Blind groper wrote:Couple of points.
First, on self help justice.
The people doling out death because the victim 'deserves' it are more often wrong about the person deserving it. For example : if someone is a drug pusher and murders someone else because the victim is selling drugs on what he considers his turf, is that justice? Obviously not, but the pusher thinks it is. State justice works to firm definitions and is consistent.
Agreed. Even if we disagree with the fundamental premises of the laws upon which any particular state administers justice, it is useful to have a society-wide definition so that people can know what is proscribed and what is permitted.
On the death penalty.
Shermer quotes a person who has studied this form of state justice. The estimate given is that 10% of those on death row are innocent of the crime they were convicted for. Rather a lot!
I'd be interested to know how many people that 10 percent comprises. In other words, how many people are on death row at any given time.
Add to that two more facts.
1. Executing someone in the USA costs 250% of the cost of locking them up for life, due to the many legal appeals.
Is, or should cost be a factor in dispensing justice? If justice demands a particular punishment, should the cost be considered as a part of the judgment? This works both ways. If the cost of administering justice is too high, then the chances of justice being denied go up because a prosecution may be foregone due to the cost. On the other hand, if the cost of justice is given consideration, it can also lead to injustice because, by way of example, it is far cheaper for China to take criminals out back and shoot them in the head than it is to incarcerate them for any time at all, including for petty crimes.
For these reasons, I feel that the cost of administering justice is a very dangerous premise upon which to base justice.
2. There is no proven deterrent effect from executions. Criminals commit murders either in the belief they will not get caught, hence making the penalty irrelevant, or in the heat of passion in which they are not thinking of penalties anyway.
There is also no proven non-deterrent effect from the death penalty. In other words, it is impossible to quantify the numbers of murders which have NOT been committed because the potential perpetrator was afraid of getting caught and being put to death. This is why that particular argument is something of a fallacy. You assume that criminals either don't believe they will be caught or simply don't care, which in many cases is true. But it's only true for those who actually commit murder. You cannot say that the penalties associated with violating any particular law are not effective in deterring crime generally simply because it may not deter all crime or any specific crime. Obviously laws have deterrent effect, else we would not have them. So it is therefore true that the threat of the death penalty being imposed for certain crimes has just as much potential for deterring a crime as any other law, at a minimum. It is of course impossible to quantify what the deterrent effect of any law is because it is impossible to quantify how many people do not commit a particular crime because of the penalty associated with it. The number of people who do commit a crime in spite of or in ignorance of the penalty provides no valid or useful information on the deterrent effects of the penalty because, quite obviously, they are the exceptions to the rule.
The other consideration in the effectiveness of imposing the death penalty is that it is a one-hundred percent absolute and perfect cure against recidivism of any kind by that particular criminal.
My view is simple. Forget punishment, which is irrelevant and unnecessary, achieving nothing. Simply remove murderers from society so they cannot do any further harm. I would like to see prisons designed with each cell like a small apartment, with exercise room, TV, en suite shower and toilet, and with grills between cells so that criminals can talk to each other but not touch. Give the criminals such luxuries as is reasonable, but leave them locked up for life (or at least till they are too old to reoffend).
And how do you insure, absolutely, that any particular criminal will never escape or be released? You should understand that there are cases where the individual indisputably murdered another but manages to either escape or, worse, get released because of some technical error in the process of administering justice. This happens from time to time for a variety of reasons, including changing social mores. Mumia Abu Jamal, the cop killer, has been playing the system for years by trying to enlist supporters in a campaign to get him released by claiming that he was unjustly convicted and/or that he has become a "different person" during his years in prison and is no longer a threat to anyone. But writing a book or learning to speak eruditely does not cause the events that got him convicted to disappear. A respected police officer was murdered by Jamal, and he doesn't get to be released from that sentence imposed upon him unilaterally by Jamal, nor does his family get to have him in their lives.
So is it justice for Jamal to manipulate the system and appeal to the ignorant and racist individuals who refuse to believe he was properly and justly convicted and imprisoned? Would it be justice if he was able to convince some judge that he was wronged and get released? Should the opinion of one judge, decades after the crime, control whether or not a killer remains in prison?
Quite frankly, Mumia Abu Jamal is one of the best poster boys for imposition of the death penalty in a timely manner that exists today. Only by executing him will society, and his victims, be absolutely certain he will never be set free.
Since you cannot guarantee that violent criminals like Jamal will never escape or be set free sometime in the future under your plan, to me justice is not therefore served by it.
Sometimes justice demands that the individual forfeit his life for the crimes he has committed.
I know some people will say that this will cost too much, but in fact, the extra money will be a very small percentage of the total cost of locking them up for life.
As I said, cost is not really a consideration in the administration of justice because either way it can easily lead to miscarriages of justice based on economic concerns rather than on matters of justice.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
© 2013/2014/2015/2016 Seth, all rights reserved. No reuse, republication, duplication, or derivative work is authorized.