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Death penalty - yes or no ?
Are you for or against the death penalty ?
just curious how close this poll would be to public opinion polls |
I am still undecided
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I'm against the death penalty.
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im all for it, they take someones life, they should get the same done to them
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This is one of very few issues I've changed my mind on over the years. I used to be very much FOR the death penalty. But having seen so many people released that may have been executed, I've changed my mind.
HOWEVER, when someone IS convicted of a heinous crime, they do deserve the worst punishment possible. In my eyes, that's bringing back the philosophy of Alcatraz, but taken to the next level. They lose everything. They sit in a tiny cell for the rest of their life. Three square meals a day. But that's it. No visitors. No books. No TV. No yard time. No associating with other prisoners. Absolutely NOTHING. Sit in your cell, eat your three meals a day, and rot until you die. |
for it - and pass on the lethal injection - public hangings.
society can deal with the fact that in a very tiny % of cases that an innocent man may die. not like there aren't innocent people dying of neglect on every city's streets that nobody does shit about. couldn't give a shit if it's a deterrent or not - life imprisonement isn't a deterrent either. |
Since 1973, 124 prisoners have been released in the USA after evidence emerged of their innocence of the crimes for which they were sentenced to death. There were six such cases in 2004, two in 2005, one in 2006 and one so far in 2007.
(source: amnesty) How can anyone be Pro? |
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I'm going out, so I'll check back later. I'm not ignoring your response. |
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i'm not pro executions - i'm pro people not losing their lives to anti-social psychopaths. i'd rather there be no need to execute anybody. |
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If you can be 100% sure of their guilt and the crime warrants the punishment I'd be all for it, no sense in paying out the ass to keep a scumbag rotting in prison for the rest of his or her life. But is it worth the chance of an innocent person being executed? Not really sure.
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Never a reason to kill someone.
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Life in prison??? one of the posts here said solitary with 3 squares a day.... there's proof out there that solitary drives people mentally insane, which by definition would mean that you are inflicting cruel and unusual punishment. So what would be a proper punishment for a killer? |
I'm for it in certain cases, but am fine with life in prison for other cases. Depends on the situation and evidence presented.
What do I find interesting in all this is how people who have always been against the death penalty suddenly change their tune when it is their son or daughter, wife or husband, loved one etc, who is brutally murdered by some gutter scum. If the guy did it and isn't one bit remorseful about it I have no compunction whatsoever about them frying/injecting/hanging the asshole. Done and done. |
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I'm for it..our justice system needs a major overhaul.Especially for young offenders.Some poor kid was dragged to death underneath a car after some punks stole 10 bucks worth of gas.All they got was like 10 fucking years.
It's bullshit how the criminals get away with it..hang the fuckers |
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I am against a state-imposed death penalty, since governments and courts are corrupt and evil.
However, I have no problem with vigilante justice. So I am split on it. |
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if i really KNEW somebody in my family didn't commit the crime and was executed then i'm sure i'd turn against the death penalty. but unless that family member was actually in my sight during the killing how would I ever know if they did it or not. i really believe in an eye for an eye - i don't believe jail is an eye for an eye. it's unfortunate that an innocent person may die but like lots of things in life i believe in the larger purpose knowing that it won't be perfect. do you know how many things we do as a society KNOWING that people will die because of something we do or don't do? There are roads that we know statistically have more fatal accidents than they should but we don't do anything about them for economic reasons. Lots of other situations like that - our medical care system, long waiting lists that politicians know cause extra deaths that could be avoided. Mentally ill people dying in the cold of winter on the streets because nobody can be bothered. i'd leave it to the victim's family to decide if they want to. |
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I'm against death penalty
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http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0504-09.htm Willingham was duly convicted of murder and, after 12 years on death row, was executed by lethal injection in February 2004. Now, though, compelling evidence has emerged that Mr Vasquez did not in fact know what he was talking about. None of his testimony has passed muster with a panel of acknowledged arson experts, which has gone over it in detail. And without his testimony, the case against Willingham is left essentially baseless. |
Why kill them when you could make them ride an exercise bike hooked to a generator that was wired into the electrical grid?
You also would have a trap door covering the whole bottom of their cell, so if they quit pedaling for a certain amount of time the doors would open and they would fall into a pit of hungry crocodiles. |
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undecided
one on hand, if the crime is bad enough, let them rot in prison for the rest of their lives, fuck em, death is too easy on the other hand, we can execute them and not have to worry about supporting them until they die + this would also be a testament to their irrelevance |
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And another...
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/s...3517.htmlstory But 16 years after De Luna died by lethal injection, the Tribune has uncovered evidence strongly suggesting that the acquaintance he named, Carlos Hernandez, was the one who killed Lopez in 1983. Ending years of silence, Hernandez's relatives and friends recounted how the violent felon repeatedly bragged that De Luna went to Death Row for a murder Hernandez committed. The newspaper investigation, involving interviews with dozens of people and a review of thousands of pages of court records, shows the case was compromised by shaky eyewitness identification, sloppy police work and a failure to thoroughly pursue Hernandez as a possible suspect. These revelations, which cast significant doubt over De Luna's conviction, were never heard by the jury. His case represents one of the most compelling examples yet of the discovery of possible innocence after a prisoner's execution. That's two. Two too many. |
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When I sit and think about it I have to say no..
but I can think of many times I would have happily pulled the trigger myself when I hear of crimes that defy the imagination. Its a hard one..... of course there are fates worse than death. |
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I don't have all the answers, nor do I pretend to. What I know is I HATE the idea that someone could be put to death for a crime they didn't commit. But I ALSO hate the idea that someone, albeit under incarceration, can move on with their lives and live and even thrive in a "Community". (edit-while their victim is laying in the ground). |
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