Posted on 06/05/2016 4:48:39 AM PDT by 5150 FREEPER
Colby Coash can point to the moment his evolution in thinking about the death penalty began.
It was Sept. 3, 1994, and Coash now a conservative senator in the Nebraska legislature but then a freshman at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln decided to go with some friends to the state penitentiary. Willie Otey, convicted of first-degree murder, was set to be executed at midnight, and people were gathering in the parking lot outside. Coash can still remember the scene: the live band, the grilling meat, the revelers popping cans of beer and chanting, Fry him!
You wouldnt have been able to tell the difference between the parking lot of the penitentiary and a tailgate. It was pretty ugly, Coash says now. Even though he went to the event as a supporter of capital punishment, he says, it kind of changed my heart. I thought, I dont want to be a part of state-sponsored killing.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
Read the whole story of "Walkin' Willie" Otey and Jane McManus.
Like most libtard positions, declaring yourself opposed to the ultimate punishment makes you look noble and feel good while pushing the consequences of your decision off on others.
Name me any libtard position which isn’t.
Hang the bastard, hang him high.
Hoist his body to the sky.
It’s as nice as a day can be.
Won’t you come to the hanging with me?
Hang the bastard, hang him high.
Hoist his body to the sky.
It’s as nice as a day can be.
Won’t you come to the hanging with me?
Hang the bastard, hang him well.
Send his sorry soul to hell.
When his neckbone snaps we’ll know.
When the cannibal won’t be killing anymore.
His face will turn red,
Then purple, then blue.
We’ll watch from up here
To get a good view.
And when his eyes bug out we’ll know,
It’s the end of him
And the end of the show!
So hang the bastard, hang him with cheer.
We’ll make some hot dogs
And drink a few beers.
And when his tongue rolls out we’ll know,
It’s the end of the show
And we all can go home!
But not till we hang the bastard, hang him here.
The most exciting thing this town has seen in years.
When his body stops jerking we’ll know,
It’s the end of him, it’s the end of him,
It’s the end of him,
And the end of the show.
[Cowbell solo]
So hang the bastard, hang him high.
Kiss his guilty butt goodbye.
It’s as nice as a day can be.
Won’t you come to the hanging with me?
His veins will pop out all over his head.
We’ll tickle his armpits to make sure he’s dead.
And when his tongue rolls out we’ll know,
It’s the end of him and we all can go home!
But not till we
Hang the bastard, hang him high.
Hoist his body to the sky.
When his body stops jerking we’ll know,
It’s the end of him, it’s the end of him,
It’s the end of him!
Let’s get on with the show!
Hooray!
It's called "virtue signalling."
1. Identify five innocent persons put to death recently and we can talk. Or even one, if you can.
2. These people who sit in prison convicted of crimes are almost always “known scumbags” with a a long criminal history. It is extremely rare to see someone with no criminal history at all convicted of a crime they didn’t commit.
ALL punishment is "irreversible." If you put an innocent man behind bars for 20 years, upon the discovery of his innocence, how do you restore the 20 years?
Justice is, by nature, retributive and reactive. If the scales are to be balanced, the punishment must equal the crime. The maximum offense demands the maximum payment. Since the most punishment the system can impose and still be constitutional is a death sentence, in cases where the offense is as heinous as imaginable, the death penalty is not only tolerable, it is REQUIRED as the only means to satisfy justice. Any lesser penalty diminishes the value of the victim's suffering and elevates the offender above not only that victim but society itself.
It takes courage to apply the ultimate discipline, but a worthy society will rise to that demand.
I do believe that public executions as practiced by the 1890s were still dignified-- people gathered to witness, sang hymns and watched the condemned get a hood over their heads before the trap door was sprung.
If you could keep this dignified method, I believe they would even have a place today. But between the extremes of those who don't think it should be done to anyone for any reason and those who get their jollies looking at the unhooded spectacle which you describe, I don't see how we could bring it back the way we should.
I’m against it but for a different reason. I think God gets to decide who dies, not me or our justice system. I’m all for putting them in a prison and paying to let them think about their awful decisions. And yet according to Rapscallion and others,they believe I am not a conservative. I’ll live with my religious beliefs and my own comfort of my conservative positions.
ALL of your statement was profoundly true, but this was the best part.
That is not the set of alternatives we face. We have a choice between:
- executing the worst of the worst, and occasionally, perhaps, getting one wrong, or
- life without parole for the worst of the worst, and occasionally having them kill a fellow prisoner, arrange the killing of someone outside, released in error, released intentionally for political pandering, or escape.
The innocent are at risk both ways. Having been a juror, and having been targeted by violent criminals, I know which risk I will choose. I would rather take the risk of a juror who knows how serious it is getting it wrong, rather than the much greater risk of a criminal beyond redemption hurting an innocent person because the judicial system refused to do the right thing.
Not only do I support the death penalty, I think it should be vastly expanded. Rape a child? Death. Kidnapping and rape? Death. Forcible rape using a weapon against a stranger? Death. Attempted murder, when a success would have earned the death penalty? Death. Terrorism? Death.
Liberals are against the death penalty until a crime is committed against their family. Problem with the death penalty is it takes way too long to implement.
Trial, appeal, implement sentence. Killing a cop, kidnap murder, planned murder and third time felony conviction should all receive death penalty.
Justice needs to be swift.
Gettin' goosebumps here! Was anyone playing More Than A Feeling on their car stereo?
In Illinois in 2 adjacent counties County States Attorneys, establishment figures of opposite political parties, knowingly prosecuted, framed and convicted young men of crimes to which the prosecutors knew they were innocent.
Those States Attorneys did it to appear to be tough on crime and to advance to higher office. The voters backed them and they did rise to higher office. Cheating benefitted them.
The problem is us voters. As long as we back our establishment candidate in a form of identity politics where being of the right political party automatically gets our support, then we get the government we deserve.
As long as we who do not automatically support our identified party a allow ourselves to be pandered to by obvious pandering and twisting of the truth by the politicians we get what we deserve.
I am ambivalent about the death penalty. One reason is that I wonder about the accuracy of DNA evidence. I don’t have the technical knowledge to question it. I just know that human knowledge, as it advances, often shows us that things are sometimes less certain than they seemed. Plus, pretty much all evidence requires some amount of interpretation.
Precisely
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