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#1 | ||||||||||||||||
Silent Hunter
![]() Join Date: May 2008
Location: Storming the beaches!
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Very well, I shall elaborate further.
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![]() In order to be Constitutional, the camp could not practice anything regarded as cruel and unusual punishment. So all we have to do is find state-sponsored employment with terrible standards, and we have the worst possible environment for them whilst remaining legal through precedent. The military should serve admirably as a precedent for the measures needed. It would be a hard case to argue but it could be done if Congress backed it. The gulag had doctors and libraries and al kinds of amenities, they were just so bad that no one would ever use them. ![]() Quote:
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![]() One more thing I forgot to mention; No shooting people. All uses of force should be non-lethal except in the most extreme circumstances. You don't want captives escaping their fate by taking suicidal actions, do you? Truncheons, tazers, and CS gas should serve well enough. Quote:
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One of Stalin's favorite tricks was to give a person a tenner or a quarter, and if they survived it, tack on another sentence. While this is not permissable under the U.S. Justice system, there's no rule against insinuating that one's sentence might be commuted, only to dash their hopes on the day before the expect to be released. A lifetime with a broken spirit and mind is more hellish than a few moments with a broken body. Quote:
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The death penalty is very expensive and time-consuming, I can only assume that a reversible lifetime labor sentence would not warrant so much debate, and with production factored in, would be cheaper. Quote:
Labor camps preserve the lives of the innocent until they can be exonerated. The death penalty is irreversible. Quote:
Then again, who knows? It depends on the spin. Quote:
Rehabilitation is a natural extension of that philosophy, but prone to abuse by those who really deserve terrible punishments. I think that labor camps, in the context I have presented, are a happy medium. Miserable enough for the guilty, and hopeful enough for the innocent. The important thing is that they be reserved only for those who are found gulty, beyond a shadow of a doubt, of crimes like premeditated murder, rape, slave trafficking, and the like.
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#2 |
Soaring
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He who thinks he can decide in a state of aroused emotions, is wrong. He gets decided.
Eventually it happens that an offender really realises the wrong he did, and truly regrets and changes. I do not say this happens in all cases, I say that it does happen in some cases. That'S why the door usually should not get closed forever. If such a true change takes place in somebody, he indeed is no longer the person he has been before. Eventually it happens that the person most affected by a crime - the victim - forgives as well. And for once I agree with August. Costs should be no argument in sentencing. It would be an extremely dangerous precedence that easily could spread from death penalties to all kind of law cases and penalties in general. You should think twice before accepting that to happen, else we end up with putting people into coffins, linking them to life-support system inside (if that is not too expensive), and stacking the boxes near the garbage dump.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#3 | |
Wayfaring Stranger
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![]() Flanked by life and the funeral pyre. Putting on a show for you to see. |
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#4 |
Subsim Aviator
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I would be for that... the problem here is that most judges would rather the criminals had cable TV and ping pong tables and weight sets and libraries and movie night and similar luxuries.
![]() when you are sentenced life in prison, you should be placed in an 8x8 white room with concrete walls, floor, and ceiling, no window. your first day on the grounds you will dig a hole using a regular garden shovel. the hole will measure 7 feet long by 3 feet wide by 6feet deep. you are allowed 30 minutes per day in a 20x20 exercise room which is equipped with a treadmill. your food will be your choice of white or wheat bread, a single serving of vegetable, and a single serving of "mystery meat" served with room temp water. you are allowed to bring 5 books for entertainment ... make them good ones. your cell will be equipped with a single cotton sheet and a seat with a small hole for defication. your only chore will be to clean out the sewage trap beneath this hole once per week equipped with rubber gloves, a single sponge and a regular garden hose. when you die of old age, you will be placed into a pine box and thrown into the hole you dug on day one
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Best of SUBSIM Chairman Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Milwaukee, WI
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I have no problem with, rather than the death penalty, making prison life damned near unbearable. But sadly, that's not what we have. If we were to put into place the systems that most of us agree upon, ultra left groups would go nuts. I seem to remember that a few years ago there was a politician in Europe that claimed that a prison without a chance of escape leaves the prisoners no hope, and, as such, is inhumane.
As such, there are indeed some offenders that should just be put to death I believe. |
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#6 | |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Best of SUBSIM Chairman Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Milwaukee, WI
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An interesting related incident: http://www.jsonline.com/news/crime/47730062.html
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Here's another interesting case for examination: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steven_Avery |
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