Hatchet Man said:
Actually there are jurisdictions in the states (and other countries) where premediated murder is not the only capital crime. Some examples are Drug Traffic, Armed Robbery, Kidknapping of a minor, Sexual assualt, Sexual Assualt of a minor.
Great - there are jurisdictions in the US with laws as idiotic as those in Greece circa 620 BC.
Also if Tookie and other were not afraid of death, why do we see these last minute public appeals (especially in Tookies case) using high profile people including celeberities touting the scums merit and why they should live?
The issue isn't whether criminals fear death, it's whether that fear translates into a deterrent to crime, which it doesn't.
Why, because they are at the end of the road, death is finally at their doorstep and not years away. They have had years in most case to go for these stay of executions, but they wait till the last minute cause they are sh-iting bricks with realization that they are going to die.
You also have people who don't bother with the appeals process and go to their deaths confidently and quietly. Regardless, postulating as to the mindset of a death row inmate at the time of death is pointless and speculative at best. How this translates into a deterrent capacity for the death penalty is beyond me. Do you really believe that it's the appeals process that undermines the deterrent capacity of capital punishment? If so, you've only demonstrated that the institution of the death penalty in Canada would be useless as we're guaranteed to have a lengthy appeals process and thus the DP would serve no deterrent use. That's not to say I agree with you on the length of process and deterrent value (I disagree), but by your own standards, the DP is useless in Canada.
kincanucks said:
There's a consultation of the public at least every 5 years (often sooner) and the fact that the death penalty has been a generally non-existent issue would suggest that Canadians are happy with our abstention from its use.
Really and where does one view these public consultations and who conducts them?
I was referring to elections.
I did a quick search on public opinion about capital punishment and came up with:
http://www.cpa.ca/ogloff.htm
http://www.religioustolerance.org/execut3.htm
Public approval of the death penalty is currently about 70%. Public support is essentially the same in Canada, a country which abandoned capital punishment.
http://www.amnesty.ca/deathpenalty/canada.php
While this arctile shows a decrease in support for capital punishment there are still more people that support it then who don't.
An Ipsos-Reid poll in 2001 found that only 52% of those polled supported the death penalty. That's down from 61% in 1995 and 73% in 1987. Support for the death penalty would appear to be decreasing steadily.
Infanteer said:
Well, that's probably why it isn't doing so hot - what good is a justice system based on deterrent punishment when it seems to be the general concenus that penalties don't serve as a deterent value? No point trying to affect the behaviour of somebody you would just stick behind bars for life anyways; save that idea for lessor offences.
It's apparently doing hotter than the southern states which use the death penalty and the US in general. As I pointed out previously, the Northeast US (with 1% of executions) has a lower murder rate (the lowest rate of any region in 2001) than the Southern US (which has the highest murder rate) which accounts for 80% of executions.
Revenge serves a useful function; it ensures the "golden rule" is fulfilled. If someone commits depraved criminal acts, I have no problem with seeing the community lay vengence upon them.
The community gets its vengeance with incarceration and there's no risk of executing the innocent.
Not if you do it right - I'm all for it in the right circumstances; I'd have no hesitation in marching Paul Bernardo to the gallows; hell, I'd even kick the chair out.
While I share your disdain for Paul Bernardo, I think "doing it right" is impossible as doing it at all is pointless. How do we "do it right"? No appeals? March them from the court to the gallows?
If society has the power to lock somebody up for the rest of their natural life, then I see no difference then allowing someone to hang from the neck - it's all a matter of time and space.
I see a very big difference. The right to life and the sanctity thereof is supposed to be utmost in our system. We already went over the times in which it's justified to take a life and the DP fulfills neither. The only appeal or argument left for the death penalty is the sick, sadistic "satisfaction" argument which hinges on normative grounds.
Well, maybe we should invest in one; I like the sounds of it. It'd be a good place for Clifford Olson to work on his book about raping little boys....
Yes, then we can join the ranks of the former Soviet Union, China, and a host of other countries whose treatment of their citizenry is despicable (by our standards) to say the least.
Well, some people are animals, so it isn't an issue, is it?
I'm not even going to bother with that one. ;D
Instead of looking at new and pointless punishments for criminals, we might do better to take a look at the factors which cause crime. After all, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.