K
KindredSoul
Guest
I’m with you on that belief, for the most part. That is to say that I know and obediently concede that the Church allows for the Death Penalty, but I’m of the late Pope John Paul II’s opinion that it is almost never appropriate to employ it in our modern society with its extensive prisons and much more civil ways of protecting society from murderers. With him, I feel that the Death Penalty should only be used if it is the only means of self-defense for society at large, and I think those circumstances are rare.The governor of Texas has no power to stop an execution. that power is reserved for the board of pardons and paroles.
I was protesting in Huntsville the night Mr Willingham was executed-his guilt or innocent is irelevant to me as i oppose the death penalty in all circumstances/
It would take a most powerful murderer, with a savvy or escapist skill verging on omnipotence, of whom it was a foregone conclusion that he would almost certainly not be contained by the prison systems and who would almost certainly kill again once he inevitably broke free, before I would think the Death Penalty would be as necessary as the late Pope felt it should have to be before being employed.
In fact, if we stopped employing the Death Penalty except in such extreme, rare circumstances, the situation at hand now would never have existed, since I highly doubt that a man who might even plausibly be innocent is a clear and nigh-omnipotent threat to society on that extreme scale; by such appropriately strict standards, he would therefore never have been sentenced to death in the first place.
Blessings in Christ,
KindredSoul