boyfalldown
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I really wouldn't compare the average Swiss with the average Yank though ... comparisons again.

I really wouldn't compare the average Swiss with the average Yank though ... comparisons again.

Switzerland has very high gun ownership levels. Nearly that of the US fact, but nothing like the homicide rate, in fact the homicide rate compares to the UK (all per capita)
that I'm afraid is absolute garbage - administering the death penalty hardly costs anything at all - its all bleeding heart inspired repeated appeal process thats expensive - however even that isnt as expensive as keeping someone in prison for 50 or 60 years
(it may not be quite as clear cut as to whether it is cheaper than keeping in for 5 yeasrs then releasing him on a badly supervised parole - but only if you don't count the costs of subsequent reoffending and reaprehension)
You could administer the death penalty far more cheaply - trial, one apeal, one plea for clemency - bullet in the head (or long drop hanging , guilotine, lethal injection , gas chamber - etc) over in less than 6 months from conviction
Chain gangs, hard labour etc - Alabamba have the right idea IMO
plus basic amenities only - bed, toilet and thats it no tvs, computer, xbox, sports facilities etc - if they want extras they have to earn the money to pay for them working 40 hours a week doing nasty ****** manual work like road ganging, and shovelling crap out of ditches
Some 35 percent of the 10,880 state inmates who got out of prison in Alabama in 2004 returned within 3 years, a rate that was virtually unchanged from the 3-year period between 1999 and 2002, according to a study released Tuesday.
It varies tremendously from one state to another, in some states they are literally available to almost everyone, in others they are available to nobody.yes but aren't the swiss procedures for vetting gun owners much stricter than in the states - you can't just wander into a shop and buy whatever you like there and then
Given how heavily armed he was i'm quite suprised the police didnt take the oportunity to exercise a little CP of their own and just shoot him on the spot - with that much weaponry on the scene it would have come out as a righteous shoot.
That aside this a a great example of what i was saying about apeals - there is no doubt at all that they have the right man , and the only question is whether he's fit to plead. If its established that he is , trial and conviction are pretty much a foregone conclusion and appeals a waste of everryones time .. just take him out back and nine him to the head.
But surely that's the point the article is making the existing way is too expensive.
yes but aren't the swiss procedures for vetting gun owners much stricter than in the states - you can't just wander into a shop and buy whatever you like there and then
posiview said:Can you explain how you would achieve this?
Regards.
I wonder how much the murder by guns statistics vary in states where they have abolished the DP.
It would help if the prison system was one that people don't want to spend another day in.
When you look at how some of the prisons in the US are run, you can see why people don't want to go back in. Hard manual labour, chain gangs.
Make the prisoners over here do things like that, put something back into society, after all it's the tax payer who is paying.
I know a few will be shocked, but they are not on holiday, while they are inside make them work.
Looking at people like Huntley, or had they lived the likes of raul moat or the taxi driver in Cumbria who went on the rampage, is there any justification for NOT having the death penalty. 100% guilty, evil people and will or should never be released. I certainly see no benefit to keeping them alive?
Evil or mentally ill? The brain is a wonderful machine, but one that when it goes bang can make normal people do the most evil things.
A better correlation is to look at the amount of poor, uneducated (also black) people living in poverty and the murder rate. To me that seems it would be a more telling statistic.
Looking at people like Huntley, or had they lived the likes of raul moat or the taxi driver in Cumbria who went on the rampage, is there any justification for NOT having the death penalty. 100% guilty, evil people and will or should never be released. I certainly see no benefit to keeping them alive?
Headless Lois said:Thing is, we can't have degrees of guilt in the legal system, can we? You can't say 'those people were definitely guilty, so we'll have the death penalty for them. However, this other set of people, who just happen to have been FOUND guilty, well we won't for them, just in case, because they are only mostly guilty, not, like, definitely'
Thanks .Clearly lower, by quite a margin.
For 2010, the average Murder Rate of Death Penalty States was 4.6, while the average Murder Rate of States without the Death Penalty was 2.9
For 2009, the average Murder Rate of Death Penalty States was 4.9, while the average Murder Rate of States without the Death Penalty was 2.8
For 2008, the average Murder Rate of Death Penalty States was 5.2, while the average Murder Rate of States without the Death Penalty was 3.3
.
thing is your assumption is that the DP causes a higher murder rate - it could also be that those states are inherently more violent areas and therefore the legislators are more inclined to have the death penalty
You can't just take him out and 'nine him to the head' though, even parts of China have evolved past that. You wouldn't find the appeal being a waste of time if you asked the accused or their lawyer. What if you had a terrible lawyer or defence? It's not a pick and choose what steps you want to follow.
Take the **** out and shoot him , job done - moving to a situation where bleeding heart liberals worry about the rights of someone who thinks its perfectly okay to gun down a bunch of inocent people , is IMO not a step forwards

I'd take exception to that , except I really can't be bothered to expend the energy
if you can't see the difference between executing a man provably guilty of mass murder, executing a woman guilty of sweet FA except for two men fancying her, then you really need a reality check
Diminished capacity Holmes could plead most probably, but who knows. It's certainly not considered normal behaviour to dress up as the Joker and go and shoot people in a cinema. If that fails you'd appeal, sack your 'incompetent' legal team and hire another.
Taking people out and shooting them just won't happen. Imagine trying to get that through Parliament or the EU. It's really not worth it morally or financially to get revenge.
pepi1967 said:I would take a look at this first you may change your mind on that
The trouble with diminished capacity with the offence itself being evidence of the person being unfit, is that its a sliipery slope - it could equally be argued that the commision of any crime is not normal behaviour , and therefore pretty soon no one is responsible for anything
The other problem with deciding that criminals are mentally ill, is that sooner or later some pillock decides they are cured (or that the state can't afford to keep them so they can be 'cared for in the community') at which point they are released to reoffend
which is the point - its not about revenge, its about making sure they don't do anything like it again.
I'm not sure I'm getting this. Are you suggesting the DP still exists mainly in sates that have the poorest people?...which matches with the highest murder rates.
Except that as already discussed you can't keep him in complete solitary so some unfortunate person has to come into contact with him , thus giving him the opportunity to inflict harm on them.
It is the fact that in the areas with the poorest people the crime rate is the highest. If you look at Michigan which held the title for years as the murder capital of America it is easy to see the real cause of crime. The proportion of those living in poverty, with no education and no futures would be a massive contributing factor. If you have nothing to lose then you are more likely to commit crime, get involved in substance abuse etc.
This is the point I raised earlier, which will I am sure get my shot down as a bleeding heart liberal by most (those who don't have me pinned already), but the key to reducing crime is not figuring a punishment for criminals and scare people into not committing crimes (the figures back this up). It is trying to find a way for people to be engaged in society and give them a reason to not need to commit crimes. Finding the best way to punish is like closing the stable door once the horse has bolted. The only way to reduce the crime figures as a whole (including murder) is to pull people out of poverty and give them a reason for living.
When you have nothing to live for and can see no future, drugs and criminal activity can have a VERY powerful pull to it.

It is the fact that in the areas with the poorest people the crime rate is the highest. If you look at Michigan which held the title for years as the murder capital of America it is easy to see the real cause of crime. The proportion of those living in poverty, with no education and no futures would be a massive contributing factor. If you have nothing to lose then you are more likely to commit crime, get involved in substance abuse etc.
This is the point I raised earlier, which will I am sure get my shot down as a bleeding heart liberal by most (those who don't have me pinned already), but the key to reducing crime is not figuring a punishment for criminals and scare people into not committing crimes (the figures back this up). It is trying to find a way for people to be engaged in society and give them a reason to not need to commit crimes. Finding the best way to punish is like closing the stable door once the horse has bolted. The only way to reduce the crime figures as a whole (including murder) is to pull people out of poverty and give them a reason for living.
When you have nothing to live for and can see no future, drugs and criminal activity can have a VERY powerful pull to it.
no never ever. We should introduce the American sentencing of 200-300 years or some other method of ensuring life means life in prison without possibility of parole.
There are no degrees of guilt, you're either guilty and you're punished or you're not guilty and you're not punished. You can't add degrees of guilt, such as an eye witness or not.
Atleast a prison sentence can be corrected if you find, however unlikely it may be, a wrong decision was made. A death sentence can't.

gramps said:Whilst I can listen to your argument in terms of crime in general (and yes I do think you are a bleeding heart liberal) I am not sure that it is a valid one in respect to murder in the UK.
gramps said:Chalk & cheese, they are not comparable samples IMO ... access to guns etc.
gramps said:But then I don't entirely agree, if poverty was the only or major reason for crime we wouldn't see so much crime amongst the middle class/richer members of society. I know the argument won't be popular with younger ones but generations coped with poverty without turning to gratuitous crime or murder.
That said, if we can agree what constitutes 'poverty', (I'm sure we won't), I will support working very hard to remove it.