breadth and depth, which overwhelms any position to the contrary.
Timeless teachings did not begin in 1995.