It doesn't. America provides all the evidence we need for this.
Pragmatically speaking, how much is that worth? Because executing people is enormously expensive.
But it is the time for wishing for outlandish violence on the perpetrator of a crime?
[FnG]magnolia;19968163 said:You won't change any minds here, these types of threads never do. You're right, of course, but it's unimportant to the people you're aiming this at. People want their eye for an eye and their pound of flesh regardless of stats, evidence and logical thinking.
It doesn't. America provides all the evidence we need for this.
That all depends, how much is a life worth? If this guy got sent to jail, gets out in 25 and then kills another child and we find out that its the same guy who did the same thing 25 years ago and could have been prevented it will go down like a lead balloon.
And could you define enormously expensive for me? I honestly have no idea how much it costs, or on the flipside, how much it costs to hold them in cells, feed them, keep them clean, pay guards to risk their lives to monitor them for say 30 years.
Outlandish violence?
Retribution is justice.
[FnG]magnolia;19967792 said:The death sentence wouldn't change what your OP described.
Care to expand with said evidence?
It costs far more to keep a person on death row with a view to executing them than it does to keep them in prison for life. Part of that cost is the enormous number of appeals which any just society would have to endure.
And the question of the value of a life is one that I deliberately threw in, because it gives rise to utterly outlandish arguments. Of course a life is near priceless, but that doesn't mean you should pay such a sum to prevent any lives being lost.
States with the death penalty - Texas for example - have a comparable murder rate to States without.
You know killing people regardless of the motivation for doing so just makes you as bad as them.
You know killing people regardless of the motivation for doing so just makes you as bad as them.