First, I believe that abortion an inherently immoral act and I would support any legal abolition of it. I feel the same way towards the death penalty even though the Church believes differently.
What I’m trying to do in this thread is state that in today’s day and age, and most especially in the United States, the death penalty is not an “absolute necessity”. I’m not trying to convince anyone here that the DP is always wrong, no matter what.
Garysibio, you should stop using the term Moslem because some Muslims consider it offensive today, and its an outdated term. For you to say its not outdated simply because you use it is ridiculous. Your use the word is what’s outdated. If you continue to use the term, then whatever, that will say something about your wisdom and respect towards Muslims.
When I said that you can’t execute someone based on what you think they might do, I am invoking the statement,
“The ends don’t justify the means.” as per paragraph 1763 of the CCC. I’m saying that unless the execution is an “absolute neccesity” aka you know that the person will kill gain, the execution is an evil act. Likewise, you cannot execute someone based on what you think someone else might do.
garysibio:
And what makes you think that locking someone up is ever going to make a better person out of them? The recidivism rate shows that they are completely unable to accomplish that task. When someone does something wrong you punish them so that they learn not to do it again. In some cases what they do is so hideous that the punishment must include removing them from society for the remainder of their natural lives. Prison as punishment also acts as a deterrent. If older brother tells younger brother how horrible prison is, younger brother is a lot less likely to do anything that will put him there. If older brother says “Prison isn’t that bad,” then the younger brother is more easily tempted to follow in older brother’s footsteps.
You completely missed my point, but whatev. I didn’t say that locking a person up would make a better person out of somebody, often times it either does absolute nothing to a person or makes them worse (in our prison system). If its a situation of whether or not to lock up a serial killer or execute him, I’d prefer the situation where he/she is allowed to remain an actual person as opposed to a corpse. Corpses, you see, have 0 chance of becoming a better person, but living people, ironically enough, still have some chance of bettering themselves.
The recidivism rate is the way it is because of precisely what I stated, that being that our prison-industrial complex is geared more towards vengeance than reconciliation.
In some cases what they do is so hideous that the punishment must include removing them from society for the remainder of their natural lives.
That isn’t what the catechism or the Church teaches.