M
Mycroft
Guest
no, its not a factor. a person is onlly killed if they have comitted what the judge considers a great enough crime. noone is ever put to death for their potential to harm others from inside the prison.
Christ founded His Church…not His debating society. Capital punishment is consistent with Church teachings…your opinions on the subject are just that: your opinions. That is what they will remain.no, its not a factor. a person is onlly killed if they have comitted what the judge considers a great enough crime. noone is ever put to death for their potential to harm others from inside the prison.
Not correct Romans and Jews of 2,000 years ago had plenty of deep and dark dungeons where people could be stored forever. That has not changed at all–except that our jails are cleaner and have cable tv.yeah to us it would sure seem like a differrent world wouldnt it? and did i say human nature or God changed? no. why dont you put some more words in my mouth? i said it was a different world because it was basically impossible to lock someone up for the rest of their lives. and we dont still abide by the eye for an eye rule either. jesus changed that.
Well then…what is your point?no really? i actually thought the church would change its teachings if it saw my opinion. way to state the obvious.
You can believe what you want, but the fact is, in Texas future potential harm is specifically what is weighed when deciding between life in prison or death by injection.no, its not a factor. a person is onlly killed if they have comitted what the judge considers a great enough crime. noone is ever put to death for their potential to harm others from inside the prison.
Past behavior patterns indicate character. Character dictates behavior. It isn’t all that difficult. It does take experience and education. I know some prisoners whose behavior and character allow me to know that they are a threat to others, even behind bars.if thats true then it makes even less sense. how could they possibly judge the potential harm of people in prison? oh i forgot the judges are psychic.
good job how you conveniantly left out the rest of my quote where it asks if you would rather kill soemone than put them in jail where they cant do any more harm.Past behavior patterns indicate character. Character dictates behavior. It isn’t all that difficult. It does take experience and education. I know some prisoners whose behavior and character allow me to know that they are a threat to others, even behind bars.
Since you have no experience in this area and I do, I can only encourage you to take my word for it.
Again you show your lack of knowledge. Juries usually determine the danger to society based on court testimony and evidence, not judges. Placing one in solitary is not a decision judges can make and civil case law dictates limits on how isolated one may be kept.and dont say: “well the prisoner could harm others in prison or give orders to other people to hurt others.” If the judge decides whether or not the person should be killed on the basis of his likelihood of hurting others, then if he decides the prisoner is a threat we could put him in solitary and not give him access to the outside. its a lot better alternative than killing him, isnt it? oh wait that makes too much sense.
Hello tru-dvotion,The death penalty, like most things, can be supported or refuted by Scriptures or Catechism. We should not explain our position with Old Testament laws. Try to explain stoning an adulterer. This is year 2004. So the question is what is the current, official position of the teaching Magisterium on the death penalty? That is what we have to listen to, that is, ultimately, what we have to respect.
Solitary.I can offer you the case of a murderer who has been convicted of 25 felonies in the last 20 years. Ten of those felonies have been committed while in prison. He has seriously injured 3 other prisoners in separate attacks while in prison. There seems every likelihood that he will kill a fellow prisoner or guard if given enough time.
What should be done with him?
The Church’s teaching seems reasonable to me. My dad was a doctor on death row, and participating in one “state killing” as he called it, turned him against the death penalty for life. It went against everything he had been taught in medical school (he was of the old school, and actually took the Hippocratic Oath).The Church teaches that the death penalty is acceptable only when the convict still poses a threat to innocent life. As the Pope pointed out in his encyclical *Evangelium Vitae, *it is only appropriate “in cases of absolute necessity, in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise to defend society. Today, however, as a result of steady immprovement in the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare, if not practically nonexistent.”
I would suggest that the case you cited may be one of those rare cases where the death penalty may be justified. It’s debatable.