F
Forkfoot
Guest
What? You do know what many means, do you not? Stop being silly.many,many ? exaggeration
What? You do know what many means, do you not? Stop being silly.many,many ? exaggeration
“But-but- maybe some of them were guilty!”because a conviction is overturned doesn’t mean the person is innocent .![]()
Are you asking whether self-defense is permissible? If so, then the answer is obviously yes, as the Church teaches.A capital crime would include murder but would not be limited to that alone. If it simplifies things for this discussion I would be (temporarily) willing to stipulate that a capital crime means murder. So let’s go back to your answer that the state would be justified in executing someone who has not yet committed a murder in order to prevent him from committing one.
Redressing the disorder is not the sole objective of punishment. In the case of the death penalty, the Church has clearly stated that the objective of redress is subordinate to the objective of protection of society.Not unless we accept that the teachings about punishment have changed and that what was just said in 2266 no longer applies in 2267. Either “redressing the disorder” is the primary objective of punishment or it isn’t, but if it is then protecting society cannot determine the degree of punishment because it is only a secondary objective.
In fact the statement in 2267 about the traditional teaching of the church is inaccurate. The church never restricted the use of capital punishment to whether it was necessary to protect the public.
There are no compelling arguments in favor of the death penalty. Not one. Typing them out in purple prose doesn’t make them “compelling”. They only *look *compelling to people who, for reasons which have nothing whatsoever to do with God, are looking for an excuse to meet violence with violence, death with death, hatred with hatred, and who desperately want to believe that they live in a society where only the guilty are executed and for the right reasons. This isn’t “maudlin sentimentality”, it’s just opening your eyes.This will be my final post in this thread but I pray that those viewing it will carefully weigh all the compelling arguments in favour of the death penalty,
I don’t think you can say that, categorically. The Aryan Brotherhood killer who is executed will kill no one, in prison or out, thereafter.There are no compelling arguments in favor of the death penalty. Not one. .
The death penalty is wrong for you but you acknowledge that I may think it right. This means one of two things: either one of us is mistaken or the concept of right and wrong is meaningless.The death penalty is just plain wrong and immoral to me, that’s all. I would never tell anyone that they HAVE to agree with me…
Prove me wrong!!!
This assumes he ever killed anyone in the first place, which he may not have. Cast against the reality that we can’t know for certain if every single convict is actually guilty, I’ve been unable to find a single compelling argument for capital punishment.I don’t think you can say that, categorically. The Aryan Brotherhood killer who is executed will kill no one, in prison or out, thereafter.
No, I’m not denying the right of self defense. What I’m saying is that principle of double effect, which justifies the actions of individuals, would not justify an execution based on a governmental claim that it was acting in self defense.Are you asking whether self-defense is permissible? If so, then the answer is obviously yes, as the Church teaches.
Punishment has four objectives: retribution, rehabilitation, protection, and deterrence. These are all valid but all but one are secondary. The primary objective and, absent mitigating circumstances, the one that must always be satisfied, is retribution.Redressing the disorder is not the sole objective of punishment. In the case of the death penalty, the Church has clearly stated that the objective of redress is subordinate to the objective of protection of society.
If 2267 is prudential then the argument is about what action is best in the context of modern societies but there are no moral arguments against its use. If 2267 is doctrinal then it is a repudiation of 20 centuries of church teaching and we have to accept that the church was in serious error for two millennia and virtually all of the Doctors and Fathers of the church, along with over 260 popes, were wrong on this issue.The Church teaching is still what it is. 2267 clearly states that there must be a condition of no other recourse.
It’s highly unlikely that Ted Bundy would be left alone with any attractive young blonde women in a maximum security prison serving life without parole.And again, odious as Ted Bundy was, he made the same argument in saying it was right that he be executed since he would surely kill again if given the opportunity.
There may well be no compelling argument for the person who thinks that right and wrong are whatever he believes them to be. For a Catholic, however, the compelling argument is that the church has unequivocally acknowledged the moral right of states to employ capital punishment and has for two millennia defended this right against every group that challenged it. For Catholics the compelling arguments are known as the Traditional teachings of the church.There are no compelling arguments in favor of the death penalty.
I believe that the death penalty can possibly be moral, in a just society where only the guilty are convicted and one’s odds of acquittal aren’t directly influenced by the size of their bank account. We do not live in such a society, unfortunately. Anyways, the Church also allowed slavery.There may well be no compelling argument for the person who thinks that right and wrong are whatever he believes them to be. For a Catholic, however, the compelling argument is that the church has unequivocally acknowledged the moral right of states to employ capital punishment and has for two millennia defended this right against every group that challenged it. For Catholics the compelling arguments are known as the Traditional teachings of the church.
Ender
perfect example of the strawman argument favored by anti-DPers, this is a predictable misinterpretation of CCC, cherry picking inapplicable examples to make a general rule.It’s highly unlikely that Ted Bundy would be left alone with any attractive young blonde women in a maximum security prison serving life without parole.
I didn’t bring up Bundy, good sir. The man I’m replying to did.perfect example of the strawman argument favored by anti-DPers, this is a predictable misinterpretation of CCC, cherry picking inapplicable examples to make a general rule.
Bundy would not qualify for the DP under the CCC because this kind of killer is not going to continue to kill if locked up. the FBI knows, even if forkfoot doesn’t, that narco-gang leaders continue to kill and operate narcotics distribution rings from inside prison.
why aren’t the lives of these future victims important to the categorically never anti-DPers?
they won’t say.
Serial killers can be eclectic in their choice of victims. Personally, I am inclined to take Bundy’s word for it. He knew his proclivities better than you do, I’m sure.It’s highly unlikely that Ted Bundy would be left alone with any attractive young blonde women in a maximum security prison serving life without parole.
with the very highest restrictions in prison permitted in the USA, you still could not prevent attorney-client confidential communications as a conduit to the outside, as Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman and every other convict knows.…If we were to address this issue, we could really rule that such people be kept in total isolation without any outside contact.
Well, seeing as we’re addressing an issue we’ve never actually addressed before, we’re making new laws anyway. We could opt to write new laws allowing for the swift execution of inmates known to have called hits in prison as you seem to be suggesting, or we could write new laws allowing for those people’s true isolation. Either way we’re re-writing the law in a big way, and either way they’re unable to call out hits anymore. I just prefer the option we can take back if it turns out they were really innocent.with the very highest restrictions in prison permitted in the USA, you still could not prevent attorney-client confidential communications as a conduit to the outside, as Sheikh Omar Abdel-Rahman and every other convict knows.