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If you want to jump on the press bandwagon and be swayed by sensationalist reporting, be my guest. You should read my quotes from the latimes again, which addresses the op's concerns that this particular case of lethal injection was barbaric. The reports from the governor, amongst others, were of a event which unfortunately for you doesn't fit your definition of barbarity. If you think their descriptions of the event that took place defines barbarity, well..... Quote:
And furthermore assume what i think of humanity, and that my morals towards humanity aren't in the right place. I don't know if you know but we are addressing the op's point about this particular case where a crim was lawfully dealt with, in that state. Was it barbaric that a treatment of lethal injection was given to that crim? You say yes, i say no. We agree to disagree. If you want to start assuming that my moral fibres are lacking towards humans then we need to discuss that in another thread. Here, in this thread, we are discussing the lawful execution of said crim. Which has put some poeple's noses out of joint, including yours. You have your own vision of what occurred there it seems, which conveniently doesn't fit in with the reports of the governor, amongst others. Quote:
That the drugs don't work? Rubbish. The only thing the viewpoint is based on is that it's unconstitutional and inhumane. That's not fact, that's a moral stance. The drugs work, lab tests are conducted, which proves that the drugs work. The botched lethal injections occur due to inexperienced administration of the drug or drugs. Not because specialists have said that they don't work. I will admit that specialists (not the ones consulting drug companies who have banned the supply) admitted that in the case of the 3 drug adminsitration, the first 2, which are barbituates, are really not necessary, and a lethal does of the third is only needed. That's as far as that goes. Hence why there are only a few states left that administer 3 drugs Quote:
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Lethal Injections. Am i right or am i right? Quote:
Think carefully here. No experimentation is occurring, it's the administering of a single drug, in most states, apart from a few from 2009, which are still using the 3 drug injection, which is tried and proven. If we were still in the experimental stages, as you claim, then i can guarantee you there would be a hell of a lot of botched executions, and a hell of a lot of threads like this started. And people like you defining barbarity as something which only ties in with their moral beliefs. We agree to disagree, this debate will go around and around and around. EDIT: And i think we may have to define what a human is and what is not human. Now i'm sure you will come up with a definition and comparison with a human who commits no crimes and is a law-abiding citizen, and a human who commits rape, pillage, murder, paedophilia and any other lovely crimes you wish to put into that fold to describe someone who is not human. Are they both human? Genetics would say yes. Do they deserve a clean and humane death, with absolutely no botched chances forthcoming? I think that's where you stand. I don't unfortunately, or actually, fortunately share your stance on that. So questioning my moral fibre on my vies on whether a paedophile should be cared for and looked after until his or her final moments and that we should strive to uphold humanity and every moral fibre in our bodies to ensure that they not be given a barbaric execution is thankfully not something i need to stress about. |
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Don't trust the govt. for a proper execution! Something to think about before you kill people. |
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Get it yet? Quote:
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Perhaps they refuse because they view it as barbaric? One of those doesn't make sense, can you see which it is? Quote:
Pretty hard to find human subjects to volunteer for the clinical evaluation isn't it.:hmmm: Perhaps you could rehash some of 731s work, though of course such studies are uncivilised and barbaric which is why the people that did them were called heinous criminals. Quote:
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So that's not just 731, you have gone full on Buchenwald. Never go full on Buchenwald.:doh: |
I see both of you sinking into that level of condescention using the term "Yes Dear".
Absolutely nothing wrong with disagreeing with each others opinions and viewpoints but try debating in a more acceptable way. I'm off to work now but have asked another moderator to act appropriately should the need arise. TIA of your cooperation. |
Da judge speaks... I'll take a good Napa Cabernet with that!
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"But executions are, in fact, brutal, savage events, and nothing the state tries to do can mask that reality. Nor should we. If we as a society want to carry out executions, we should be willing to face the fact that the state is committing a horrendous brutality on our behalf....I personally think we should go to the guillotine,:/\\chop but shooting is probably the right way to go,":o Kozinski said." I personally disagree as wild crime ridden river-town Napa has a history of its own. Napa has the dubious distinction of being the site of the last public hanging in the state. It happened back in 1897 for a murder that so enraged the Napa community that instead of sending the criminal to San Quentin Prison, the judge turned the responsibility over to the Napa sheriff so the hanging could occur in the Napa County Jail yard. In preparing for the hanging, the sheriff hired carpenters to build a corrugated iron fence enclosure in the county jail's yard. It was 40 feet long and 34 feet wide. He also ordered a platform for visitors to view the hanging. 400 tickets were sold and the rope cut into souvenirs; the noose was retained by the sheriff. "January 15, 1897, Roe was led from the jail to the wooden gallows. A photographer was present to take the official photo. One of the doctors who attended Roe's autopsy managed to get hold of the body and took the bones to a roof in downtown Napa to bleach them. He then put the skeleton back together. It reportedly was used to teach high school students taking biology courses. Eventually it disappeared in the '60s, and its whereabouts are unknown today." A proper hanging can be a career stepping stone::up: "In 1870, Grover Cleveland was elected sheriff of Erie County, New York, in which capacity he personally oversaw the hanging of two condemned men. On September 6, 1872, Grover Cleveland personally served as the hangman to the convicted murderer Patrick Morrissey. So infamous was the murderer, his execution was covered by the New York Times. Morrisey had stabbed his widowed mother to death while drunk. The Erie County Sheriff was empowered to carry out death sentences, and instead of delegating the job to one of his deputies or an assistant, he decided to take responsibility for the handing of Morrissey himself. He tripped the engine of execution with his own hands, as he would again, on February 14, 1873, when he again personally hanged another murderer, John Gaffney. Both executions took place in public. The Republicans hung on him the pejorative nickname "The Buffalo Hangman.". Within 11 years the chief executioner was a 'hands on':doh: chief executive.:smug: |
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Where would the murderers be living ? Where is the highest probability of homicide/murders likely to be committed. You open a loophole and the criminal mind will be through before you can blink. Look what Hitler got away with, until it was too late - the cost was 50 million lives. His was a criminal mind and the world 'appeased' him for too long - an extreme example, but it happens if you let it. :) |
Just another botched execution...
Lethal injection, hanging, guillotine, firing squad, electric chair, keel hauled, or drawn and quartered all fine with me as long as they have the same end result - far too much focus on the criminals - not nearly enough on the victims - if you ask me...
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Good luck with that. |
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Well, Slovenia has one of the lowest rime rates, and the worst punishment one can get is 30 years in prison.
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Though of course it was only done on criminals and other sub humans |
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Sure throwing the word "stupid" around a lot. It's stupid to keep these type of criminals alive in prison, just shoot them. That works most of the time. Quote:
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I will agree with you as far as putting innocent people on death row, that the standard of proof should be very high for death penalty cases. But in cases where the evidence is clear cut, someone who murders a child in cold blood has forfeited the right to continue living. And yes, that will bring the crime rate down by at the very least: 1. |
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You usually put more thoughts behind what you say, I am surprised... |
I don't need to put a lot of thought behind simple matters like this, it doesn't require it. You're too caught up in searching for nuances when it's simple.
Let's see, you think this perp will be miraculously found "not guilty"? Judge: "I sentence you to death." Firing squad: "Bang!" Next day: OMG! that guy was innocent! It was some other guy who shot the case worker, the doc shot a guy who he owed money to.":rotfl2: Like I said above, the standard of proof needs to be pretty high, but there are a lot of cases like that where there is no doubt, not just a reasonable doubt. Unless you are a Hollywood screenwriter. |
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And who knows how high the dark figure might be? But... its rare so just never mind? Most people who get killed were guilty, so it's kewl? I am in awe. |
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