- Reaction score
- 114
- Points
- 680
exabedtech said:Defining who should and who shouldn't receive the death penalty is easy if I simply ask "Should Bernardo get the death penalty". I'd love the opportunity to shoot him, and i'm sure i'd have to take a number if the opportunity arose.
Of course that isn't the way it works. We would have to define the parameters in legislation and then apply those parameters to the individual case. At that point, things get murkier. After a while it may be tempting to change the parameters a bit after a high profile sadistic murderer escapes this penalty since his particular case does not, for whatever reason apply. In any case, what exactly should those parameters be? DNA found at the scene that matches? I'm in and out of different homes all the time. i'd have to work in a hazmat suit from now on to avoid leaving a hair in home where someone may be murdered in the future.
I really am a big fan of DNA evidence, but then again, what does it really prove? It proves a person's DNA made it to the scene where it was found. It doesn't say when or how it managed to get there. A few years ago, I had to change a tire on a country road near St Albert AB. As it turns out, A military mechanic had dumped his wife's body within 50m of where i'd pulled over just the day before. She wasn't found until he led police to her some while later on, but I easily could have left DNA evidence as well as evidence of having pulled over in a truck at that very scene.
It is an extremely rare event for an innocent man to be convicted of a capital crime, but it does happen and still happens. Imagine your own child being wrongfully put to death over a set of bizarre coincidences. When debating the death penalty, you cannot consider the criminals we already know about, you can only consider the set of criteria under which you would judge defendants in the future.
Keep trying, but you will not change my mind.
Column A: Column B:
Murder Victims (millions of 'em); Convicted murders (craploads of 'em);
No Trial; Trial(s) with presentation of evidence;
No DNA showing guilt; Evidence of Guilt that is subject to their scrutiny and questioning;
No Statement; Lawyers (usually paid for by taxpayer) opening and closing
No Opportunity to Defend Themself; Can testify if they choose;
No Appeals; Endless Appeals again paid for by taxpayer;
DP carried out anyway; I wish!!;
Every one of that 100% is innocent; 99.99999% of them not innocent;
Lefties ignore them for Column B's rights. Lefties fight for these guys' rights over everyone else's.
Eerily, arguing about their 'rights' in Column B won't be winning my conversion to your (their) cause anytime soon.
You argue for every opportunity that we DO give them and pay for, but NONE of which 'rights' they felt their victims deserved.
Yep, I'm all about 100% certainty ... and only one column has that number. See, it evens out in the end.