E
eddietoo
Guest
consider this, if for the protection of others,the only alternative to the death penalty is a life time of solitary confinement, some might consider the death penalty the more merciful penalty.
There have been escapes from prisons.Prisons are secure
You are correct. Certain types of forced labor, such as prisoners being forced to make license plates, or a civil offender being sentenced to community service, are also types of ‘slavery’, in that they are forced labor without recompense.ringil:![]()
I think there are various institutions which are called slavery. So, exchanging one’s future labor as payment for a debt is called slavery, as is exchanging labor for room and board when one is a POW (albeit widely defined).Maybe slavery isn’t a sin then?
Chattel slavery, where human beings are treated as animals by being captured, sold, and forced to work, often bred as livestock are bred with the children belonging to the owner and at his disposal, has been condemned by the Church since the 1400s.
In the case of debt, well, it is an exchange; in the case of the second, it is preferable to simply killing the prisoners a nation cannot hold. There is no similar justification for the last.
One other consideration is violence while in prison. Against other prisoners or the guards themselves. They too are members of society who are to be protected.Prison escapes aren’t good justifications. Death rows are not easy places to even get into, much less get out of, and I am equally concerned about people escaping whose crimes weren’t even in death penalty range. Plus the number of escapes is relatively low.
What is it that makes a punishment “allowed”? I would think that foremost among reasons is that it is just, and if it is just it is the appropriate penalty for the crime: the severity of the punishment is commensurate with the severity of the crime. The thing is, that isn’t dependent on the capabilities of a nation’s prison system. Is a murder in Myanmar more or less severe than a murder in New York, and if not, why should the penalties be different?In such limited cases, the death penalty can be allowed.
I think that the characteristic is that they have committed a crime.Certain types of forced labor, such as prisoners being forced to make license plates, or a civil offender being sentenced to community service, are also types of ‘slavery’, in that they are forced labor without recompense.
Those are not immoral. The characteristic of both of those is that while they compel labor, they do not deny the inherent personhood of the subject.
I thought that doctrine could not essentially change?Who says doctrine never changes? Doctrine obviously changes,
If you want to kill people in order to protect their fellow prisoners, you’ll be executing half the prison population in no time.One other consideration is violence while in prison. Against other prisoners or the guards themselves. They too are members of society who are to be protected.
That happens FAR more frequently than escapes.
I never said a single thing about killing anyone, rather, it is one factor to be considered when determining if CCC 2267 applies to a specific prisoner.Brendan:![]()
If you want to kill people in order to protect their fellow prisoners, you’ll be executing half the prison population in no time.One other consideration is violence while in prison. Against other prisoners or the guards themselves. They too are members of society who are to be protected.
That happens FAR more frequently than escapes.