I just recently finished listening to an extensive podcast on executions, so I'm curious. Why should no one ever be executed?I don't think anyone should be executed ever.
I just recently finished listening to an extensive podcast on executions, so I'm curious. Why should no one ever be executed?
Which podcast is that? I need something to listen to tonightI just recently finished listening to an extensive podcast on executions, so I'm curious. Why should no one ever be executed?
In my opinion, the institution should not have the right to decide that someone has to die for his/her crimes, no matter how heinous those crimes are.I just recently finished listening to an extensive podcast on executions, so I'm curious. Why should no one ever be executed?
Just repeat my limerick about the two unique creators of TMMAC over and over.Which podcast is that? I need something to listen to tonight
Hardcore History, my brother.Which podcast is that? I need something to listen to tonight
Keeping in mind that in both instances deprivation of life is the outcome. How do you reconcile that locking that person in a cage to slowly go insane for the duration of their life is a humane alternative to just ending it swiftly?In my opinion, the institution should not have the right to decide that someone has to die for his/her crimes, no matter how heinous those crimes are.
No, it's not.in both instances deprivation of life is the outcome.
How is locking someone in a cage for the rest of their life not depriving them of life?No, it's not.
Instead of being an enigma why don't you tell us the reasons that you're against execution?No, it's not.
Hardcore History, my brother.
New one dropped last week.
It's a fucking wild one when you strip it all down to brass tacks.Started it now. I'm taking call so have to be up anyway. You just made my night immeasurably better.
I worked in a prison. They have movie nights, cable in their cells, video game systems, play cards and dominoes all day, free weights, basketball and other sports, etc. Literally the only concern is being locked up with other mentally unstable people so a simple argument can lead to getting stabbedHow is locking someone in a cage for the rest of their life not depriving them of life?
I can appreciate that concern about state overreach. Other than the irreversible nature, is there something about execution versus permanent incarceration that you think goes outside the state's Authority?In my opinion, the institution should not have the right to decide that someone has to die for his/her crimes, no matter how heinous those crimes are.
It sounds like your prison was broken.I worked in a prison. They have movie nights, cable in their cells, video game systems, play cards and dominoes all day, free weights, basketball and other sports, etc. Literally the only concern is being locked up with other mentally unstable people so a simple argument can lead to getting stabbed
You worried @Rhino might be with him?It's technically in Sunrise but yes. Please tell me if you ever go there again so I can avoid the area at all costs.
I'm lazy and kind of hoping he'll just stop asking me questions.Instead of being an enigma why don't you tell us the reasons that you're against execution?
I'm lazy and kind of hoping he'll just stop asking me questions.
Criminals have to be punished and that punishment has to fit the crime according to the law/societal perceptions of evil at a given time.
Taking away or restricting someone's freedom is the appropriate punishment we use when a person commits a serious crime.
But I don't believe that any person or group of persons should be granted the power to decide that, on a state level, someone must die for a crime he/she has committed. This is too much power for us to have. This is going too far, and it is incredibly inhumane.
Yes, of course people, especially the family members of murder victims, are going to feel that the culprit deserves to die, but at a state level, no person should hold such immense power as to be able to decide such a thing.
So you'd rather rot in a cell for 70 years until you die an old man than just have a bullet put in the back of your head?But I don't believe that any person or group of persons should be granted the power to decide that, on a state level, someone must die for a crime he/she has committed.
Remember this for when you make it to the end of the episode @Splintypunishment has to fit the crime according to the law/societal perceptions of evil at a given time.
That’s today’s state-of-the-art prison my dude. They’re slowly closing the old style prisons for the “hug-a-thug” versions with fancy door systems and $2m worth of video cameras. The only time you will see a classic 23hr lockdown is if the inmate is in seg at the unit or has a disciplinary issue and has been shipped to a max. The state can no longer sentence people to a max or super-max. They get to now live it up on our dime.It sounds like your prison was broken.
I'd rather not do either, but if I had to choose, yes. I'd choose to live.So you'd rather rot in a cell for 70 years until you die an old man than just have a bullet put in the back of your head?