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How To Execute People In the 21st Century

HughPickens.com writes Matt Ford writes in The Atlantic that thanks to a European Union embargo on the export of key drugs, and the refusal of major pharmaceutical companies to sell them the nation's predominant method of execution is increasingly hard to perform. With lethal injection's future uncertain, some states are turning to previously discarded methods. The Utah legislature just approved a bill to reintroduce firing squads for executions, Alabama's House of Representatives voted to authorize the electric chair if new drugs couldn't be found, and after last years botched injection, Oklahoma legislators are mulling the gas chamber.

The driving force behind the creation and abandonment of execution methods is the constant search for a humane means of taking a human life. Arizona, for example, abandoned hangings after a noose accidentally decapitated a condemned woman in 1930. Execution is also prone to problems as witnesses routinely report that, when the switch is thrown, the condemned prisoner "cringes," "leaps," and "fights the straps with amazing strength." The hands turn red, then white, and the cords of the neck stand out like steel bands. The prisoner's limbs, fingers, toes, and face are severely contorted. The force of the electrical current is so powerful that the prisoner's eyeballs sometimes pop out and "rest on [his] cheeks." The physical effects of the deadly hydrogen cyanide in the gas chamber are coma, seizures and cardiac arrest but the time lag has previously proved a problem. According to Ford one reason lethal injection enjoyed such tremendous popularity was that it strongly resembled a medical procedure, thereby projecting our preconceived notions about modern medicine—its competence, its efficacy, and its reliability—onto the capital-punishment system. "As states revert to earlier methods of execution—techniques once abandoned as backward and flawed—they run the risk that the death penalty itself will be seen in the same terms."

1,081 comments

  1. HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't.

    1. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Really simple. And that nobody is willing to supply the Propofol should tell you that some nation is stuck in the deep and dark past on this issue (and apparently has some problems with manufacturing some medical drugs...). The world has moved on and realized that there are no acceptable excuses to execute anybody in a modern society, it is time to join it.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    2. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why are you americans so squeamish about executing people? Surely you want to just watch them suffer, take a life for a life etc etc?

      Just make sure it's barbaric, if you're executing somebody, you should see what that means? At least ISIS is honest about their barbarity, take a note from them.

      In the mean time the rest of us in the civilised world will continue to look on with horror and disgust.

    3. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing idea really. But what will Texas do if it can't shoot retarded people in the face for the

    4. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      exactly, and it should be carried out by one of the victims family.

      They need to see the brutality of state sanctioned murder, they need to be involved, they need to understand how the death stains the soul.... forever.

      While its perceived as clean and tidy and hidden....

    5. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I disagree. There's an old saying about liberal application of high explosives, and their application to otherwise daunting problems. What could be more painless than being utterly vaporized faster than your neurons carry information? Just make sure it's done out in the middle of nowhere, so the buzzards, flies and like can pick over the remains, and some poor soul doesn't have to clean up. That's what I call ecologically friendly, too.

    6. Re:HOWTO by ganjadude · · Score: 2

      no, the answer is nitrus oxide. its painless and you pretty much feel great, and fall asleep, and dont wake up

      the other question is does it really matter? if they committed a crime* big enough to command death, does it really matter how?

      * - take out cases where people were found innocent after the fact. I am generally talking about clear cut cases with witnesses that hold up, maybe even video evidence. - example of people who deserved it, timothy mcveigh and the boston bomber when his time comes

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    7. Re:HOWTO by durrr · · Score: 1

      Why not use asphyxating gases? If the internet can figure out how to make painless exit bags then why can't the US government? It's not like nitrogen, helium or hydrogen sulphide is terribly expensive or hard to aquire.

    8. Re:HOWTO by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really. Just because you don't agree doesn't mean you are right or more advanced. You may be, you may not be, but you are not in the position to make that determination.

      If America wants to execute people, THEY WILL. Not having the drug sold to them will not change that, as clearly demonstrated by finding alternate methods.

      Finally, Propofol is not used for executions, Euthasol is. Pentobarbital Sodium. And its not difficult to manufacture, its patented. America could easily make it if they want to ... of course they'd be in violation of several international trade treaties that they expect Denmark to follow, so its really not something that anyone is going to do. Euthasol is patented by a Danish company, for reference, and they refuse to allow it to be sold to a state government for the purpose of executions.

      Perhaps if you knew a little bit more about the issue you wouldn't be making silly opinionated statements as if they were fact.

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it. Not everyone is worthy of life, deal with it. You don't want to execute them, fine, don't. We have other people for that. Consider yourself VERY LUCKY to not have to have had to experience something so horrible that you believe the only response is to take someone elses life, and hope that you never end up knowing what it feels like.

      Of course, as demonstrated by Utah, executing people isn't difficult, they'll just shoot them or hang them, thats ALL THAT HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED.

      Instead of people being terminated quickly, painlessly and with no suffering, now they are fully aware of the end of their life as it happens. This is clearly a much better solution.

      Personally, I'm happy for the lack of availability of Euthasol for use in human executions. Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible. The only way to make it better is to make them suffer like their victims, and their victims are NOT JUST THE PEOPLE THEY KILLED, but also all the people left behind. When someone murders another innocent being, plans it out, does the execution and shows no remorse at all (all of these things are the requirement for the death penalty in most places) ... and it happens to be your loved ones ... then get back to me on your high and mighty horse, until then ... stop pretending you're so enlightened. You aren't, you're just naive and selfish and ignorant of reality.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    9. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Don't.

      It isn't enough to say don't. You need to tell the lovers of death WHY it's a stupid idea.

      Here goes.

      1. It's pointless. It's not an effective deterrent, at least not for all people, otherwise you'd never need to use it.
      2. It's prohibitively expensive. Most of the costs involve legal wrangling, after all, but that's still part of the cost.
      3. It is irreversible. If you figure out you got the wrong person, you can't fix it.
      4. Even if you have the right person, it's not actually punishing HIM (or her,) since death is the ultimate fate of all living organisms.
      The person you would execute is receiving the exact same thing your own beloved child is doomed to get the day you conceive him or her.
      If that's a punishment then why, oh why, would a person EVER become a parent knowing that the child would be condemned to such a horrible fate?
      What did any (and indeed, EVERY) innocent child do to deserve that?
      5. If you think you're getting the person being executed an earlier start on his/her eternal punishment, consider that eternity is the exact same duration,
      regardless of when it starts.
      6. In as much as there IS no eternal punishment, in the place many people believe their imaginary friend consigns "bad" people when they die, as it turns out.
      Magic-evil-fire-land is just as imaginary as the men and women in red body-suits with pitchforks. Even were the PLACE real, why would someone who rebelled against "god" punish people for DEFYING him? Wouldn't "the devil" reward people rather, making Hell a cool, hip, happening place to spend eternity, rather than a boring, sordid "heaven" where all you get to do is tell "god" what an awesome, amazing, wonderful creature he is? Also, remember he created everything, including evil... so yeah, there are so many logic holes in the narrative to which Magic-evil-fire-land belongs that it's not worth the time to continue to examine this point. The place is fake, the punishment nonsensical and its occupants are imaginary.
      7. The people you punish are the friends and family of the people you kill, who often had nothing to do with the crime, even when you DO have the right person.
      8. If you DO have the right person, consider the very real possibility that he or she is performing suicide-by-court-system and that you are playing right into a would-be suicides hands, by allowing, condoning, or supporting this stupid, counterproductive, barbaric practice.
      9. The executioner is morally and ethically no better than the person being executed; the "state" saying it's okay to kill the person being executed, which is often for killing someone, cannot be done without it saying, PERFORCE, that SOME killing is okay. The state sanctions the exact thing, ironically, that it's punishing. You'd have to hire someone to kill the executioner after the deed is done if you're really interested in justice.
      10. The idea that it's a punishment of the guilty having been thoroughly debunked, now let's briefly examine vengeance. You don't get, as an individual, or as a society, revenge on or against a person you've killed, or else, the act of conceiving a child is VENGEANCE exacted upon that child as by conceiving him or her, again, you're condemning an innocent person to DIE. In fact, the individual concerned is ESCAPING justice, since the DEAD don't suffer AFTER they're dead. Executing a criminal is like asking people for tickets to prove they've paid for something after that something is done, and if a person turns out not to have a ticket, ejecting the individual from the thing, when he or she was GOING TO LEAVE ANYWAYS!
      11. It's a cowardly act to execute someone using someone else's hand. If you're going to have the death penalty, the person passing sentence should be obliged to execute the person, and in as grueling and gruesome a fashion as possible. Maybe if the judge had to take the condemned's life with HIS OR HER OWN

    10. Re:HOWTO by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yep, came here to say this. The solution is to realise that we're in the 21st century, and we no longer need any of this "eye for an eye" nonsense.

      It's more expensive than life imprisonment, it's more likely to have catastrophic consequences if a miscarriage of justice occurs, and it's less of a punishment.

    11. Re:HOWTO by dmbasso · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If America wants to execute people, THEY WILL.

      Psychopaths sympathize with that statement.

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize how flawed your justice system is, and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      --
      `echo $[0x853204FA81]|tr 0-9 ionbsdeaml`@gmail.com
    12. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously have never killed anyone deliberately. Killing someone changes the killer, a change society does not want occurring. Also, vengence by the state is not the same as revenge, we expect the state/ magistrate to function impartially, not by means of emotion.

    13. Re:HOWTO by penguinoid · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Most humane way to execute someone:
      Bullet (or bolt gun) to the head, followed by organ donation to more worthy human beings. This may be ugly, but it is very humane.

      Least humane way to execute someone:
      Put them in a box till they die, funded by money that could have been spent saving lives.

      I'm opposed to the death penalty, but my opposition starts at the most common method -- putting them in a box until they die because someone was too afraid of the automatic appeals process required for a faster death penalty.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    14. Re:HOWTO by ganjadude · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      realize how flawed your justice system is, and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      And none of that has to do with the facts that some people do deserve it. timothy mcveigh for one example

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    15. Re:HOWTO by Squiddie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem is that too often the justice system makes mistakes. We know that innocent people have been executed, but let's say that was not the case. Let's look at your logic: they have killed, so they deserve to be killed. Eye for an eye, no? Then why not do it like Saudi Arabia? They recently blinded a man as punishment for an acid attack. Should the US then implement these kinds of punishments that they so often condemn? At the end of the day, the death penalty accomplished nothing and too often costs too much to society at large.

    16. Re:HOWTO by i_ate_god · · Score: 0

      First you point out:

      > You may be, you may not be, but you are not in the position to make that determination.

      But then you:

      > I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it.

      so what position do you have to make these determinations?

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    17. Re:HOWTO by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 2

      It's more expensive than life imprisonment, it's more likely to have catastrophic consequences if a miscarriage of justice occurs, and it's less of a punishment.

      If the prospect of life imprisonment is more of a punishment than death why do most of the prisoners on death row fight tooth and nail and tie up the appeals process to get out of the death penalty?

    18. Re:HOWTO by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If America wants to execute people, THEY WILL. Not having the drug sold to them will not change that

      But it will cause change. One of the reasons many people oppose the death penalty is that the system is so dysfunctional. Condemned prisoners sit for decades on death row. Some of them are exonerated while waiting. The system is overwhelmingly tilted against the poor and minorities. The process of trials, and appeals, is hideously expensive. The botched executions and unavailable poisons just pile on more dysfunctionality. People may be in favor of the death penalty in principle, but fewer and fewer people are in favor of the way it is actually carried out. Those of us who oppose the death penalty see no reason to "fix" the system, and instead prefer to keep it as dysfunctional as possible until there is enough popular will to abolish it.

    19. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not dissimilar to locking them away forever and blissfully pretending they don't exist.

    20. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only Texas would shoot more retarded people like you in the face.

      Back on topic: If people are grossed out by the person about to meet their maker flopping all over the place, just give them a paralyzing agent and then you can hang 'em, club 'em to death, whatever.

      Or, maybe there's something that can be given to the witnesses... so that they're not such pussies.

    21. Re:HOWTO by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or just nitrogen. Same effect, easier to handle. Just make sure you have an ECG hooked up too, so you can make sure the condemned is well and truly dead before you expose them to oxygen again.

    22. Re:HOWTO by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because it's too humane. The condemned doesn't just die peacefully, they die after a brief euphoria. For many people this offends their sense of justice: It feels like an evil person has gotten away because they didn't suffer sufficient pain to balance out their crime.

    23. Re:HOWTO by aliquis · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      How is shooting something in the head with something which do a good mess all that worse?

      Except it messes up the place a little more.

      Animals are killed by the billions and they for sure didn't deserve that treatment.

      As for whatever it should be done or not, if it's a serial killer it make sense from a consequence perspective.
      If it's vs life-time in jail it also make sense from a society-economical perspective.

      If it's someone who took laws in their own hands to solve a dilemma no-one else took care of? .. Then isn't it more or less just like the law-enforcement?

      Anyway. Feel like my country should try to figure out because we're importing and having a lot of terrorists trained within the country now and for whatever reason want them back and want them here .. So. (Sweden.)

    24. Re:HOWTO by Nexus7 · · Score: 5, Informative

      You can expect anything you want, but it isn't happening. Here for example, is an innocent executed by Texas using a bogus "expert."

      http://www.newyorker.com/magaz...

      You've never heard of the "Innocence Project", I take it.

      Vengeance by the state is certainly not the same as revenge, it is a severely broken system, fed by an electorate that is easily swayed by simplistic made-up origin stories (Fox News), prosecutors who want scalps for career advancement, and in love with militaristic nonsense; and a system which is disproportionately harsh on minorities.

    25. Re:HOWTO by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really.

      As always, The Onion says it best.

      --
      "Are you hungry? I haven't eaten since later this afternoon." -- Primer
    26. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      As much as I hate the position of BitZtream, I hate quote-miners even more.

      Here, allow me to include the parts you conveniently left out.

      First you point out:

      >The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really. Just because you don't agree doesn't mean you are right or more advanced. You may be, you may not be, but you are not in the position to make that determination.

      But then you:

      > I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it.

      so what position do you have to make these determinations?

      There, now we have proper context to see that the two sections aren't really related at all.

      Thank you for muddying the waters and making actual discussions problematic. People like you are the reason we cannot abolish the death penalty.

    27. Re:HOWTO by tlambert · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why are you americans so squeamish about executing people? Surely you want to just watch them suffer, take a life for a life etc etc?

      No. The purpose of the penal system is to enact a penalty.

      The purpose of a penalty is to provide an example to the rest of society, such that they obey the laws, for fear of a similar penalty.

      Society is taught this lesson, regardless of whether or not someone is later found to have been not the perpetrator, since they were *convicted*, they are definitionally guilty, unless exonerated.

      It has nothing whatsoever to do with "retribution".

      Sadly, there are some jurisdictions that make a pretense of it being about retribution by permitting victims or family members of victims during sentencing. This is a perversion of justice towards retribution, and should probably not be allowed.

      As to your other point...

      The "squeamishness" in method of execution arises from temporarily enacted bans on executions, and the "cruel and unusual punishment" clause of the Constitution, since something that's been banned for 8 years, if you go to try to use it after the ban is lifted, is, by definition, unusual.

      Ted Bundy was killed in the Florida electric chair in 1989, He is known to have committed at least 30 homicides, including decapitating at least 12 of his victims. He would keep the corpses around and have sex with them until the putrefied. He kept some of his victims severed heads in his apartment as mementos. While in prison on other charges awaiting extradition, he escaped twice, and while a fugitive, committed other assaults, including 3 more murders.

      Ted Bundy needed to die to protect society, since he could not be kept locked up.

      If you agree, then we are merely arguing about where to draw the line, and not whether or not there are people who should be executed.

    28. Re:HOWTO by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      You think people don't fight tooth and nail to get out of being in prison for their entire life?

    29. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really.

      Cavemen throughout history agree. Enlightened people can see that by murdering somebody in revenge, you do not bring somebody killed back to life, you just have one more murder and one more murderer.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    30. Re:HOWTO by neilo_1701D · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves.

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      The problem with the death penalty is that you can't undo a mistake. Innocent people have been executed before; DNA evidence is getting people released from Death Row (see, for example, Anthony Apanovitch).

      In cases where guilt is 100% proven beyond all shadow of a doubt, there is still the moral issue of the State, which represents the people, being party to murder when the State (ie. the people and the laws they have agreed to live by) forbids it.

      Instead of people being terminated quickly, painlessly and with no suffering, now they are fully aware of the end of their life as it happens. This is clearly a much better solution.

      The bolding is mine. Under what system of ethics do you follow where killing a person and ensuring their suffering right up until they die is viewed as a better solution?

      What happens when a person commits a particularly horrendous crime? Suppose it takes around 20 minutes for lethal injections to work; how long would you have them suffer? The whole 20 minutes? Longer?

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it..

      In whose opinion? That may be your reality; it certainly isn't mine.

      When someone murders another innocent being, plans it out, does the execution and shows no remorse at all (all of these things are the requirement for the death penalty in most places) ... and it happens to be your loved ones ... then get back to me on your high and mighty horse, until then ... stop pretending you're so enlightened. You aren't, you're just naive and selfish and ignorant of reality.

      How many people go on to live better and more fulfilled lives knowing that this person is dead? Retribution is a very natural, normal emotional response. That doesn't mean it's the healthiest response.

    31. Re:HOWTO by SirSlud · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Except people who commit crimes don't really care all that much about the punishment. Harsher sentences don't lead to reduction in crime. Criminals are the kinds of people who think, "Hey, what's the punishment for killing somebody?"

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    32. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      As we do not know what happens after death, we do not know what these people actually get. Unless you believe in some primitive, obviously flawed "Heaven and Hell"-model, killing somebody is not a form of punishment and hence cannot be "deserved". It is however killing somebody in cold blood, and (disregarding some perverse legal fictions) that is one of the most despicable acts humans can commit.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    33. Re:HOWTO by SirSlud · · Score: 1

      Are not, rather.

      --
      "Old man yells at systemd"
    34. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And there your stance becomes obvious: You are not after justice, you are after revenge. In revenge, you do not mind killing a few innocents with the guilty, with justice, that is completely unacceptable.

      Other interesting fact: The Soviet Union had that sort of legal model where punishing the guilty was considered far more important than not punishing the innocent. Beware what people you associate with here.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    35. Re:HOWTO by ganjadude · · Score: 2

      As we do not know what happens after death, we do not know what these people actually get.

      and frankly, I dont care, they could be reincarnated as a powerb all jackpot winner for all I care

      killing somebody is not a form of punishment and hence cannot be "deserved"

      If that were true, wouldnt you see more people in prison for life appealing for death instead of the other way around? If it was not a punishment these DR inmates would not be wasting money and time on appeal after appeal (unless you are mistakenly believing that EVERYONE on DR is innocent)

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    36. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a flawed (infantile) understanding of Heaven and Hell.

      Meanwhile, you have a flawed (infantile) understanding of religion.

      Protip: different religions hold different views regarding heaven and hell.

    37. Re:HOWTO by tricorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nitrous Oxide isn't a bad idea, followed by CO2 or N2 displacing all the O2, or simply lowering the pressure. Valium drip followed by ex-sanguination might be an effective method as well.

      I'm generally not happy with the death penalty for various reasons, but if you're going to do it, do it right.

    38. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize how flawed your justice system is, and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      if you're really sorry about it, then you won't mind explaining how flawed our justice system is, and exactly how many innocents have had their lives taken by it.

    39. Re:HOWTO by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      Every single "problem" with it, can be resolved with common sense approaches.

      That is not going to happen. Way too many people see any "fix" as a step away from abolition. The more involved people are with administering the death penalty, the more they tend to oppose it, even if that is not their public position. Meanwhile, they make a lot of money off the dysfunctionality. So the people best placed to "fix" the system, are the least inclined to do so.

      It is silly to support the death penalty because it could theoretically be fair and sensible in some alternative universe. If you support it, you must support it as it is, not just as it should be.The only "common sense" solution is abolition. It is already repealed in 18 states, plus DC and PR. Many more states have de facto abolition, with no executions in decades.

    40. Re:HOWTO by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Except people who commit crimes don't really care all that much about the punishment. Harsher sentences don't lead to reduction in crime. Criminals are the kinds of people who think, "Hey, what's the punishment for killing somebody?"

      Not all criminals are sociopaths or psychopaths. A large percentage of them relative to the general population tend to be XYY, but not all people who are XYY are criminals.

      Part of the problem is that there are differential penalties for minors and adults who commit the same crimes (something which encourages adult recruitment of minors into criminal enterprises). Par of the problem is that the penalties (these days) are not swift. Part of the problem is that the penalties are not certain.

      So it's possible for a completely rational person to make a risk/reward decision on a crime, and decide to commit the crime (example: a father who robbed a bank to pay for his sons cancer treatment). People can do bad things for reasons other than sociopathy or psychopathy.

    41. Re:HOWTO by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      I came here just to type that exact response. Thank you, kind sir.

    42. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oklahoma is actually considering a nitrogen execution bill in this legislative session.

    43. Re:HOWTO by Cyberax · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm sure that means that we should institute summary execution for traffic tickets. After all, first you exceed the speed limit, then you drive drunk and then you plow at high speed through a group of innocent little children. We can't have that.

    44. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it does matter. 8th amendment and all.

    45. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But then think of all the money spent on the salaries for keeping them alive, and paying the construction workers to build the prisons, and more!

    46. Re:HOWTO by cmarkn · · Score: 2
      --
      People should not fear their government. Governments should fear their people.
    47. Re:HOWTO by sjames · · Score: 2

      Sadly true. Oddly enough, that makes the executioners much closer in kind to the executed than most people are.

      Perhaps they should look at the fact that nobody will sell them the drugs and no physician will help them and take a hint.

    48. Re:HOWTO by meburke · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The Russians used to sit a person in a chair and put a bullet to the brain stem. Lights out. This is the same target that snipers try for to turn off hostage takers without causing a physical reaction in response.

      But the nitrous oxide/nitrogen s a new idea to me and has some merit.

      --
      "The mind works quicker than you think!"
    49. Re:HOWTO by meburke · · Score: 1

      I think the purpose of the penal system is to protect society from those who prey on the common citizenry, and "penalty" has noting to do with it.

      I am not interested in punishment, retribution or revenge. If society is adequately protected by isolating criminals from the society, then that is adequate and moral.

      Clarence Darrow maintained that the persons who committed "real" crimes, such as rape, arson, or murder, were sick. They should be hospitalized and quarantined until they were well, then released. They should not be released before they were well.

      The death penalty should be reserved for those persons who are still a danger to society, even incarcerated. Some terrorists perhaps. Maybe lawyers and politicians.

      --
      "The mind works quicker than you think!"
    50. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah, then you learn that Ted Bundy escaped each time through some rather laughable circumstances. In the first instance, he was acting as his own attorney, and the judge excused him from being secured, and then he went to the law library to do research, where he escaped by going out a window.

      My goodness. Such a cunning plan.

      Now the second time, he was a lot more clever, but then the jail went on a skeleton crew for holidays. What? A jail, not a prison? What kind of security did they have? Well, not much really.

      And this was BEFORE standing trial, on charges that were rather weak, so he might have been acquitted anyway.

      He could have been kept locked up. It's just that the circumstances he was in, were not ones were people had yet to even truly recognize his depravity, so no real effort was made to keep him in a secure situation.

      What else do you expect? If anything, it just shows that those courts were lax, and would have been issues with ANY prisoner, let alone a Ted Bundy.

      But this wasn't even a person yet to be identified as a serial killer, so unless you're planning on executing us all, it's not going to mean much.

    51. Re:HOWTO by sjames · · Score: 1

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves.

      What might that say about the executioners? More to the point, what does that say about the executioners if it turns out the person they executed was innocent? Have they not then executed an innocent? Isn't that (according to you and them) grounds for execution?

      Since you probably already know that people have been executed and then exonerated, your first argument will probably be that they didn't know, but since we DO punish people even if they were motivated by a mistaken belief, EVEN IF IT WAS DUE TO MENTAL ILLNESS.

    52. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Least humane way to execute someone:
      Put them in a box till they die, funded by money that could have been spent saving lives.

      The problem is that it costs the state more to kill someone than it does to fund the rest of their lives in a box.

    53. Re:HOWTO by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      Nobody deserves unnecessary suffering. People who recognize their mistakes will feel punished for that, and people who don't will feel vindicated.

      America wants to execute people—more specifically, America wants to punish people—but few of us have the ability to distance ourselves from the process that you apparently do. America does not want to be present and aware of its brutality, it wants to be able to say justice is a balancing of scales and then to wash its hands of the whole affair. And nobody really believes you can balance the scales. Executing a monster doesn't undo their monstrous past.

      Your position is grotesque, like the emotions in a lynch mob. It's a feeling that most people can't stomach, and that's why it's been mostly abandoned. Society can surely be manipulated to fervor, to become monstrous, but then the fervor dies down. People cannot be manipulated to face themselves as the monsters they want to destroy. They walk away from the whole thing with regret and trauma.

      Restoring the worst forms of execution is the surest way to set execution up for abolition. Which would be commendable, except that the monstrous act still prevails.

    54. Re:HOWTO by omfgnosis · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Deserve? Deserve what?

      Justice is about making wrongs right. What does it mean to deserve? How does it square with justice?

    55. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming god is real, it is the most evil entity imaginable. Even if every single human on the planet attempted to reach gods level of monstrosity it wouldn't be possible.

      Any remotely moral, honest, and unbiased person who read the Bible, Torah, or Koran would reach the conclusion that the bad guy is the character god portrayed in those stories.

      The imaginary fairy tale land Heaven sounds like North Korea and the land hell a one of their concentration camps. Where the "good" worship and marvel in the love and glory of the Dear Leader and the evil are spited and sent for everlasting punishment.

      The biggest issue with believing or not in some hidden entity controlling and creating everything is that if god is real it is impossible to reject it, go against it, surprise it, or even think in a way it doesn't want. God is all knowing, all powerful, and created the universe. If that's true then god not only knows everything that has or could happen but actually engineered it itself. God created everything and the rules for how everything interacts with everything else. What we experience as time is just the program running an infinite number of "if then" steps and god knew all the iterations the program would run through when creating it. Anything that anyone or anything ever dose is done because god wanted it to happen. Sandy Hook, 9/11, the Holocaust, Crusades, ISIS, Soviet Union, North Korea, pedophiles, and every other evil thing that has happened was orchestrated by god to happen when he designed the universe. Free will is just your brain processing and acting on a large set of variables and conditions. Because god set all the variables that go into peoples decisions gods the one really the one in control of people.

      It is impossible for God to exist and anything to happen that God didn't do.

    56. Re: HOWTO by slasher999 · · Score: 0

      I too believed this for many years. However as I've gotten older I realize that some people are simply too dangerous to others to leave to their own. If these individuals cannot live within the society the rest of us do why is it our responsibility to support them for the remainder of their natural lives? Death penalty is not a secret, people know if you do this, chances are you are going to die for it. They have made their choice, so why do some people feel this odd need to "save" them like they are a stray dog but then insist that the rest of us help pay for it?

    57. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should they? In fact, yes. If it's not political, which it probably would be.

    58. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The justice system makes a lot more mistakes than we would like to admit.

      Ever notice how many cases finally get overturned due to DNA testing? Just a few years ago, a man from Louisiana got off death row due to a rape that DNA evidence finally cleared him as provably innocent. If it was 20 years ago, he'd be dead.

      Perhaps the Justice system likes the death penalty because when they screw up the main person who would complain is forever silenced.

    59. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Unless you believe in some primitive, obviously flawed "Heaven and Hell"-model, killing somebody is not a form of punishment

      Who said that primitive superstitions are required?

      Depriving a person of a future is punishment. Someone who has decided to, and has murdered other people, and who wakes up each morning and has breakfast anyway, is definitely going to be punished by having all of his future days removed. Forcing the families of the people he's murdered to go to work each day to pay some taxes to keep alive, and feed breakfast to, the person who wrecked their lives - that is punishment for the victims. They aren't made whole by the death of the murderer to took their loved ones away, but they spared from spending some of every day to keep that person fed and housed and chipping away at what's left. If the families can convince a judge they'd be happier keeping their loved ones' murderer alive, then that's something to consider.

      It is however killing somebody in cold blood

      No, it is just completing what the murderer chose to start.

      that is one of the most despicable acts humans can commit

      I'd say that doing things like raping someone to death is pretty awful. Doing it more than once, and promising to keep doing it is pretty despicable. Showing zero remorse for doing it is despicable. Telling the brothers, mothers, and children of the raped-to-death woman, "Hey, thanks for helping to buy my meals every day!" is pretty awful. Telling them how much he enjoys spending part of every day thinking about the act of killing their family member - pretty awful, right? Ending that person's ability to keep doing so is definitely punishment.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    60. Re: HOWTO by slasher999 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The death penalty is not vengeance in the least. It is a possible penalty for very serious crimes. Generally it's only reserved for the worst of the worst. It's not something taken lightly, but it is one alternative. This is very different from ISIS kidnapping innocent people, touring them and finally publically murdering them. Don't think ISIS is "honest" or have any other redeeming qualities. They are the Nazis of this century and are deserving of being wiped from this planet as quickly as possible.

    61. Re:HOWTO by Pentium100 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In my country, these crimes happened quite recently (and got a lot of media attention), the criminals were caught and convicted, but not all got life in prison. Maybe they should move to where you live after getting out of prison.

      1. Two school students murdered a 17 year old girl (using an axe, a hammer and a metal bar) then cut her body up into very small pieces and threw those pieces outside, while keeping one piece i the fridge for eating later. During trial one of the murders said that what they did was not cruel because they killed the victim before cutting her up. They got 20 years, hopefully they are not released sooner for good behavior.
      2. A girl (17 years old) was waiting for a bus when a car stopped and the two guys in the car offered a ride. The girl refused (smart), bu then thee guys just forced her into the car, raped her then put her (still alive) in the trunk and lit the car on fire. The ciminals were previously convicted on multiple lesser crimes. At least these guys got life in prison. And they probably will have a "great" time while in prison.

      In both cases a noose or a bullet would have been more appropriate.

      Or at least the prison should be how it was when my country was part of the USSR - no TV, no complaining that you do not like the conditions there and also hard work for some. When people got out of prison they did not want to return there at all, unlike some criminals now who get out of prison, start committing crimes again and go back to prison shortly after.

    62. Re: HOWTO by zeigerpuppy · · Score: 0

      Hell is just fine for me if it means not believing in your fairy god. The trap of religion is the true hell. Eventually I'm sure society will become civilized, the end of death sentences and the realization that crime is a function of a broken social order will be two signposts on the way.

    63. Re:HOWTO by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      Massive morphine overdose is apparently also a rather humane way to execute people. But a painless death doesn't seem to be the desired outcome.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    64. Re:HOWTO by ganjadude · · Score: 0

      flaimbait for stating timothy mcveigh deserved it.... wow slashdot.... wow

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    65. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There have been 20 exonerations from death row where DNA evidence eventually cleared the would-be executed prisoner.

      The average length of a DNA exoneration is 14 years. That's 14 years of incarceration on average to be acquitted.

      65% of the exonerees have been financially compensated for their time in prison (last I checked, state law set a maximum of $50,000 per year, with few cases actually achieving the maximum)

      If you are callous enough to state that such actions are just part of the risks of having an otherwise pretty-good society, then put your money where you mouth is; volunteer to be the next wrongfully convicted.

    66. Re:HOWTO by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Those of us who oppose the death penalty see no reason to "fix" the system, and instead prefer to keep it as dysfunctional as possible until there is enough popular will to abolish it.

      Revealing a typical left wing tactic. When popular opinion opposes what you want, rather than argue the case and convince people to do things the way you would prefer introduce "improvements" to the current system which actually make it worse, then use the results of these "improvements" to argue that the system is hopelessly flawed and must be replaced.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    67. Re:HOWTO by Jiro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      "I'll take 'arguments that can be used against prison and kidnapping as well' for 10 points."

    68. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment"

      What you're showing, here, is that you don't actually understand what the word "murder" means.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    69. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's scarier and emotionally feels like the worse punishment. Just like if you told your 8 year old they were getting a spanking. Almost all 8 year olds would fight tooth and nail to get grounded instead. Even if that meant being grounded for two weeks of school vacation which would actually be more of a punishment then a just a quick spanking. Objectively a couple weeks of mild to moderate discomfort ends up actually punishing more then a couple minutes of intense discomfort. Granted most parents would also ground the little bastard as well if they had to spank them.

      Just like some places down south where students can trade spending the weekend at the school in ISS or getting spanked most older kids will choose the quick spanking over the worse punishment of having to spend their weekend sitting in a classroom in silence. Most little kids would do anything for the weekend in ISS instead of the spanking.

      If you added up all the pain and discomfort of spending the rest of your live in prison and the short intense emotional pain of being executed, then the life sentence is worse.

    70. Re:HOWTO by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

      People like i_ate_god aren't the reason, but points for keeping the discussion honest anyway.

    71. Re:HOWTO by PopeRatzo · · Score: 0

      But it will cause change

      Well, Utah's found a way around any possible change because of the availability of lethal injection drugs. They're doing lethal injections of lead.

      http://time.com/3742818/utah-f...

      And you can draw a straight line from the reinstatement of firing squads to the growing militarization of police departments from big cities to small towns, and county and state police. There are already firing squads for poor people, they call them, "police". And not just unarmed black men on the street. The new trend in American law enforcement is for young black men to somehow commit suicide by firearm or being shot by police while in police custody with their hands cuffed behind their backs.

      http://www.nbcnews.com/news/in...

      http://legalinsurrection.com/2...

      In conclusion: Unarmed black guys get killed by representatives of the government, but if a white guy threatens an officer with a weapon, of course, he's taken alive and even given back his gun. What a country.

      http://www.alternet.org/civil-...

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    72. Re:HOWTO by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      You get 1 appeal, and if denyed, you go directly to the punishment instead of back to your cell. If you REALLY didnt do it, take the chance, otherwise sit there and rot until your day

      Either you are naive or ignorant. What happens when it comes out that prosecutors hid evidence? Does that justify another appeal? Why do prosecutors fight tooth and nail to prevent examination of previously unexamined DNA evidence?

      The plain fact is that innocent people have been executed in the USA. And you want to speed up the pathway to execution?

      Do you want to be responsible for executing innocent people? I don't, which is one of the reasons that I oppose the death penalty.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    73. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stay out of the US if you're too stupid to understand, nitwit.

    74. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that was an acid attack. Have you seen the faces of women after an acid attack? It's not fair to the victims that they either die or suffer due to maiming while their tormentors get off relatively easy by living in Club Fed (three square meals a day, books to read, exercise, sometimes radio and TV).

      I applaud the Saudi government for cracking down on the perpetrators.

      (Cutting off people's hands for stealing might be excessive, but to each his own I suppose.)

      Word verification: mangler

    75. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just revoke legal protections for people convicted of crimes. That way, anyone can legally execute them. Moreover, people who have been exonerated should still be executed. Even if they were harmless individuals before going in, prison turns them into threats to society.

    76. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the only version of murder you're willing to accept is the legal term, then sure. Of course, if we go for the legal term, one has to consider there's a lot of murderers out there that really aren't. But we'd still call them that. For example, think about every company whose cheap arsed CEO manages to kill customers. The non-legal term for that would be murder, because he knew that the shitty products would kill some (eg: Ford Pinto). But legally, not murder. Just deadly negligence.

      I'm sure that it's very comforting to the relatives surviving those who burned to death in a Ford Pinto to know that Lee Iacocca simply decided they deserved to die to save a few bucks. That he's not a murderer. Very comforting.

      And rather stupid.

    77. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Enlightened people can see that by murdering somebody in revenge, you do not bring somebody killed back to life

      You probably need to refresh yourself on the meaning of the word "murder."

      I would, though, like to hear your opinion on sending a man to work every day so that a bit of his paycheck can be used to buy breakfast, lunch, dinner, and much more for the person who raped his wife to death. Each day, he gets to do another little bit of work so that actual murderer can enjoy another day of reliving his conquest, and perhaps even reminding the dead woman's husband through letters or during occasional hearings how much he enjoyed the crime he committed. Your desire to keep an unrepentant, deliberate sex-torturing murderer alive and supported by, among other people, the surviving family of their victims is a strange urge. You want his indirect victims to look across the breakfast table at the empty chair where their raped to death mother used to sit, while the person who horribly stole her life is having scrambled eggs bought with their tax dollars. You truly are enlightened!

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    78. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how is premeditated homicide, which is what an execution is, anything other than murder? because it's homicide under direction of the state? as mentioned above, that is absolute hypocrisy. excuse it how ever you like, that's what it is.

    79. Re:HOWTO by Squiddie · · Score: 1

      Why highlight the faces of women? The victim was a man.

    80. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      how is premeditated homicide, which is what an execution is, anything other than murder? because it's homicide under direction of the state?

      No, it's death set into motion by the deliberate actions of the murderer suffering the consequences of his own actions. It's consequence. Your moral relativism is pretty sickening, actually. I wonder if you'd snap out of it if someone, say, raped your wife (or mother, or daughter, or best friend) to death after torturing her for fun. That might allow you to distinguish between that act of premeditated murder and the consequences.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    81. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves.

      and

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live[...]

      *you* are not worth letting live by your own logic! have you noticed that you're morally bankrupt?

      http://www.theonion.com/articles/texas-now-regretting-wasting-doses-of-pancuronium,38205/

      sources within the Texas Department of Criminal Justice confirmed Thursday that they now regret wasting doses of pancuronium bromide on innocent prisoners in 1997, 2000, and 2004

    82. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is obvious from your writing that you are an violent and bloodthirsty person, with violent fantasies of revenge, and that part of the problem is a very American fixation on violence as a form of justice.

      It is natural for a person who lost a loved one to dwell on thoughts of revenge, but it is not at all healthy. Your hypothetical bereaved needs emotional support and help to move on, not assistance from the state to channel their feelings into a misguided desire for an eye-for-an-eye retribution.

    83. Re:HOWTO by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Why don't the various states that are having this problem offer some money to whichever US drug manufacturer is able to supply them with some Propofol?
      Make it in a US factory where the EU cant interfere.

    84. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ABSOfuckingLUTELY.

      Furthermore, why in the hell can't they just send people on on hellava good MORPHINE ride straight to heaven.
      The reason is that AMERICA is fixated on TORTURE and the wrath of their supposed GOD.
      Not euthanasia and you know, human rights and shit.
      That would blow their simple little couch potato minds.

    85. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 0

      It is obvious from your writing that you are an violent and bloodthirsty person

      Not at all. Though it's obvious that you enjoy the thought of the families of murder victims supporting the person who killed their loved ones. Why do you like that idea? What is it about that that excites you so much? Do you have dark fantasies about killing people, and then getting to taunt them for the rest of their family's lives? It's a strange mindset, but your interest in keeping murderers locked up in boxes, cared for and fed by the families of the people they killed says a lot about you. Very ugly.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    86. Re:HOWTO by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      The problem is that it costs the state more to kill someone than it does to fund the rest of their lives in a box.

      It is more worthwhile to spend money giving someone better chance to prove their innocence, than to spend it keeping them in a box til they die.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    87. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      all of these things are the requirement for the death penalty in most places

      You forgot "being black".

    88. Re:HOWTO by eth1 · · Score: 1

      Nitrous Oxide isn't a bad idea, followed by CO2 or N2 displacing all the O2, or simply lowering the pressure. Valium drip followed by ex-sanguination might be an effective method as well.

      I'm generally not happy with the death penalty for various reasons, but if you're going to do it, do it right.

      Or maybe just a straight-up heroin OD?

    89. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or just use liquid nitrogen. Same amount of dead, but with the added benefit of being able to shatter the evil bastards afterwards.

    90. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are fed up then leave. Many of us ignorant idiots would prefer to remain in the US just as it is thank you.

    91. Re:HOWTO by Kjella · · Score: 2

      Least humane way to execute someone:
      Put them in a box till they die, funded by money that could have been spent saving lives.

      There are people with far more crippling disabilities than being stuck in a jail cell, yet nobody wants to kill them. Just be honest, it's because they're criminals and it's a resource issue not because you can't have some form of life behind bars. At least if you didn't make life in jail as shitty as possible as a deterrence, if you wanted to mimic real life under supervised conditions and with certain temptations removed you could do a way better job.

      I think there are people who have already dealt so great harm to society they don't deserve the opportunity to deal more. Because that's the flip side of giving people a second change, if you release a rapist from prison he may have changed but if not there's a victim who'll pay the price. You're of course free to seek redemption and forgiveness on a spiritual level, but not to ask society to accept more risk on account of you.

      That doesn't mean I wish them more harm than what's necessary to keep the rest of us safe. Retribution isn't usually about justice, it's about returning suffering and often in an escalated fashion. If you punch me, I don't just want to punch you back and get even. I want to beat the crap out of you for starting a fight with me for no good reason. It's about cruelty and while I certainly can feel like certain people deserve it I also know it doesn't really have much to do with justice.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    92. Re:HOWTO by Orgasmatron · · Score: 0

      Satire?

      1. Murderers, by definition, disregard the rules of society. Executing a murder prevents (or "deters", if you prefer) their future crimes. Note that crimes in prison are crimes.

      2. 4 rounds of .308 and a blank are cheaper than even a single day of prison.

      3. No justice system is perfect, but I agree that it could be improved. Make prosecutorial misconduct a serious matter, with punishments similar to the punishment under consideration. We aren't exactly swimming in false convictions, but there are still way too many. With real consequences (prison, death, etc) for prosecutors (and maybe extend to official witnesses, aka police) sketchy convictions would diminish.

      4. Most of us consider the time, place and method of death to be important. If we didn't, why would we consider murder to be a crime?

      5 and 6. You must be the hippest atheist in the coffee shop.

      7. Begging the question.

      8. So?

      9. Murder is not a synonym for killing. Please consult a legal dictionary, or a 10 year old child, if you need the difference explained.

      10. Nice of you to expand on #4. Still rubbish, but overly wordy this time.

      11. Gun owners tend to be responsible and have a keen understanding of the mechanics of civilization. We'd be happy to be judges, if you'd really like to exclude the gunless from consideration for judging capital crimes.

      12. Restitution is rarely possible even under the best of circumstances. For capital crimes, it isn't possible even in theory.

      --
      See that "Preview" button?
    93. Re:HOWTO by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And that nobody is willing to supply the Propofol should tell you that some nation is stuck in the deep and dark past on this issue (and apparently has some problems with manufacturing some medical drugs...).

      It's the EU saying "we don't agree with your stance on the death penalty, therefore we're going to do whatever we can to stop you". Meanwhile, they're ignoring the fact that all the other methods that were used in the past are just going to come back, since they're the second best option, and cause shortages in hospitals.

      That's not even getting into the arguments about life vs. death, or reformation of prisoners. If I were guilty of some horrific crime with no chance of ever being free again, I'd sure as hell rather be put to death than be locked in a cell until I gradually die of more natural causes. Life in prison vs. death isn't even the right framing for the argument - it's a slow, confined, drawn out death vs an expedited death. I've never seen a logical reason for holding someone for a life sentence without parole besides the inaccuracy of the justice system. That's a problem, for sure, but is in no way affected by whether the death penalty exists or not.

    94. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really.

      If ISIS has taught us anything it is execution is barbaric and uncivilised. The death penalty should be replaced with 12 hours of productive physical labour on prison farms with the misbehaving inmates assigned to 16 hours of hard labour and segregated to isolated prisons removed from society and the well-behaved inmates.

    95. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's only true for Nitrous Oxide.

      Just plain Nitrogen works too. No euphoria - the person simply falls asleep.
      It doesn't provide any pain, but your point was about the euphoria, which Nitrogen doesn't provide, and is very straight-forward to extract from the atmosphere itself.

    96. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is how you stop and bury a discussion of Harper's fascism. Fuck you samzenpus. Fuck you.

    97. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just bury them alive. Out of sight, out of mind.

    98. Re:HOWTO by hcs_$reboot · · Score: 1

      I do agree, and thank you for posting this, despite your weird name. However, please, please, explain why. That's not obvious for 50+% of Americans (especially the ones located near Texas).

      --
      Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
    99. Re:HOWTO by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

      "It's more expensive than life imprisonment"

      TBH, I fail to see how ending someone's life could be more expensive than feeding, clothing and caring for 20, 30, 40 years or even longer.

      --
      I've got better things to do tonight than die.
    100. Re:HOWTO by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Your complaint is misdirected. The problem with those guys is not the lack of death penalty, it's that they're released when they're still dangerous.

      And you haven't addressed his key point. Mistakes do happen, and more often than people thing. This includes some of the most heinous crimes, where if the guy is wrongly condemned, everyone is screaming for his head. When later on you find out that the accused was actually innocent, if they're in prison, you can let them go and write them a check to at least partly compensate for the injustice done to them. But you can't dig out a corpse and reanimate it back to life.

    101. Re: HOWTO by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      If death penalty is not about vengeance, than what's the purpose of it? Life imprisonment achieves all the same goals - it keeps the society safe from the sociopath, it serves as a strong deterrence (arguably even stronger, the perspective of spending many decades in a cell for most is worse then death), and it can be corrected in the event of a judicial mistake. The sole reason to prefer death penalty is to get a feeling of emotional satisfaction of seeing a "bad guy" die.

    102. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's murder then putting people in jail is kidnapping. And finding people is robbery. The reality is that the government gets to do things that would be crimes if individuals committed them.

    103. Re:HOWTO by hyades1 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Nice job of cherry-picking, or simply devising a situation out of nothing.

      Meanwhile, why don't you tell us how many innocent people should be put to death who would otherwise have been exonerated...even decades after their conviction? One? A dozen? Where's your cut-off point? And what penalty should be paid by law enforcement officials who hide exculpatory evidence?

      Because these things have happened in reality a lot more often than the hypothetical case you describe.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    104. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      The reality is that the government gets to do things that would be crimes if individuals committed them.

      Of course "the government" doesn't conduct capital murder trials without a jury. That's "the people," and it has to be a unanimous decision. The frequency with which jurors can't unanimously arrive at a death sentence even for some serious, serious monster killers on trial in front of them, shows that mechanism (a jury trial) is certainly not just some rubber stamp for "the government."

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    105. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You seem to be confused about the definition of "punishment". One central requirement is that the person punished can learn something from it.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    106. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The point about death penalty sparing the tax revenue is pretty bogus as it stands. The money used to sustain a normal prisoner is negligible compared to that spent for a death row inmate. A death row inmate gets much more money spent in the justice system. You may say that means the system is too careful with death penalty (or perhaps unfair in *not* giving a life-sentence convict the same right), but this is the practical reality.

      There are some people who really should die an an accelerated schedule. However our ability to make that call is so far from perfect, that it just isn't worth it. We have gotten so careful and selective about it, only a handful of cases get executed in a year. Even with all that care, all those appeals, and being so selective, we *still* have a case ever so often where evidence that strongly suggests innocence is uncovered after the execution. Basically the likelihood of the death penalty is not as related to certainty of the murder as much as it is to how heinous the crime committed is perceived. Someone with every possible piece of evidence possible shooting a notorious drug dealer to death is not likely to get the death penalty. Someone whose kids die in a house fire however can be executed based on flawed arson investigation that concluded it had to be arson by *someone* and circumstantial evidence (who else would have killed the family but the father? It's the only explanation....

      Besides, I don't know if I'd feel comfortable around someone who would execute a person in cold blood. Either they are somewhat traumatized by what they do (in which case it doesn't seem fair to *them*) or they don't mind calmly killing a person who at that moment poses no particular threat to anyone (which seems creepy to me).

    107. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 2

      Well, obviously if the prosecutors hid evidence, then they go on death row and the accused is set free as he did not get a fair trial.

      Not that I think such a system would work, but if implemented, then it needs to be implemented with all the consequences. Yes, I know that will never happen. The US is in a war against the freedom and basic rights of its citizens.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    108. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Nice one. I never understood that delusion that you could somehow correct a wrong by heaping more wrong on it.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    109. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1, Troll

      You have a mental problem. You should seek help. Obviously, you not only get off on fantasies of violence, you also have constructed an elaborate construction as to why it is somehow "acceptable" to kill. These are usually warnings signs of a killer slowly working up his nerve.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    110. Re:HOWTO by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

      We can't competently confirm actual guild and have repeatedly pardoned people on death row as well has evidence that some people executed may have been executed.

      Sure-- keeping an innocent person in prison for life is horrific. But killing an innocent person was a big thing the founding fathers were clearly trying to avoid.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    111. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably the best way is to inject hypertonic saline directly into the heart, thereby inducing cardiac arrest. Once deceased, dismember the corpse to make disposal easier. I'm sure there are already a number of medical professionals who would not object to performing such a procedure.

    112. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Overall I'm on your side, but I think your points could do with some examination.

      1. I agree. At least in the limited situation where modern society uses death penalty, those cases are people so damaged no deterrent would matter.
      2. I agree. Though part of the reason why is to be extra double sure the defendant has every chance to prove their case, and I think it weird that we don't afford people condemned for life the same opportunity.
      3. Agreed.
      4. You are going off the rails here. If that rant were the case, then people on both sides would be more laid back about it. Inflicting unnatural death on an unnatural timeline is a big deal. Most people do fear it. If it were no big deal because 'everyone dies', then why be so *against* the death penalty?
      5-6. This is just getting weird. I don't think the afterlife factors into the debate much. Vengeance certainly does on a very mortal scale, but I don't think people would *need* the concept of hell to still want to go through with it.
      7. This argument would also apply to life in prison. Basically any punishment given to the guilty will hurt the innocent who are in the guitly party's life.
      8. I don't think this is a realistic scenario. Keep in mind how drawn out capital cases are. If they really desired that end, they would find a way that's much less drawn out.
      9. While I think the perspective is skewed, I do agree that I'm bothered by the concept of an executioner. Either they are doing something horrible that is traumatizing them or else they are a bit of a psychopath. Neither situation appeals to me...
      10. Life in prison isn't exactly horrible either. I don't think it's going to work to argue that anything would work better at satisfying vengeance. I think all possibilties are pretty much equally hollow on that front.
      11. That may not be such a terrible idea. It may have less of an effect than you think though...
      12. Restitution in these cases is a lost cause no matter how you slice it. Those affected by the death of the victims can never be made whole, and even to the extent thay can receive restitution, a life-sentence prisoner is no more likely to provide anything meaningful than a dead one.

    113. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a friend who endured, for many years, abuse at the hands of a family member.

      Psychologically she was badly damaged by this, but she at least thought that when he died she might feel better.

      He did die, of course, but his death did not bring any peace. Just as the death of the man who, in your violent bloodthirsty fantasy, "raped to death" a wife and mother will not bring peace to her family.

      And in fact, if myself or someone that I loved were to meet such an unspeakable end I would be happy - insofar as I could know happiness in circumstances like those - to know that my tax dollars were in part contributing to keeping a dangerous inhuman criminal locked away forever.

      Revenge is not justice.

      (AC for privacy)

    114. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You bring to mind a very apropos _Simpsons_ quote:

      He's thinking of killing me then riding my carcass down the mountain to safety.
      He's truly gone mad if he's thinking that.

    115. Re:HOWTO by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      That's a weak argument, and I even agree with you. The State is sanctioned to exact forms of punishment that individuals may not - imprisonment is illegal too you know.

    116. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention that the states that allow execution absolutely refuse to ever re-examine the case of anyone who has already been executed even if new evidence comes to light. As far as the state is concerned, the justice system is infallible when it comes to execution. Those people who were exonerated after convictions they simply see as the system working.

    117. Re:HOWTO by wisnoskij · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Killing is not for punishment. No one who says that legal system is about punishment knows what they are talking about. Legals systems are about civil obedience. When the victims, the populous, cry out for blood you need to give it to them or face civil unrest. It is about making an example out of people to discourage other lawbreaking.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    118. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a really cowardly person. If you are too much of a weak and pathetic person, then yes, revenge murder is fully appropriate. Sadly, it seems you are this weak and pathetic.

    119. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1

      That is the really funny thing here: The US legal system prevents this! First, the drug is under patent, so they cannot rip it off. Second, if making something similar, it has to fulfill so extreme medical safety requirements that no US company will touch it with a 10 foot pole.

      The underlying problem is of course that the US population is mostly decent people that have been convinced by the psychos that the death "penalty" is somehow necessary and right. These decent people know deep down it is not, but as long as they are not confronted with reality too directly, they can suppress their decency with regard to the question. Now, in order for that to work, the state-ordered killing has to appear "humane". That means, for example, using actual medication for deadly injections that is legal to use for proper medical uses on humans.

      It it is absolutely no problem to reliably and painlessly kill large mammals such as humans. Veterinarians do it all the time, for example when a horse breaks a leg. These drugs do work on humans just as well, but they are not medical drugs from medicine for humans and they do not have any other application than to kill, and hence the "humane" killing illusion goes out the window.

      Case in point: Hanging was abolished in some US state in 1930 (I think) after somebodies head was torn off. That is not a problem for the person being killed, they very likely did not perceive much of a difference. It is a huge difference for the witnesses and the press, as it drives home how barbaric the act actually is. The decent people that have suppressed their decency with regard to that question find that, give such evidence, they cannot do so anymore.

      And that is the whole reason the psychos are trying to make executions look humane: They are afraid that the rest of the population will wake up and rob them of their little guilty pleasure. The difference is that in Europe, the population has woken up to that little fact.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    120. Re:HOWTO by syzler · · Score: 1

      Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible. The only way to make it better is to make them suffer like their victims, and their victims are NOT JUST THE PEOPLE THEY KILLED, but also all the people left behind.

      The point of the judicial system is not to exact revenge, but to protect society. I stand with the teachings (CCC 2267) of the Catholic Church on this issue.

      2267 Assuming that the guilty party's identity and responsibility have been fully determined, the traditional teaching of the Church does not exclude recourse to the death penalty, if this is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor.

      If, however, non-lethal means are sufficient to defend and protect people's safety from the aggressor, authority will limit itself to such means, as these are more in keeping with the concrete conditions of the common good and more in conformity to the dignity of the human person.

      Today, in fact, as a consequence of the possibilities which the state has for effectively preventing crime, by rendering one who has committed an offense incapable of doing harm - without definitely taking away from him the possibility of redeeming himself - the cases in which the execution of the offender is an absolute necessity "are very rare, if not practically nonexistent."

    121. Re:HOWTO by binarylarry · · Score: 1

      You see, by using European sourced propofol, we are basically tricking the Europeans into executing our criminals.

      This allows us to ride high on our moral pony while screaming jebus! in the land of the free.

      Personally, I think bullets are a cheap, effective solution.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    122. Re:HOWTO by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Well, obviously if the prosecutors hid evidence, then they go on death row and the accused is set free as he did not get a fair trial.

      I'll put you in the naive category. I think that is better than stupid.

      There was video of a policeman hitting a handcuffed supect during questioning. Was he convicted? No. You really think that prosecutors are going to suffer for misconduct? If so, I have a bridge to sell you.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    123. Re:HOWTO by wisnoskij · · Score: 2

      It should not be about that. If someone cannot be rehabilitated. If they must forever be confined for our societies safety, they should be killed on compassionate grounds. Requiring someone to be punished in perpetuity like some sort of hell on earth is barbaric.

      “We live in a primitive time—don’t we, Will?—neither savage nor wise. Half measures are the curse of it. Any rational society would either kill me or give me my books.”

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    124. Re: HOWTO by adamstew · · Score: 5, Informative

      You do realize that it costs significantly more money to see a death-penalty case from start to finish than it does to see a case where the penalty is life without parole?

      The trials are more expensive to run.
      There are many more appeals steps that are expensive through the legal system.
      It costs twice as much to house a death-row inmate during the appeals.

      All-in-all, it costs nearly 3 times as much to see a death-penalty case from start to finish vs. a non-death-penalty case. Also putting a person in jail for life, without parole, means they are never "left to their own" since they will never see freedom again...very slim chance they will be a danger to anyone again.

    125. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's both laughable and horrific that you are presenting severe emotional trauma as a way to "snap out of it" and think rationally about justice and punishment.

    126. Re:HOWTO by khallow · · Score: 1

      Nobody deserves unnecessary suffering. People who recognize their mistakes will feel punished for that, and people who don't will feel vindicated.

      America wants to execute peopleâ"more specifically, America wants to punish peopleâ"but few of us have the ability to distance ourselves from the process that you apparently do. America does not want to be present and aware of its brutality, it wants to be able to say justice is a balancing of scales and then to wash its hands of the whole affair. And nobody really believes you can balance the scales. Executing a monster doesn't undo their monstrous past.

      Punishment and vengeance is part of justice. From the pragmatic point of view, if your system of justice doesn't punish someone for a heinous crime, then the public will. You don't want a devolution of justice into escalating feuding and vendettas.

    127. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Webster's dictionary says the following:

      Revenge: to avenge (as oneself) usually by retaliating in kind or degree

      Retaliating: to do something bad to someone who has hurt you or treated you badly : to get revenge against someone

      A judicial system killing a murderer is not revenge exactly because the murderer did not kill a loved one of the judge, court reporter, lawyer, etc. It's avenging the victim's surviving loved ones. The difference has to do with motivations, not simply the act of killing the murderer. The motivation for a judicial system to do this can include:

      1. As mentioned by another: the victim's loved ones do not pay taxes towards keeping the murderer alive & fed
      2. The murderer cannot murder anyone else
      3. Killing the murderer is a deterrent -- if you wantonly take the life of another, you can expect death yourself

    128. Re:HOWTO by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      it's that they're released when they're still dangerous

      Pulling that out of context; How would a person who spent years among like minded criminals become less dangerous?

      Prisons don't rehabilitate people. They fuck people up mentally.

    129. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The death penalty isn't about punishment; prison isn't even supposed to be about punishment. Prison is about rehabilitation (although we've royally fucked that up) and the death penalty isn't about making that person feel bad about themselves or depriving them; it's about admitting that they cannot be rehabilitated and thus the rest of us aren't going to waste our money on them.

    130. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves.

      Imagine if we applied the same reasoning to rapists. Except, of course, that we kind of do, we're just not honest about it.

      Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible. The only way to make it better is to make them suffer like their victims, and their victims are NOT JUST THE PEOPLE THEY KILLED, but also all the people left behind.

      I'm sorry that you're so simple-minded that you seriously think that this makes anything "better".

      This is revenge, not justice. The whole reason why we give the government a monopoly on dealing with criminals is precisely to take the revenge aspect out of the equation; remember, the point was to replace blood feuds.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    131. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically this. There is no pain or suffering, you just feel sleepy and after going unconscious you die from lack of oxygen. You only feel like you are suffocating when C02 builds up in your blood so as long as you allow the person to exhale C02 and inhale fresh nitrogen and you don't allow any oxygen in, it would be an effective, painless, and reusable process since the gasses can be collected and reused for further executions. I honestly don't know why they don't already do this, maybe because it takes longer? Its not as flashy as the electric chair or as quick as lethal injection but its effective, cheap, and humane. So what if it takes an extra few hours?

    132. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you punish a child in private, the child might learn to listen. If you punish the child in front of his peers, they all get the lesson. Are you so dense to not understand this concept, whether or not it successfully provides the intended disincentive?

    133. Re:HOWTO by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      The world has moved on and realized that there are no acceptable excuses to execute anybody in a modern society, it is time to join it.

      You know, the world has "moved on" time and again: to imperialism, colonialism, fascism, and socialism, all with wonderful philosophical and scientific justifications behind them. The idea that the US should do something because much of the rest of the world, or "civilized countries", or Europeans, or China, or whoever is doing it, isn't very convincing.

      I don't really care much about the death penalty either way, but frankly, if Europeans don't like it, that's a point in its favor as far as I'm concerned.

    134. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you seem to be one of the few who have good reason for abandoning the death penalty instead of using emotion, I would appreciate your input. My country is currently mulling _instating_ the death penalty and though I disagree with the death penalty on most of the counts that you mention, I happen to agree with the procedure (note that I did not say punishment) in our unique situation.

      In my nation, a certain political movement has people perform acts of aggression (public murder, specifically) against innocents of a particular ethnic group. When the people who perform these acts of aggression are arrested (no doubt about identity or intent, and the people clearly state that they will do the act again if possible), then the political movement kidnaps members of the targeted ethnic group with the intent of trading them for their imprisoned members. This has happened multiple times, and the released aggressors have in fact gone on to perform the acts again.

      In our situation I do see the death penalty as a proper procedure for handling the murderers. It will prevent the kidnappings and prevent the murderers from being release to do it again. I am deliberately vague as to the identity of my nation as we are a "the world doesn't care if we die" nation. I would appreciate your opinion on the matter, thanks.

    135. Re:HOWTO by kanweg · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen, you have good company in IS. They may not agree with you what is and what isn't worth executing people over, but when your time has come in their hands, they've taken note that you want it painful.

      Bert

    136. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All other ethical questions aside, we still don't have any ability to resurrect people who are wrongfully executed. If you believe that doesn't/can't happen, then I'm a Nigerian prince with some money locked up in a bank account, and could use a little help....

    137. Re:HOWTO by kanweg · · Score: 1

      Maybe that unrest is a symptom for other things wrong in your society, because there is not much unrest in Sweden or other many other countries where they don't execute people.

      Bert
      Who thinks that people sentenced to life without parole should have the right to terminate it early themselves, like anyone else

    138. Re:HOWTO by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      killing somebody is not a form of punishment and hence cannot be "deserved"

      If that were true, wouldnt you see more people in prison for life appealing for death instead of the other way around? If it was not a punishment these DR inmates would not be wasting money and time on appeal after appeal (unless you are mistakenly believing that EVERYONE on DR is innocent)

      You seem to have overlooked the simpler and obvious explanation: that people wish to continue living.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    139. Re:HOWTO by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      [S]ome people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it. Not everyone is worthy of life, deal with it.

      Even if we accept this as fact--and I do not--you yourself note that

      [Y]ou are not in the position to make that determination.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    140. Re:HOWTO by catmistake · · Score: 1

      and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      This and this alone invalidates the death penalty in all circumstances, according to Blackstone's Formulation.

      But it goes much deeper. Statistics prove the death penalty does not deter crime. Many have been executed, yet we still have murders and violent crime. Those who commit murder do not care about life, and thus the threat of a death penalty will not deter them from their committed acts.

      Due to appeals, lawyers fees, court costs, the death penalty is far more expensive than keeping a convict in prison for life.

      And the coup de gras, the death penalty is overwhelmingly biased towards killing black men, many whom have been shown to be innocent after it was carried out... the stats don't lie, the death penalty is racist.

      If only those voting for the political Right would put their economic interests first, there would be no GOP, no nanny/police state, no unregulated out-of-control capitalist interests destroying our planet, and no inneffective, expensive, and racist death penalty.

    141. Re:HOWTO by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      "The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves" as long as you don't execute innocent people and i bet there have been loads of those especially if your skin is black.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    142. Re:HOWTO by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Yes, that is also true (but is a different problem).

    143. Re:HOWTO by Barsteward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      i guess you are happy with ISIS chopping heads of people because of their interpretation of law. In their eyes, its justified.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    144. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The U.S. is the Microsoft of governments.

    145. Re:HOWTO by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Most humane way to execute someone:
      Bullet (or bolt gun) to the head, followed by organ donation to more worthy human beings. This may be ugly, but it is very humane.

      That's the way we slaughter cattle - bolt to the head.

      If you're going to execute people and don't want the mess of a head shot, I'd say put em in a gas chamber-like room, and flood it with enough CO2 to displace all the oxygen (it is heavier than N2 and O2). Loss of consciousness within about 10-15 seconds. Death in couple minutes. I never understood why they insist on using a "deadly" substance like cyanide or phenobarbital, when oxygen deprivation is just as lethal. In fact the way cyanide kills is by inhibiting the mechanism by which cells metabolize oxygen.

    146. Re:HOWTO by fafalone · · Score: 1

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      Not that I'm advocating the death penalty, but that's a bad argument. It's quite illegal for me to put a gun to your head, drag you off to a tiny room, and hold you captive for decades (even if you murdered my family). If I do that to you, the State is sure as hell going to be doing that to me.

    147. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Noone says you cannot lock them up for life. Death penalty is done by animals.

    148. Re:HOWTO by Yaztromo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is however killing somebody in cold blood

      No, it is just completing what the murderer chose to start.

      Murderers rationalize their crimes in exactly the same way.

      Yaz

    149. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I don't support the death penalty because it's morally reprehensible" is pure, unadulterated narcissism. If you're here for that, please, go fuck off and die.

      For starters, it isn't government that decides on the death penalty. It's a jury of your peers who decide. And that's the way it should be, for better or for worse; nobody plays god, only a group of your peers, people of differing viewpoints, all looking out for the good of society. It's only after the civil war that all the court rooms got their maritime flags, and the 14th amendment was passed replacing our constitutional rights and citizenships in republics for the federal monstrosity we now face, and judges started giving juries instructions and throwing people off of them for not going with the party line, and we got a BAR association to monopolize on law practice, one of the reasons our ancestors fought the British was overly complicated law and lawyers. Only once all of those changes happened, that this discussion about eliminating the death penalty came up. All those wrongful deaths because career cops with big pensions to protect started torturing confessions out of people, and torturing the evidence as well to make convictions.

      It's really difficult for a tyranny to take root if you can't just go around shooting people you don't like, THAT is what this "discussion" is really about. Lets get that straight right here and now.

      Put me on a jury and John Wayne Gasey or Ed Gein, watch me paint the whole situation with a wide brush labeled "Guilty". I'll do it, and then I'll go home and sleep like a baby. I also don't want to hear any of this death by injection crap; bullet to the head, done, quick clean cheap. If you want to do it with some dignity, give them the option to dig their own grave first. We already offer a token of respect (last meal) and the opportunity for recompense (priest, rabbi, et-cetera).

      Could these people be saved? I can see a small government research program that the prisoners would opt into, where their lives would be spared with the possibility to release after rehabilitation into society. Problem is you do enough bad things and you end up numbing out, it's near impossible to come back from that. The Eggheads have done a lot over the last 60 years to profile and understand the psychology of insane people, when they start doing bad things they can quickly catch them, and eliminating the situations in-which they get that way, is an admirable objective. If CPS had taken Ed Gein away from his nutcase of a mother at age 6 and put him into a good foster home, or if the teacher union heads at Columbine High School were charged with violating RICO instead of kids deciding to shoot each other like prison inmates. Those are good outcomes.

      What isn't a good outcome is storing these people in a prison when the funding could be put to better providing welfare for poor areas of the country. Better yet, lower my taxes, then I'll voluntarily donate my time and money to helping those poor areas. Charity is one of those things tyranny also doesn't like; can't have the proletariat looking after their own no sir. Fastest way to destroy charity and force people to rely on the state is high taxes; charity by gunpoint. Then everyone has to get their giving fix through the government, and make the argument to some politician who gives you only the most meager scrap back.

      Our government is not robin hood, get that straight.

    150. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure how you figure a prisoner in the states cost money... It is an industry that (can) make money... https://materials.proxyvote.com/Approved/36159R/20120302/AR_120114/

    151. Re:HOWTO by Mantrid42 · · Score: 1

      So... you do know that it costs taxpayers more to execute someone than imprison them for life, right?

    152. Re:HOWTO by Mantrid42 · · Score: 1

      Yes, in our already overcrowded prison system, with disproportionately high populations of minorities, surely we should incentivize death sentences when there's such a high demand for transplantable organs.

    153. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they should move to where you live after getting out of prison.

      Maybe you should spend a few decades having your asshole resized in prison for a crime you did not commit, nazi fuckhead.

    154. Re: HOWTO by quax · · Score: 1

      Release all the nonviolent offenders who received massive sentences due to the three-strike, and mandatory sentencing rules, and you have plenty of savings to offset the far smaller number of dangerous criminals.

      Many of them rot in prison for nothing else than selling pot.

      Per capita the US incarcerates more of it citizens than any other industrialized nation.

    155. Re: HOWTO by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If these individuals cannot live within the society the rest of us do why is it our responsibility to support them for the remainder of their natural lives?

      You do realize that killing someone to save a buck is even worse than killing them for revenge, right?

      But hey, if you insist that your state should have the right to kill you if it sees fit, good for you. I don't trust mine with that power, but maybe that's just me.

      They have made their choice, so why do some people feel this odd need to "save" them like they are a stray dog but then insist that the rest of us help pay for it?

      Because they aren't a dog, no matter how much some people like the idea of "subhumans" who can be terminated at will.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    156. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure that story was in Saudi Arabia?

    157. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lulz. Says a winger who's ideology depends on breaking anything not fellating free market capitalistic property rights.

    158. Re: HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      The deterrence value of capital punishment is zero. This is a well-established fact. Unlike you, I actually look at reality.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    159. Re:HOWTO by bluegutang · · Score: 1

      Because it's too humane. The condemned doesn't just die peacefully, they die after a brief euphoria. For many people this offends their sense of justice: It feels like an evil person has gotten away because they didn't suffer sufficient pain to balance out their crime.

      Whenever someone dies while mountain climbing or skydiving, the friends and relatives console themselves with the thought "He died happily - doing what he loved most. If you have to die someday, isn't that the best way?"

      Not wanting a murderer to die among feelings of euphoria is just the flip side of this attitude.

      Like it or not, human beings attach great importance to what's felt just before death. Not wanting a murderer to feel euphoria at this moment is hardly an example of cruelty.

    160. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I too believed this for many years. However as I've gotten older I realize that some people are simply too dangerous to others to leave to their own. If these individuals cannot live within the society the rest of us do why is it our responsibility to support them for the remainder of their natural lives? Death penalty is not a secret, people know if you do this, chances are you are going to die for it. They have made their choice, so why do some people feel this odd need to "save" them like they are a stray dog but then insist that the rest of us help pay for it?

      And how do you feel about supporting the state sanctioned killing of innocent people? Which keep happening, there will always be convictions that are wrong. Just shrug it off as collateral damage?

    161. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would, though, like to hear your opinion on sending a man to work every day so that a bit of his paycheck can be used to buy breakfast, lunch, dinner, and much more for the person who raped his wife to death. Each day, he gets to do another little bit of work so that actual murderer can enjoy another day of reliving his conquest, and perhaps even reminding the dead woman's husband through letters or during occasional hearings how much he enjoyed the crime he committed.

      And when DNA evidence gets that man released after years in prison, because the cops and prosecutor were too lazy to look past their first suspect?

      "Thank god he wasn't executed by bloodthirsty shit-for-brains dumbfuck right wingers before he was cleared."

    162. Re:HOWTO by Black+Copter+Control · · Score: 1

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really. Just because you don't agree doesn't mean you are right or more advanced. You may be, you may not be, but you are not in the position to make that determination.

      If America wants to execute people, THEY WILL. Not having the drug sold to them will not change that, as clearly demonstrated by finding alternate methods.

      You're right -- people are eager to see justice done for an unjust killing. Unfortunately, that justice is far to often wreaked upon the innocent. Here in Canada, we gave up the death penalty after a 14 year old boy was almost executed for the rape and murder of his classmate. -- He was acquitted 48 years later.

      But here's my offer: I'm willing to help you develop a method of execution that appears humane and can't be blocked by sissies in other countries... but if anybody is executed by that method who is later proved innocent, I get to 'test' it on you to prove that the innocent person died in the most humane way possible.

      You willing to take me up on the offer? I would consider it Darwinism in action.

      --
      OS Software is like love: The best way to make it grow is to give it away.
    163. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2. 4 rounds of .308 and a blank are cheaper than even a single day of prison.

      And if sociopaths like yourself had their way, Richard Jewell would have been meat on slab, as would the Central Park Five. It's so nice and tidy when you can skip all that "rights of the accused" BS and skip straight to dealing with people who are obviously guilty!

    164. Re:HOWTO by zAPPzAPP · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to say that if the death penality would have been an option, then these crimes would not have happened?
      Because that would be the only argument of any importance given the whole reason we have a punishing justice system at all is to prevent crime. Not to exact revenge.
      I really doubt these people willingly accepted 20+ years in prison, but would have reconsidered in fear of a death penality.

      The punishment which acts as the best deterrant while still being reasonable is the most appropriate one. Not the one that 'feels' most appropriate.

      As there is apparently (by looking at past data in countries switching from one form to another) little difference in the deterrant effect between long jail time and death penality on hard crime, it makes no sense to apply the latter one, which is riddled with all kinds of problems for society, both economic and ethical.

      I agree that it may make sense to make the jail time itself more of a deterrant, but it is hard to get this factor to influence someone BEFORE they end up in jail, ie before they do the crime, which is what we really want.

    165. Re: HOWTO by Andy+Smith · · Score: 1

      people know if you do this, chances are you are going to die for it

      "This" = be black, have a low IQ, no money, and be accused of something that you may or may not have done.

    166. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Those who voted it "Flamebait" should consider that there's a rather good sub-discussion to be had here over McVeigh. Those who say he "deserved" it should not forget that he wanted it.

      "I knew I wanted this before it happened. I knew my objective was state-assisted suicide and when it happens, it's in your face. You just did something you're trying to say should be illegal for medical personnel."

      Moreover, in McVeigh's mind, he was exacting retribution against the US Government for murdering 76 innocent citizens in cold blood two years earlier. Comparisons between that and "retribution"-type arguments for capital punishment are entirely appropriate.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    167. Re:HOWTO by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      This is the second time in this discussion I've had to point out the obvious: Most people want to continue to live as long as possible.

      Or as the old saw has it, "Where there's life, there's hope."

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    168. Re: HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1, Funny

      It certainly deters that individual, doesn't it? I don't have the figures in front of me, but I should expect that the recidivism rates for those executed for their crimes to be exceedingly low.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    169. Re:HOWTO by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Put them in a box till they die...

      Funny, we do this to old folks all the time. And nobody seems to think that isn't torment.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    170. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever tried to transcend your current level of thinking and think a big higher level? I feel like there is really no such thing as "right" and "wrong" but rather just a large group of people's desires and their fears. It's never so cut and dry. What we really have are just disagreements and people who think they get to kill someone else for violating their beliefs. Who is really the dangerous one here?

      Think about places where someone is legal and suddenly a new politician comes in (not liking that thing) and starts talking publicly about making it illegal? Do we get to perceive that as a threat to our life and harm him? What if we think our way of life is fine and this new law is a direct attack on our family? Eventually this guy wants to implement the death penalty for breaking this moral law.... Isn't he trying to kill me now? It could be simple things like I smoke weed and he thinks I need to be put to death over that..... To me then I should be able to execute people who move into power and start taking about executing people who smoke weed... right?

      What I'm saying is that danger is not one-sided. It's always double sided. Your safety is someone else's misery. If we keep all the sheep safe the wolves starve.... If we give all the sheep to the wolves then all the sheep die. They both have equal stake in life and the right to attempt to live. Both see the other sides attempts to save themselves as "danger".

      White collar danger like crashing the stock market or wasting away someone's hard earned pension is just as hurtful to people but we have no recourse. So in reality only one side is really killing the other. I'd almost say that justifies the side getting thrown in jail for trying to hurt us back.... aren't our white collar ways a danger to their blue-collar skills?

      The answer is the both sides do what they have to and neither side should be able to judge someone's death. Everyone is trying to be "safe" and sometimes that may mean killing a politician who tries to shorten the number of years for welfare recipients... I mean honestly that guy is attacking your ways of feeding your children.... why can't you kill him? If you harm his method of feeding *his* children he can get you killed. But you are powerless while he pursues "legal" (pointless term in this context) methods to essentially harm and kill your family.

      It takes a certain type of intelligence to see things this way and the average person is down a few levels back where this concept of "right" and "wrong" exist and blur the issue into being one-sided. But if you transcend mans stupid laws you see two sides each getting their way of life harmed by the other yet only one of those sides gets to kill over the issue.

      Think about it people and raise yourself up from the primordial soup just a few inches higher...... otherwise you are just thinking like an animal. (Now bring up some violent crime counter examples to prove you misread my point)

    171. Re:HOWTO by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      Not everyone is worthy of life, deal with it.

      True, and some will interpret your post to mean you are not worthy, but what makes you think you, or the state, have the wisdom to decide who should live and die?

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    172. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Just to be clear, the choice isn't between execution and parole. The choice is between execution and life without possibility of parole. Restitution is possible in the latter case, should it turn out that someone was wrongly convicted.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    173. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do like the British did and create a prison colony/island, where they are released into, it could pay for itself with TV revenue.

    174. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I disagree. As a member of society, I have some say in what happens in my justice system. I wish for my justice system to permanently remove the individuals they described from society such that there is no chance of them interacting with anyone ever again. I do not believe we can, nor do I wish to dump resources into attempting to fix somebody who's so broken that they'll chop up human beings to eat them or set children on fire. I honestly don't care whether it's possible - in theory - to "fix" somebody like that. I merely want them removed so they're gone forever and nobody has to deal with them - including the prison guards.

      That I'm willing to entertain methods of execution which cause those individuals no pain ought to demonstrate that I take no joy in their killings. The gut reaction seeking vengeance is to have them killed as painfully as they killed their victims. As a civil member of society, I'm content to have such persons go to sleep and die peacefully. There's no bloodlust there; merely a desire to have them permanently removed from society in the hope that the rest of us civil beings can live normal, happy lives without them.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    175. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      John Wayne Gasey or Ed Gein

      You do realise that these are the exception and not the rule, right? There's an argument to be made in the case of these psychopathic serial killers, but they are remarkable precisely because they are rare.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    176. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      How will you deal with people who rape children and murder people so they can eat them once the justice system is "abolished"?

      I see what you're saying about the problems and even though I support the death penalty, I agree there are major issues that need to be resolved. I would support a science/evidence based approach to ensuring less innocent people get caught up in the system and that the system itself is an efficient and just machine treating everyone equally. Within that new, reformed system, I would like a method for permanently removing individuals who are zero net value to society. That begins with every murderer and extends outward from there.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    177. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      You quoted one line without the other; the other being the line in which the naivety was shown not to exist. They basically described what they'd like to see, then stated outright that it would never happen and why, and then you attacked them for being naive based on what they said they'd like to see happen.

      That's rather unfair, isn't it?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    178. Re: HOWTO by deuxm · · Score: 0

      And why shouldn't someone execute the executioner then? Because democracy? This sort of argument doesn't always work. The best thing to do is to stop the circle of death .

    179. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      This is very much a digression, but I've never found the argument "we should execute people because our prison system sucks" convincing. This can be found in various forms, such "prisons don't rehabilitate people" or "they could escape and kill someone else", but it's essentially the same argument.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    180. Re:HOWTO by William+Baric · · Score: 1

      Yes, mistakes do happen. So?

      We all have a lot more chances of being killed in a car accident then being wrongly accused of a crime. Yet, very little is done to effectively prevent death in car accidents. We could limit the speed of cars to 15 miles an hour, but we don't. We consider the convenience of our system of transportation outweighs the life of a few individual (more than a million each year in the world). We consider a million people being killed each year is an acceptable margin.

      So what's your point about "mistakes happen"? Because it seems completely irrational to me.

    181. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with removing an individual guilty of a certain level of harm from society permanently. Deterrent arguments aside, that individual will cause no further harm to society. It isn't about exacting vengeance, nor is it about righting the wrongs that person has done; it's about controlling the damage they can cause.

      I do not support the death penalty nor any result handed out by the justice system when it is handed out as vengeance. What I do support is rehabilitation with amends where feasible and appropriate and removal of particularly destructive individuals from society on a permanent basis. To that end, humanely execute all murderers and others beyond redemption.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    182. Re:HOWTO by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The purpose of the justice system is not to respect your arbitrary wishes. The question is, why do you wish that, and why you're not satisfied with life sentence and demand death.

      The only rationale that you gave so far is not willing to "dump resources" on those people. The oft-quoted statistics is that it costs more to execute someone than to keep them in prison for the rest of their life, due to the complicated and lengthy appeals process associated with death penalty. You could say that we should just get rid of the process, but that will only increase the number of people who are executed wrongly (even with the current costly process, we still get it wrong often enough to be noticeable). So in practice, the resource cost of keeping those people imprisoned is not for the sake of them if they're truly guilty; it's for the sake of giving a chance to someone who is actually innocent. So, how many innocents are you willing to sacrifice?

    183. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      That's a flaw in the system which should be corrected. Obviously every reasonable effort should be made to ensure no one is executed who could possibly be innocent, but when guilt is beyond question, stop with the legal games and quickly and humanely put an end to their existence so they can no longer burden society with pain, terror, and destruction.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    184. Re:HOWTO by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      There is a very big difference between an accidental death and an execution. The latter is a deliberate, intentional, thought out and meticulously executed act of killing. If the person is innocent, it is in fact murder. And even one murder is one too many.

      And given that every single rational objective that can be applied to death penalty is also applicable to life sentence, there's no reason not to prefer the latter in every single case.

    185. Re:HOWTO by itzly · · Score: 1

      And why don't we give people who are serving life imprisonment a choice of various painless suicide methods ?

    186. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      So the State, having decided that kidnapping is illegal, resorts to kidnapping as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      There we go. How's that look?

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    187. Re: HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Cite? Obviously different economics in different countries, but our worst inmates can cost us $10million over the course of their life imprisonment at a Supermax facility. I struggle to see how a few court cases and a few bullets cost more than that. If they do then the legal system, needs to be reviewed.

    188. Re:HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize how flawed your justice system is, and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      Don't confuse concept with implementation.

    189. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      The purpose of the justice system is not to respect your arbitrary wishes.

      Certainly not, but it is the collective opinions of individuals in a society that form its government and thus, by definition, its system of justice.

      The question is, why do you wish that, and why you're not satisfied with life sentence and demand death.

      Now that simply isn't true. I stated my reasons a number of times throughout my post:

      1. 1) such that there is no chance of them interacting with anyone ever again
      2. 2) nor do I wish to dump resources into attempting to fix somebody who's so broken
      3. 3) I merely want them removed so they're gone forever and nobody has to deal with them
      4. 4) a desire to have them permanently removed from society in the hope that the rest of us civil beings can live normal, happy lives without them

      I thought I was quite clear on the issue of why.

      The only rationale that you gave so far is not willing to "dump resources" on those people. The oft-quoted statistics is that it costs more to execute someone than to keep them in prison for the rest of their life, due to the complicated and lengthy appeals process associated with death penalty. You could say that we should just get rid of the process, but that will only increase the number of people who are executed wrongly (even with the current costly process, we still get it wrong often enough to be noticeable).

      The existing system has a number of flaws which should be corrected with evidence-based reforms. We should not be treating people from different communities, races, families, or means any differently from one another. Rules of evidence should be reviewed in depth periodically (following an initial overhaul) to ensure they're based on the latest scientific understanding of what is and isn't an effective means to establish truth. The same should happen for investigative measures to ensure that fewer innocent people ever make it to a trial. Prisons should be completely reformed to rehabilitate effectively where possible and confine safely for execution where it is not possible. And all proceedings involved in executions should be overhauled and periodically reviewed to ensure that every possible effort is being made to ensure there is no chance of executing an innocent person.

      That said, once the system itself is operating fairly, efficiently, and effectively to a certain degree, the delays associated with the high cost of modern execution sentences will have been reformed out of the system and the costs will decrease. Those costs may continue to be higher than keeping the individual in prison for life, but that seems a rather pointless endeavor to begin with. If the individual is such a threat that they can never be released, what is the point of having that individual alive at all? Seems as though you're merely reducing the threat they pose and forcing them on prison guards who are, themselves, law-abiding citizens who deserve protection from such threats. As such, establish guilt and execute. Threat is reduced to zero.

      So in practice, the resource cost of keeping those people imprisoned is not for the sake of them if they're truly guilty; it's for the sake of giving a chance to someone who is actually innocent. So, how many innocents are you willing to sacrifice?

      That's an unfair question. Let's take your question to the logical conclusion and state that we should simply release everyone in prison today, abolish the justice system, and abolish the police to ensure no innocent person is ever arrested, tried, convicted, imprisoned, etc. How many innocent people are we willing to confine in a cell for decades at a time?

      We cannot have a perfect justice system, but we can certainly have one that's a lot better than what we have today. We should be constantly reforming and reviewing it from top to bottom, fixing perverse incentives, taking lessons from g

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    190. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      They're two separate issues. Prisons should be reformed such that they provide maximum possible rehabilitation for those who can be rehabilitated (and so that no one is released until they are properly rehabilitated) and for those where rehabilitation is impossible, execution should be swift, humane, and simple.

      There are, admittedly, a lot of steps to get us from where we are today in the US to where the above is possible. However, I think those steps are worth taking considering the monumental cost of crime.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    191. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      No individual should ever be in the position to make that determination. There should be an objective, fair, efficient, evidence-based system making that determination and it should be regularly reviewed and reformed as needed to ensure it's continuing to be fair and effective. What we have today isn't that and we should work hard on fixing that quickly.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    192. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have made their choice, so why do some people feel this odd need to "save" them like they are a stray dog but then insist that the rest of us help pay for it?

      Because people that call for death penalty doesn't have a 100% track record of finding the right guy.
      When we get a reliable method of getting someone dead back to life I'm all for death penalty.
      Until then, I can only tolerate it with a complementary rule that you can't call for the death of another person without going with him. (Possibly if can be convinced that this only should come in effect if one later found out that the guy was innocent.)

    193. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      If the state sanctions it, it is not - by definition - murder.

      Further, the family cannot be involved since the crime is committed against society as a whole; not the family. It is society pursuing justice within the context of the trial and sentencing; not the family.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    194. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As we do not know what happens after death, we do not know what these people actually get.

      As a matter of fact we do know what happens after death. Absolutely nothing!

    195. Re:HOWTO by goarilla · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'm happy for the lack of availability of Euthasol for use in human executions. Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible. The only way to make it better is to make them suffer like their victims, and their victims are NOT JUST THE PEOPLE THEY KILLED, but also all the people left behind. When someone murders another innocent being, plans it out, does the execution and shows no remorse at all (all of these things are the requirement for the death penalty in most places) ... and it happens to be your loved ones ... then get back to me on your high and mighty horse, until then ... stop pretending you're so enlightened. You aren't, you're just naive and selfish and ignorant of reality.

      But that's not justice that's revenge.

    196. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the goal is to make them suffer, but in a way that isn't visibly so, because then it would make the death penalty unappealing to anyone who viewed it.

      If you can't ban the death penalty outright, I fully support the "barbaric" methods in the article because at least it shows the honesty of the situation instead of trying to disguise it as an efficient and clean medical procedure. I think some web comic (probably xkcd) proposed a giant robot that picked someone up and physically tore their head off their body... to me that would be perfect, because it's both quick and painless to the executed while being as gruesome as possible for onlookers to realize what is happening.

    197. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Death penalty is not a secret, people know if you do this, chances are you are going to die for it. They have made their choice,

      Because misjudgement never happens.

    198. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has bugged me for a long time too. Morphine overdose just blisses the person out and off they go.

      But that doesn't seem to be acceptable. Taking their life isn't enough for Americans - there has to be pain involved, not ecstasy.

    199. Re:HOWTO by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Haven't you been paying attention? The presumption of innocence is "victim blaming" now. Neither the left nor the right care about it.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    200. Re:HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      I hear about a lot of these cases in the US, but can't recall any like that here. The worst offenders I can think of off the top of my head were Port Arthur Massacre guy Martin Bryant, who killed 35 people, Ivan Milat who raped and murdered at least 7, and Bilal Skaf who was the ring leader of gang rapists. All of which are undeniable cases, all of which should be executed. the closest case I can think of was Dingo baby lady Lindy Chamberlain, but it quite obvious to anyone with a brain that she was probably innocent, and wouldn't be in the leagues of the pyschopathic animals that qualify for any hypothetical death sentence.

    201. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bet enlightened people can squeal like a pig. Wheeee!

    202. Re:HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Well whatever cavemen believe is what we should believe. To hell with evolution!

    203. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. Much like war, the death penalty is for those living in the 19th century. I don't know about Asia, but most of the western world has moved on.

    204. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As we do not know what happens after death

      Sure we do. Your body decomposes, including your brain, all those parts involved with consciousness, like your senses, memory, personality, etc.. We know of nothing that survives.

    205. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Propofol is easily available. It is used in anesthesia every day. It was thiopental which was embargoed. Idiotically, the damn lawyers wrote specific drugs
      into the regulations. Propofol would be quite effective in killing someone as it causes more hypotension than thiopental. It does however sting in injection,
      which is apparently fine for patients, but which is cruel and unusual for murderers

    206. Re:HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      The solution is to realise that we're in the 21st century, and we no longer need any of this "eye for an eye" nonsense.

      Who gave you ownership of the what is appropriate in the 21st century? I think future generations will look back and wonder why we bothered putting so much effort into protecting parasites while schools and hospitals suffered. There is no eye for an eye, medieval revenge, it is purely efficiency. When you have cancer, you remove it. I have a garden, when I get weeds I pull them out. It's the exact same concept. The idea that a psychopath has some right to exist with climate control and cable TV is primitive. There are people that exist on this earth that cannot co-exist with a functional society, and I think future generations will be smart enough to recognise and remove them when required.

    207. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      American idiots' logic:

      The death penalty is inhumane, there is no justification.
      *Brown people resist the invasion of their country*
      BOMB THEM ALL TO HELL!

    208. Re:HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      You seem to have a hole in your logic. A criminal is not deterred because by definition they have already offended. But there's plenty of potential criminals who chose a different path because they don't want to go to jail (or be executed).

    209. Re: HOWTO by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yes, and it's even successful in assuring that those wrongly convicted never in fact go on to commit a crime anyway. It's a win all around.

    210. Re:HOWTO by Cederic · · Score: 1

      When later on you find out that the accused was actually innocent, if they're in prison, you can let them go and write them a check to at least partly compensate for the injustice done to them.

      Not any more, in the UK.
      http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/barry...

      To be fair though, not just the UK:
      http://www.usatoday.com/story/...

    211. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's death set into motion by the deliberate actions of the murderer suffering the consequences of his own actions. It's consequence.

      No, you can be found guilty of a murder without committing murder. I wonder if you'd snap out of it if someone raped your wife, mother, daughter, best friend to death after torturing them for fun, someone else was then found guilty and executed (no doubt you'd be saying he deserved it), and the rapist and murderer were never caught! It's not as if people would still be looking for him after someone else has paid for the crime.

      It's great when the system works, but when it doesn't: One person murdered by the justice system, and the rapist and murderer protected.

    212. Re:HOWTO by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      If you're going to displace the air with N2, there's no need to bother with anything else. Pure nitrogen is very very dangerous in enclosed spaces because the body can't detect lack of oxygen, only a buildup of CO2.

      It's a big risk with people working with N2, often LN2 and they have VERY LOUD oxygen alarms because you basically feel a little bit sleepy then pass out without ever realising it.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    213. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'm sorry - but there are some people who deserve to die. the issue is the courts let them hang around 20-30 years.

      firing squad works - heck, can even make it mechanized where people don't pull the trigger...or, bring back the guillotine.

    214. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should stopped halfway, because you had a reasoned and informed argument. Then you went off the rails.

      If you want the victim to experience pain, you don't puss out and kill him. Instead, you torture him forever but refuse to kill him. Have some imagination.

      Oh wait, it's not legal in the US to do that, so shut the fuck up about using execution as some kind of painful, excruciating payback for past crimes (or, in some cases, lack of crimes). You want to execute people, fine. But don't get emotional about it, and ffs please don't enjoy it.

    215. Re:HOWTO by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Can't find any references to Saudi Arabia. Iran however:
      http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/iran-...

      Of course, it would be useful to educate these ignorant fucks that throwing acid at people is wrong in the first place. There are three crimes against humanity in this case, the person getting disfigured by acid, the person being brought up in an abusive religious system that left him thinking this was appropriate behaviour and then the abusive religious system choosing to blind him after.

      It's medieval right through; ISIS get the flak but Iran aren't terribly different.

    216. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is why the actual issue is making sure you don't convict an innocent man.

      those who murder and admit it, should die, period.

    217. Re:HOWTO by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Out of idle curiousity, how would one go about fellating free market capitalistic property rights?

      Are there video tutorials available?

    218. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Create a jobs program for ISIS

    219. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "ensuring their suffering right up until they die"

      hate to tell you, moron....but, they put themselves there to suffer. they made their choices, now they get to live with them until they are dead.

      "That doesn't mean it's the healthiest response."

      doesn't mean it's the unhealthiest, either.

    220. Re: HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Being wrongly convicted and dying in a gas chamber due to organ failure is different from being wrongly convicted and dying in a cell due to organ failure how, exactly?

      We should make every effort to ensure no innocent person is wrongfully convicted. We need a lot of reforms throughout our criminal justice systems to make that happen. We should be taking lessons for groups like the Innocence Project to better understand where we're going wrong and improve. We should look at the rules of evidence and how juries deliberate to determine what works well and what has poor outcomes. We should do things like this throughout the process and on a regular basis.

      But at the end of the day, we aren't throwing every cell open to let everyone roam free on the off chance that somebody innocent slipped through the cracks. The system should be fair, equitable, efficient, and effective. We should rehabilitate those who can be rehabilitated and execute those who cannot. Keep it simple, efficient, and constantly improving. It will never be perfect. We, as any society, must accept that fact. And whether someone dies in a box of old age or dies in a box by execution, where that person is innocent, we have all failed them. We must make every reasonable effort to avoid that possibility, accept our mistakes, learn from them, and constantly improve. And yes, we're a long way away from any of that today. I welcome an overhaul of our system.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    221. Re:HOWTO by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      just give them some opiats and too much to drink.

      it seems the medical staff doesn't want to deal with it or even touch the thing with a 10 foot pole which is understandable, but really there isn't a shortage of better ways to do it. sleeping pills and an enclosed chamber would work to.

      it's just the punishment as a personal revenge posse pushing for the death penalty anyways, you know eye for an eye and all that shit.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    222. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      Depriving a person of a future is punishment. Someone who has decided to, and has murdered other people, and who wakes up each morning and has breakfast anyway, is definitely going to be punished by having all of his future days removed. Forcing the families of the people he's murdered to go to work each day to pay some taxes to keep alive, and feed breakfast to, the person who wrecked their lives - that is punishment for the victims.

      Your advocating killing them for the reason of not paying a small tax burden? That is judging a life to be worth a pretty small amount, probably far less than the reasons the murderer had for killing someone.

    223. Re: HOWTO by michelcolman · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the US has a nasty habit of convicting people for crimes they did not commit. "Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, just look at this guy. He was in the neighbourhood and... he's black. Need I say more?" (And we needed our department head to look good by catching the killer).

      If you really know beyond the shadow of a doubt that the person is guilty of some serious violent crime without attenuating circumstances (raping and killing a child, for example), by all means kill him (or her). But if there's even the slightest possibility of error (and there usually is), there's no way you can justify it.

      Now, on the other hand, if you're past that discussion and really want to officially kill someone in a humane way, I'm really having trouble seeing what the practical difficulties are. Just give the same kind of anaesthetic you give to people going into surgery. Lots of it, much more than normal so there's no chance of him waking up, possibly even killing them just with that shot. Then finish the kill in any way you choose. Drill through the heart with a power drill for all I care. If you can do open heart surgery without the patient suffering, why would it be so hard to kill someone? I don't get it.

      (And then of course there's the whole issue of whether or not someone who raped and killed a child even deserves humane treatment, but that's a whole other can of worms I'm not even going to get into).

    224. Re:HOWTO by ultranova · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with removing an individual guilty of a certain level of harm from society permanently.

      Which incarceration already accomplishes. Ethics of death penalty aside, pretending the choice is it or letting murderers walk free is dishonest.

      I do not support the death penalty nor any result handed out by the justice system when it is handed out as vengeance. What I do support is rehabilitation with amends where feasible and appropriate and removal of particularly destructive individuals from society on a permanent basis. To that end, humanely execute all murderers and others beyond redemption.

      Does this mean that contract killers should get leniency because, after all, they're not killing people for revenge but as mere business? Especially if they use a clean method - which, as the summary noted, is what "humane" really means in this context?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    225. Re:HOWTO by TheCarp · · Score: 1

      Yes its a bad idea....its wanton killing of a human being who is of no threat to you. Its murder in my eyes, and no amount of legal contortion will make it otherwise.

      If you are going to do it...do it right.... do the world a favor and practice on yourself! I have no moral qualms with suicide; death penalty advocates CAN make the world a better place....by example.

      --
      "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    226. Re: HOWTO by elcano · · Score: 1

      Because in their search for revenge, proponents want the executed to suffer. Suffer as much as they supposedly made to suffer their victims. Of course, this is assuming that they convicted the right person. Whem they talk about painless, they are talking about the eyes of the witnesses. They want the executed to suffer in a way that does not offend the sensitivities of the eyewitnesses. It must be painful, but not gross to the now-turned-killers. There have been many methods that have been discarded in the past, as they don't satisfy the bloody anger of the victim's relatives.

    227. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      They are both killing. It is the same outcome whether someone is called killed or 'murdered'. They are dead. So neilo's argument is untouched, arguing about the name something is given doesn't change this.

    228. Re: HOWTO by sg_oneill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I truly think we're in terrifying territory when "We can't afford to keep this perfectly healthy guy alive so lets kill him" is even part of the conversation.

      Rehabilitate and release. If they can't be rehabilitated, move them into psychiatric care because they are clearly broken.

      But don't kill. Its 2015. We're supposed to be *better* than that.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    229. Re:HOWTO by ultranova · · Score: 1

      No, it's death set into motion by the deliberate actions of the murderer suffering the consequences of his own actions. It's consequence.

      Running with scissors and accidentally stabbing yourself is a consequence. You punishing someone for running with scissors is not, it's your deliberate action. You aren't a blind force of nature, you're a sapient creature making deliberate choices.

      Your moral relativism is pretty sickening, actually.

      He's a moral absolutist, actually. "Moral absolutism is an ethical view that particular actions" - in this case killing - "are intrinsically right or wrong."

      I wonder if you'd snap out of it if someone, say, raped your wife (or mother, or daughter, or best friend) to death after torturing her for fun. That might allow you to distinguish between that act of premeditated murder and the consequences.

      Trauma can certainly cause otherwise rational people to develop irrational beliefs. The fact still remains that you actions are your responsibility, even if they're a reaction to someone else's. You don't get to kill people, and then claim you didn't, regardless of whether this killing was justified or not.

      You don't get to disown any action. If someone kills your wife, they're a killer, and if you kill them for that or for any other reason, then so are you. Live with that or stay your hand, those are your choices. Pretending someone else made the call is mere self-deception.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    230. Re:HOWTO by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You are a moron. Perhaps you could commit suicide, so no one will have to feel remorse.

      Allowing murderers to go free is nothing less than assisting in future murder. That was his point. That you read revenge into it shows us your stance: namely, that you have an irrational outlook that has nothing to do with safety and only about some silly feel-good liberal shit. You don't care how many people die, so long as you didn't personally pull the trigger. You are a monster.

    231. Re:HOWTO by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      The problem in the old USSR (and my uncle was part of the US Envoy there so I have heard lots of first hand information) is that if the party decided they wanted you to be guilty of something, you were guilty of something.

      This is sadly much the same situation we have in the USA today, although its not exploited as overtly and often, *yet*. Our legal system and tax system is so complex even the most well meaning and complicit individuals out there probably break the law everyday and don't even know it.

      So there are two major problems. One there are to many laws of to great a complexity for the majority of members in our society to discover and understand. Placing them in constant jeopardy of shipped off on some trumped up charge.

      The rules are enforced in a completely unequal way. Work at bank and do things that make it plain obvious you had to knowingly be an accomplish to fraud accepting bogus mortgage documentation and nobody will look at you because the PTBs want to make the "systemic risk" thing slide nicely back under the rug as quickly as possible.

        Walk down the side walk in NYC smoking a tiny water-pipe, while being black you are sure to get the full stop-and-frisk treatment even if it obviously smells of only tobacco and likely a trip to the station for good measure, finally to be charged with violating some nuisance law.

      Work in the presidential administration want and want to go on flagrantly violating rules about aide distribution to nations after a coup, no problem just interpret law to your favor, "Oh but we are not required to determine if a coup has ever occurred."

        No when you get pulled over for running a red light try explaining to the nice police office how, while you understand the motor vehicle code requires you to comply with all traffic signals it does not explicitly state you need to determine if a traffic signal is present, and you therefor must be excused. Hey it worked for Kerry, let get back to us and let us know how it worked for you.

      So I don't think legalism is a good policy, because I don't want to go away for 20 years because I filled a form out wrong.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    232. Re:HOWTO by sg_oneill · · Score: 1

      Because for all the shady conspiracy theories around, most drug manufacturers actually see themselves as being in the business of saving lives. The hypocrates oath and all that. Yeah I know, shocking stuff. But I'm pretty much a socialist so I'm *wired* to distrust corporations and even I can see why a company might see this sort of thing as unethical.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    233. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      Yes, that was the most humane way mentioned in the documentary 'How to kill a human being'. The documentary had a British MP who set out to find out more about executions and how to do it more humanely. In the end the MP met with one of the death penalty supporters and proposed nitrous oxide as a better way to execute someone, but the death penalty supporter disagreed saying that he wants it to be as painful as possible. I wholeheartedly recommend watching this documentary to get a better idea of what really goes on when someone is executed.

    234. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      It makes the death penalty supporters much closer in kind to the executed than most people are as well.

    235. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You probably need to refresh yourself on the meaning of the word "murder."

      Do you know what the death certificate for executed people reads like on the line dedicated for the "cause of death"?

      Homocide

      Shut up, ignoramus.

    236. Re: HOWTO by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      You do realize that it costs significantly more money to see a death-penalty case from start to finish than it does to see a case where the penalty is life without parole? ...... There are many more appeals steps that are expensive through the legal system.

      Only because the USA's lunatic legal system and the fact that lawyers are allowed to make perpetual work for themselves. These endless cycles of appeal are allowed even when it is bleedin' obvious that the guy is guilty - in fact they don't even claim that in many cases, instead claiming some bullshit excuse.

      Not so long ago, the condemned were take straight out and hung, and the total cost was half-a-crown to the hangman. I would not advocate a return to that, but some common sense needs injecting here.

      It costs twice as much to house a death-row inmate during the appeals .... Also putting a person in jail for life, without parole, means they are never "left to their own".

      Why does it cost any more to house someone on death row than "in jail for life" ? Talking about the housing here, not the appeals nonsense.

    237. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The American conundrum: afraid of the government enough to let anyone arm themselves to ridiculous levels AND more than willing to allow the government to legally kill people.
      Blows my mind.

    238. Re:HOWTO by CAOgdin · · Score: 1

      Amen! Classic example of politicians trying to solve the wrong problem by looking at tactics instead of strategy. The state has a duty to protect life, not TAKE it! The blood thirsty and and the ammosexuals have an unreasonable view of what it means to be human.

    239. Re:HOWTO by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize ...... how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      As the alternative to execution is life (or at least long) imprisonment, the "innocent" people are still going to be unjustly punished, have their "life" stolen from them. By your argument we must never punish anyone for anything, in case the verdict is wrong.

    240. Re: HOWTO by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

      Being wrongly convicted and dying in a gas chamber due to organ failure is different from being wrongly convicted and dying in a cell due to organ failure how, exactly?

      If there is no difference, then surely we can remove the phrase "wrongly convicted" from this formula, and there is still no difference? In that case, why expend the extra effort and cost to create one? If you believe this, then by your own logic, there is never any reason to perform an execution.

      --
      Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
    241. Re:HOWTO by dywolf · · Score: 1

      youre making emotional pleas, and rather exaggerated ones at that, not logical ones.
      rationality is key requirement of living in a free society.
      revenge is not a rational response, but an emotional one.

      youre argument is essentially "its such an emotional burden to live in a civilized society, it would be so much better to just kill the bastard rather than deal with that".

      and you ignore key facts.
      such as you keep making the (emotional) economic argument, while ignoring that it actually costs MORE to execute someone.
      so really, the economics of it arent even relevant. they're a red herring in the argument.
      so your argument ultimately still boils down to "kill him in order to make the survivor/victim feel better", which of course is bullshit.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    242. Re:HOWTO by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've executed someone else themselves. This isn't a difficult concept really.

      No, it's a really simple one. Simple as in unintelligent.

      Euthasol is patented by a Danish company, for reference, and they refuse to allow it to be sold to a state government for the purpose of executions.

      Because Denmark have a moral government, and certain US states are in line with some pretty ugly regimes around the world on this issue.

      Of course, as demonstrated by Utah, executing people isn't difficult, they'll just shoot them or hang them, thats ALL THAT HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED.
      Instead of people being terminated quickly, painlessly and with no suffering, now they are fully aware of the end of their life as it happens. This is clearly a much better solution.

      No, sorry, but that too is a morally unsophisticated view. Helping with one moral crime is not justified because the offender would commit a worse one otherwise.

      Personally, I'm happy for the lack of availability of Euthasol for use in human executions. Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible.

      You're a bloodthirsty thug.

    243. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no really nice way to kill a person, no matter how evil that person is. Maybe killing quickly by shooting a bullet in the head reduces suffering, but even then it won't be nice or humane.

    244. Re:HOWTO by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The US is in a war against the freedom and basic rights of its citizens.

      If you're saying that the US, as it is now, can't be trusted with the power of capital punishment, then I think this is something that everyone can agree on.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    245. Re: HOWTO by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      "Being wrongly convicted and dying in a gas chamber due to organ failure is different from being wrongly convicted and dying in a cell due to organ failure how, exactly?"

      Time.

      Time for research to be done, for evidence to be gathered that exonerates the wrongly convicted.
      There have been a couple recent articles in the news about people released after long periods of incarceration.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    246. Re:HOWTO by nukenerd · · Score: 1

      .. the definition of "punishment". One central requirement is that the person punished can learn something from it.

      Thanks for sharing your definition. It is not what my dictionaries say, they are about it being a penalty, not a school lesson. Try this one as it's handy. How does prison fit into your definition? From what I've heard, not much learning takes place there that is not orthogonal to the issue of ethics.

      You remind me of a corny schoolboy joke :-

      Judge [to condemed burglar] ; "I hope you have learned from this my man!"
      Burglar : "Yes m'Lord, I've learned not to get caught next time."

    247. Re: HOWTO by xenog · · Score: 1

      Saying someone deserves to die and killing them is not the same thing. Preventing further crime by locking up dangerous individuals without punishing them is what I expect from a civilized society. Institutionalized killing of people to exert punitive vengeance is incredibly cruel and it is only done by savages.

    248. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that start-to-finish, imposing the death penalty costs significantly more than a life sentence (in the US) don't you? We could certainly make it cheaper by removing much of the appeals process, but then you run an even higher risk of killing innocents than we do now (and make no mistake, a disturbingly large number of innocents have been executed by the State.)

      If death is indeed more humane than life in prison as you say, let the prisoner make that decision. I can support voluntarily euthanasia for prison inmates (or hell, anyone else.) But I suppose that wouldn't satisfy the blood lust of the vengeance minded.

    249. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. Let those innocent people on death row live with this guy's daughter while the courts research their innocence.

    250. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...very slim chance they will be a danger to anyone again.

      They are a danger to the workers in the prison: guards, medical/dental providers, etc..

    251. Re:HOWTO by michael_cain · · Score: 1

      As the article notes, no medical personnel would have to be involved. So the prosecutor who sought the death penalty could be required to throw the switch/open the valve/whatever. I've always thought that prosecutors would be much more reluctant to ask for the death penalty if they were the ones who had to do the killing.

    252. Re: HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 5, Informative

      The reason there are mandatory appeals, a long pre-execution process, and significant legal expense above and beyond life imprisonment is simple: executing someone cannot be reversed and cannot be adequately compensated should an innocent person be executed. "Blatantly obvious" is not a legal standard, and the United States constitution requires that states afford their citizens equal protection under the law.

      Unfortunately, even the current expensive process has proven inadequate. Carlos DeLuna [1] was executed in 1989 despite provably not committing the crime. Cameron Todd Willingham [2] was executed for an accidental fire in his own home, based on the testimony of "arson investigators" whose conclusions were not based on scientific evidence or best practices. If you really want to see how bad it can get with reduced legal barriers to execution, George Stinney (1944) was propped up on phone books at age 14 and electrocuted to death after a two-hour trial. His conviction was officially vacated 70 years after his death. Though not documented specifically in this case, the electric chair frequently causes eyes to dislodge from their sockets or explode.

      There are thousands of cases where "convicted criminals" were later found to be innocent; many of these were crimes like murder that would be eligible for the death penalty [4].

      I don't want to live in a country that shrugs off the risk of murdering innocent people. Bringing the cost of an execution and life imprisonment to parity would only serve to magnify this already-tangible risk. The marginal (supposed) increase in victim closure between an execution and life imprisonment is not worth this risk, regardless of its magnitude.

      [1] http://www.theatlantic.com/nat...
      [2] http://www.newyorker.com/magaz...
      [3] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G...
      [4] http://www.law.umich.edu/speci...

    253. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Besides the obvious answer of "Don't" I think the french perfected the art, guillotine is instant, certain and doesn't sugarcoat anything. Oh, and obviously, the judge who passed the sentence really should be among the witnesses.

    254. Re:HOWTO by wisnoskij · · Score: 0

      Ya, but that is a completely different situation. That is Europe, they don't allow their citizens to have guns, or speak their mind nearly as much as America. And I imagine that their press does not incite quite as much violence.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    255. Re:HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 1

      It's definitely murder when you execute an innocent person. Which, in the US, has happened. Far more than once.

    256. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have made their choice, so why do some people feel this odd need to "save" them like they are a stray dog but then insist that the rest of us help pay for it?

      Innocent people have been murdered due to the death penalty, and later exonerated, posthumously. That's fucking sick. The Death Penalty is Murdering Innocents. So, we should put the Death Penalty to Death. End of discussion. Justice must be served.

    257. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So people who murder indiscriminately shouldn't receive the same punishment? Thats BS. The problem is people don't want to return the exact same form of death back to the murderer. You use a gun, you get killed by one. Not Hard. Its people who have never suffered a loved one being murdered ruthlessly and had to deal with those emotions who are driving this. So lets have your loved ones murdered by a terrorist or a drug dealer or burglar and see how much you think he/she gets to live out. Because if you actually its ok you are mentally ill and a part of the problem.

    258. Re: HOWTO by thunderclap · · Score: 1

      With so many high-profile prison escapes recently it might seem that inmates are fleeing like never before. First the "Texas Seven" broke out of a maximum security prison, and now six of them — one has since committed suicide — are charged with killing a police officer while robbing a sporting goods store. Then last month, two Oklahoma inmates escaped from another maximum security prison, pulling toilets from cell walls and escaping through a hidden maintenance tunnel and a vent. Pulled from ABCNews: This week, six inmates in Alabama, using a broom to sneak under a fence, managed to bypass correctional officers and high-tech security systems to make their way out of the medium security St. Clair Correctional Facility. Despite these three highly publicized escapes, experts say prison breakouts are less common today than they were 10 years ago. "Escapes are going down," said Camille G. Camp, co-president of the Criminal Justice Institute, which has been publishing the Corrections Yearbook on criminal statistics since 1981. "The reason we've heard about all these recent outbreaks lately is that you'll have something dramatic, sensational." In 1990, 2,583 inmates nationwide escaped from minimum, medium and maximum security prisons, according to CJI. That number does not includes "walkaways," inmates who leave work programs or don't return after furlough programs. Your statement is BS, the only guarentee that they will be a danger to anyone again is if they are not on the earth.

    259. Re: HOWTO by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It would be cheaper and more humane to try to make them less dangerous. Lock them up, and give them psychological help. Murdering someone is often a symptom of mental illness, anything from extreme lack of self control to more traditional problems like schizophrenia.

      Are you really okay with killing someone without at least trying to reform them first? People are not just "evil", they are the product of their genetics, their environment, and society. Two of these we are all collectively responsible, and they can't be blamed for the other. Killing them just seems like shirking our moral responsibility.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    260. Re:HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 1

      Better inject people with naloxone before the firing squad starts then; wouldn't want the body's own beta-endorphin release to dampen the pain.

      Here's how I want horrible murderers to die: of old age, while confined and separated from society, having reached a point where they sincerely regret their inhuman and irreversible actions, and serving as a counterexample to other prisoners/people who haven't yet completely ruined someone else's life. No risk of euphoria there.

    261. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a severely broken system [...] which is disproportionately harsh on minorities

      It's also disproportionately harsh on men, to a greater degree than it is on minorities, but for some reason there's a lot less fuss about that.

    262. Re:HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 1

      4 rounds of .308 and a blank are cheaper than even a single day of prison.

      But accidentally murdering an innocent person with 4 rounds of .308 isn't cheaper, financially or ethically. Any analysis of cost-saving changes in the pre-execution / appeals process need to take in to account the risk (and cost) of accidentally killing an innocent person.

    263. Re: HOWTO by tbannist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Being wrongly convicted and dying in a gas chamber due to organ failure is different from being wrongly convicted and dying in a cell due to organ failure how, exactly?

      Well, I can think of a few differences:

      1. The first case costs the state (taxpayers) significantly more money because of legal bills.
      2. There's more time for the error to be discovered in the second case, which means the wrongfully convicted may not die in a cell.
      3. The blood of innocent isn't on society's collected hands because they didn't deliberately murder an innocent man.

      The system should be fair, equitable, efficient, and effective. We should rehabilitate those who can be rehabilitated and execute those who cannot. Keep it simple, efficient, and constantly improving.

      Executions are never really "fair, equitable, efficient [or] effective". Legals costs make them expensive and inefficient, in America they are predominantly performed on black prisoners which makes them more racist than fair or equitable, and since they are more expensive and have a lower deterrence value than life in prison they are not terribly effective. Frankly, all it does is satisfy a very primal urge to see a simplistic punishment applied to the person who we believe has done wrong. There's a conservative part in all of us that wants to see death dealt to those who have wronged us, but unfortunately, that's neither practical, reasonable nor moral.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    264. Re:HOWTO by thunderclap · · Score: 1

      Execution is not about punishment. Its about removing them from the victim and its family. If they murdered, then the US decided that consequence is returned. It is more cruel to lock a child rapist in a 10 x 10 for 30 yrs than it is to kill him/her.

    265. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If America wants to execute people, THEY WILL.

      Psychopaths sympathize with that statement.

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize how flawed your justice system is, and how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize there are no innocents who had their lives taken by it EVERYONE is guilty of something. Abortion is murder whether you like ot not. No does actually mean no. Go look at the actual laws you will be surprised.

    266. Re:HOWTO by facetube · · Score: 1

      They basically did that in Ohio (with midazolam and hydromorphone, the latter of which is about 7-9 times as strong as morphine on a milligram basis). The press and observers called it a "botched execution". Odds are it was relatively painless for the person being executed – ask anyone who almost died from an opioid overdose what they felt – but the audience didn't seem to like the 30 minutes of autonomic mouth-foaming and convulsing. Turns out revenge sounds better than it looks.

    267. Re:HOWTO by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      And it depends a whole lot of how much the people trust the legal system. A lot of countries have a populous that trusts its legal system, and at least some of that is from the executions it used to do. When some young girl get murdered or raped, the natural thing that happens in any culture is people will go out and kill people they suspect of doing it. Even in modern times in first world countries sometimes whole villages get massacred because some resident is suspected to be the rapist of some sweet young girl. Unless restrained by their government. In many countries their is enough respect of the law that that is all it takes. But that is not so in America. There is continual civil unrest and for some reason the government is not willing to address it. There are some crimes it does not matter if you catch the criminal, just that you publicly punish someone. There are just some crimes that free people will not get over. The rape of murder of a woman. Or, in America, the death of a black person. Arguably, not that this falls within those bounds, if America has executed some banker for he financial crisis. If they had executed Zimmerman. Etc. There would be more trust of the system and then the system would be given more leeway to dispense actual justice. But there has to be trust in the ruling of courts before that can happen.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    268. Re:HOWTO by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      " Just because you don't agree doesn't mean you are right or more advanced."

      Yes it does. Anyone that takes a life in cold-blood is a murderer, even when the State does it. Im ok with INDIVIDUALS enacting their own vengeance, but dont you dare ask the State to do your dirty work. If you want to kill a man, do it yourself, dont ask society to do it for you.

      --
      Good-bye
    269. Re:HOWTO by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      I'm no fan of the death penalty, however...

      It is silly to support the death penalty because it could theoretically be fair and sensible in some alternative universe.

      Hmm... and yet in your previous post you say that anti-death penalty people tacitly approve of the current dysfunctional system rather than actually "fixing" it (which could make it more humane, decrease abuses and errors in the system, etc.) because you endorse the complete abolition which would be more "fair and sensible in some alternate universe."

      Perhaps your "alternate universe" is more likely than the GP's, but clearly you also are willing to accept an intermediate system that might be a stepping stone toward a better one.

      If you support it, you must support it as it is, not just as it should be.

      I rarely say something like this, but that is an insane argument. Forcing people into absolute positions is rarely helpful. You're clearly an absolutist on this issue, and that's fine. But pretending there can't be more than one other possible alternative position is ridiculous.

      It's like animal rights activists who believe that consuming animals for food is murder. Some of them refuse to acknowledge that there could be anything like "humane" farms that also slaughter animals for food.

      But I think the a huge number of people around the world would disagree. It's possible to condone the eating of animals for food AND also think it's wrong to cause an animal to needlessly suffer for its entire life. Just because you like to eat meat once in a while doesn't mean you MUST approve of people who torture animals for fun before killing them. There are more possible positions of morality in the world than two absolute polarized ones on most issues.

      Similarly, I think it's logically possible for a person to admit that the current death penalty system is SO dysfunctional that it is is fundamentally unjust, yet not disapprove of the entire concept of the death penalty system in every possible incarnation. You may regard such arguments as unpersuasive -- but insisting that such a person must be lumped together with some conservative wacko who wants to streamline the process to get more minorities in the electric chair faster is ridiculous.

    270. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a matter of righting wrongs, it's one of ensuring that no further wrongs can be made by that individual:
      Life in prison vs execution

    271. Re:HOWTO by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      So the State, having decided that murder is illegal, resorts to murder as "punishment". That is hypocrisy of the highest order.

      "I'll take 'arguments that can be used against prison and kidnapping as well' for 10 points."

      THIS.

      I'm actually NOT in favor of the death penalty. But I'm tired of stupid arguments surrounding this debate. You want to argue against the death penalty? Great -- I applaud you. But learn some basic logic skills.

      Most of the times that the government has a law which requires a citizen to do something, it is likely doing something which would be illegal for private citizens to do. To wit:

      - If police officers arrest people and detain them (for specific reasons), it is legal. If you do this as a private citizen, it is generally considered "kidnapping." As the parent says, same goes for prisons. Same thing goes for a court summons that requires citizens to show up (or be compelled by police to do so).

      - If police officers are forced to restrain people physically (for specific reasons), it can be legal. If you do this as a private citizen outside of imminent threats to yourself, it is generally considered "assault."

      - If the government requires you to give it money in exchange for not taking your property away, it is called "taxation." If you do this as a private citizen, you're probably guilty of "extortion" or perhaps some other form of "racketeering."

      Etc.

      Generally speaking, unless you're an anarchist, you accept that the government has powers to do things that would be "crimes" if private citizens would attempt them. The government is empowered to do these things to maintain order in society, to provide services for society, etc.

      I'm sure people will disagree about the exact scope of these powers and governmental authority, but especially if we accept the notion of any "police power" in the state, we are acknowledging that the state will go around kidnapping ("arresting") people, extorting money from them ("fines"), or perhaps confining them for long periods against their will.

      Should such possible state actions extend to killing people? Most people again tacitly allow such actions in the case of war -- as long as we are killing "the right people." Does the state's power extend to killing its own citizens? Well, until the past century or so, it was common to "summarily execute" (murder?) soldiers for things like desertion or aiding the enemy with relatively little due process. Nowadays we are having similar debates about "enemy combatants" and drone strikes which may target and/or inadventantly kill American citizens.

      So, the death penalty is simply another place some people might want to draw the line. You may think the state should not have such a power. But it is ridiculously naive to argue that any action the state takes against criminals should be subject to the concept of "hypocrisy"... unless you're ready to accept that police should start having discussions like -- "Well, gee, this guy kidnapped someone and put her in handcuffs... so, well, it would be hypocritical for us to put him in handcuffs and force him to come to jail... so, well, I guess we just let him go! Can't be hypocritical, after all!"

    272. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I you don't believe in a creator, then you can't believe that you are endowed by your creator with certain unalienable rights. If you don't understand that a declaration of independence is self evident, then you will fall into logic or moral traps.
      You don't have to believe in any of this stuff, but saying that you do and acting like you don't is nonsense.
      People kill each other all the time, it's disturbingly commonplace. To commit ones self to a systemic murderous rampage on a scale that defies comprehension of the sheer numbers requires a government. And a sufficient number of cattle. Of course, ultimately, the slaughter of cattle cannot be criticized - that's the whole idea of raising cattle. Please report to your stall on time.

    273. Re:HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I cannot follow the reason that executing someone because they themselves have killed someone. If they jump off a bridge, should we jump after them? Sorry, but the logic escapes me.

      If you are looking for revenge, as in "an eye for an eye", ok. I can follow that train of logic. But then, please, call it revenge, don't try to gain some higher ground by calling it "justice". Yes, you can kill people if you're a government. Duh. Any tinpot dictator can do that, it doesn't take any high horse to sit on, but calling it justice is a bit ... misplaced. It's revenge. At best.

      Because that's all it can accomplish. By definition. There is very little you can do in the sake of "justice" in such circumstances. There's no way that you could restore the person's life whose life has been taken. Not even by killing the person who took it. It may make you feel better if the person they killed was someone you loved to kill the person who killed them. But that's revenge, not justice. Because, and that's the key here, it cannot serve the person who was killed because they are dead. It may serve you, it may make you feel better, to see the person die who killed someone you liked. It may give you satisfaction. That's understandable. But does it make it "just"? Does it serve justice?

      The main problem here is that you can't really atone for killing. It's not like, say, wrecking someone's car where you can be ordered to buy the wronged party a new one. It's not really possible to "undo" the crime. We can repeat the crime against the perpetrator, of course. That's basically what capital punishment is. An eye for an eye. A head for a head. A death for a death.

      Maybe it would make you feel better. I know it would not make me feel better to know that the person who killed someone I love was killed. It doesn't bring back the person I loved, why the fuck should I give a damn?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    274. Re: HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ah, a subscriber to the "deterrent" theory. Know what? Doesn't work. Never has, never will. Why? Because the LAST thing a criminal ponders is getting caught. Or do you think a gang member goes "gee, for 5 years of jail I'm gonna cap that fucker, but getting the chair, uhhhh, nah, that's too steep!"?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    275. Re: HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Hey, anyone who got fried sure as fuck never did it again!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    276. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't lower yourself to insults, especially people who disagree with you, especially when everyone else is trying to have a rational discussion.

      It is more important that innocence should be protected, than it is, that guilt be punished; for guilt and crimes are so frequent in this world, that all of them cannot be punished.... when innocence itself, is brought to the bar and condemned, especially to die, the subject will exclaim, 'it is immaterial to me whether I behave well or ill, for virtue itself is no security.' And if such a sentiment as this were to take hold in the mind of the subject that would be the end of all security whatsoever

      Empirically, the death penalty is correlated with higher murder rates. I think what you fail to grasp is that being a murderer is not equivalent to being a mindless kill-bot. It is also imperative that you understand the purpose of prison is not to punish, not to segregate the undesirables, and not to deter crime: the purpose is rehabilitation. If our prison system was designed more towards that goal than its apparent purpose of encouraging future crime, our society would enjoy the lower recidivism rates that other nations do.

      It's ironic that you ascribe irrational behavior to your opponents when you're acting purely on an emotional response. Besides the principles of justice involved, ditching the death penalty and improving prison conditions result in empirically better outcomes.

    277. Re:HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Maybe we should let him make that decision?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    278. Re:HOWTO by IronChef · · Score: 1

      You don't need nitrous oxide. All you need to do is displace oxygen with an inert gas like nitrogen. A scuba rebreather can malfunction in this way, and it leads to painless and unexpected unconsciousness. (That's why they have multiple oxygen sensors, and why you replace them on schedule if you're smart.)

      You would not want CO2 in the execution process, as the feeling of asphyxiation is caused by inability to dump CO2, not a lack of O2. If you can keep exhaling the CO2 that you produce into a large volume of an inert gas, you'll pass out without discomfort.

      All you need for effective and humane executions is nitrogen. There is no medical mystery about how to do the job. There is no need for drug cocktails and contraptions. There *is* a need for some new legislation, or court rulings. If we're going to keep executing people, we can at least stop torturing them to death.

      According to wikipedia, Oklahoma has made inert gas asphyxiation legal, but the ABC news citation link is busted and I can't find a primary source.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I...

    279. Re:HOWTO by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      > Even if you have the right person, it's not actually punishing HIM (or her,) since death is the ultimate fate of all living organisms.

      Then you don't mind if I execute you tonight?

      The point isn't that the person has to die; it's that they die, presumably, sooner than they otherwise would, with their crime being cited as the motivation for their early death. They are deprived of years of life, just as a person imprisoned is deprived of years of freedom.

    280. Re:HOWTO by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      Think of the corporations who pay for prison labor, and how they'll have dozens of additional prisoners to hire for a pittance.

    281. Re:HOWTO by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      It's important to note that "an eye for an eye" was a prohibition of escalation. It was a prohibition of taking more than an eye for an eye's worth of injury.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    282. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Like it or not, human beings attach great importance to what's felt just before death. Not wanting a murderer to feel euphoria at this moment is hardly an example of cruelty.

      Prior combat arms military INTJ with an IQ > 140 with a background in engineering mathematics.

      I'm as cold as they get; I've been compared to Mr Spock.

      You're fucked in the head, as are people who believe as you do.

      The death penalty is a light switch to shut down a possible future threat, along with being an ineffective deterrent. If you want to believe your barbaric thoughts on the subject are the norm, that's fine.. just please dox yourself so that normal people can avoid you.

    283. Re: HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      There is no difference in the end result to the individual dying. There is certainly a difference to the guards exposed to a violent predator for potentially decades on end and there is certainly a difference in the overall risk of recidivism while that individual is alive. The point was simply that a sentence of life in prison is effectively the same as a sentence of death in prison from the perspective of the individual who's dying in prison.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    284. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not CO2; high concentrations of CO2 produce the suffocation response.

    285. Re: HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      As I stated, we need significant improvements in our system starting with an overhaul from the police investigations to the courtrooms and everything in between. We should learn from cases where we know we got it wrong so we can avoid making those mistakes again. Once all systemic problems are resolved and actual rehabilitation with measurably positive outcomes are established in the prison system, determine who can be rehabilitated and do so, who is not and execute them.

      I'm not expecting these changes to happen today, tomorrow, or in ten years. I'm describing an ideal wherein we would apply evidence and outcome based approaches to doing a righteous justice system where the most expedient and efficient means of meeting the goals of society are employed.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    286. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Murderers rationalize their crimes in exactly the same way

      You'd have a point, if you weren't working with an acutely toxic case of moral relativism.

      You're using "rationalize" in the popular sense of "make excuse for." Yes, someone who wakes up one morning deciding to kill an innocent person, perhaps after a nice all-day rape and torture session before burning down their house with the kids still inside, definitely has to come up with some sort of "rationalization" for their actions. Removing that person from society requires no excuse-making. They've already removed themselves from society through their own actions, but are still willing to damage society when and how they see fit, leaving dead bodies behind, just for fun. That you can't grasp a difference between those scenarios is pretty astonishing, really.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    287. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Your advocating killing them for the reason of not paying a small tax burden?

      No, I'm saying that making a guy spend part of every day working to feed and house the person who raped is wife to death is evil. I suppose you could volunteer to be the person who sees to it that a remorseless child raper and killer is getting nice meals every day. How many can you afford?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    288. Re:HOWTO by William+Baric · · Score: 1

      It is a logical error to change what you are talking about in the middle of your argument.

      Your initial point was not against the executioner, but against the possibility that a judge could make an error which will lead to the death of someone. That error is not deliberate. Your argument is logically wrong.

      Is it a murder? No, it's not, even if the person is innocent. A murder is the unlawful killing of a human being, it has nothing to do with the concept of innocence. A soldier who kill an enemy combatant is not committing murder. A lawmaker who decide that a kind of crime should be punishable with the death penalty is not committing murder. A judge who come to the conclusion that the crime of someone is subject to death penalty is not committing murder. An executioner who kill someone condemned to death penalty is not doing something unlawful, so it's not a murder. Again, your argument is logically wrong and saying "in fact" won't make it magically true.

      Finally, if every single rational objective that can be applied to death penalty was also applicable to life sentence, everybody would be satisfied with a life sentence and nobody would ask for the death penalty. You just choose to ignore the obvious because you're irrational.

      Behind all the excuses and false logical arguments, the only real reason against death penalty is exactly the same as being for death penalty : it's purely an emotional reason. The basis of all our moral constructs are our emotions. As long as people will try to justify their little emotions using dubious arguments, this debate will never end.

      Yes, I know being rational is not the strong point of humanity. But it's not because you're irrational that I should be!

    289. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      He did die, of course, but his death did not bring any peace.

      How would she have felt if she were forced to support that person, financially?

      I would be happy - insofar as I could know happiness in circumstances like those - to know that my tax dollars were in part contributing to keeping a dangerous inhuman criminal locked away forever.

      So, your happiness comes in the form of putting someone in a controlled box for perhaps fifty or sixty years? Yeah, I wonder who's really got the revenge problem here, huh? I want that person to cease to exist. You want to torture them for a few decades.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    290. Re: HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Well, I can think of a few differences:

      1. The first case costs the state (taxpayers) significantly more money because of legal bills.
      2. There's more time for the error to be discovered in the second case, which means the wrongfully convicted may not die in a cell.
      3. The blood of innocent isn't on society's collected hands because they didn't deliberately murder an innocent man.

      The first is only the case because we have an inefficient system and because we recognize how easily we get convictions wrong (thus a nearly endless appeals process in an attempt to avoid executing an innocent person). Fix the system, streamline the outcomes. The second case is essentially the same as the first. We understand our current system to be less effective at distinguishing guilt from innocence and we understand at least part of that to be due to biases built into the system based on race, money, family, fame, etc.

      Executions are never really "fair, equitable, efficient [or] effective". Legals costs make them expensive and inefficient, in America they are predominantly performed on black prisoners which makes them more racist than fair or equitable, and since they are more expensive and have a lower deterrence value than life in prison they are not terribly effective.

      None of this an inherent quality to executions; you're merely describing the issues with the system we have today. I don't take issue with that and in fact outlined some of how I would suggest we go about resolving that. Fair, equitable, efficient, effective justice is the goal; not a description of what we have today.

      Frankly, all it does is satisfy a very primal urge to see a simplistic punishment applied to the person who we believe has done wrong. There's a conservative part in all of us that wants to see death dealt to those who have wronged us, but unfortunately, that's neither practical, reasonable nor moral.

      Now here you're incorrect; not about the primal urges, but about how they apply to state executions. The idea behind the existing system of executions is supposed to be that all emotion is removed and an objective standard is implemented by a society wishing to rid itself of individuals deemed beyond redemption. I would agree that we often fail to meet the ideals of that idea, but that does not mean it need always be that way. With a reformed system that has incorporated all the knowledge of how and why we get arrests and convictions wrong and a reformed prison system that successfully rehabilitates people instead of turning them into more vicious and efficient criminals, we're inevitably left with a group of people who are beyond rehabilitation. They're so fundamentally broken, so destructive to our society, that the best outcome for society as a whole is to remove those individuals permanently from our society (which includes prison guards and prisoners who actually can be rehabilitated). The only way to do so effectively and humanely is execution.

      This is all simply an intellectual exercise at this point. I don't expect these reforms to be made in any widespread sense anywhere in the US any time soon (if ever). I'm not defending the existing system's problems. I'm not claiming those problems don't exist. I'm simply demonstrating that there is nothing inherently savage, primal, or unjust about the death penalty itself. Its implementation in our existing system is as flawed as the rest of our existing system, but there is nothing intrinsically flawed in the concept of executing those who are guilty beyond reasonable doubt and beyond rehabilitation.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    291. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      They are both killing. It is the same outcome whether someone is called killed or 'murdered'. They are dead ... arguing about the name something is given doesn't change this

      Do you apply the same muddle-headed moral relativism to all topics?

      Let's say you've got $10,000 in your hands:

      1) It was the life savings of a little old lady, and you beat her over the head, killing her, and took it.

      or

      2) Someone very wealthy liked you, and gave it to you.

      Doesn't really matter the words we use to describe what led to you having $10,000, right? Because all that matters is you now have $10,000. It's the same outcome! Whew, glad that all of those pesky value judgements are safely out of the equation from now on. The end justifies the means! How and why no longer matter, just the results! Thank you for making everything so simple, now.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    292. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, source?

    293. Re:HOWTO by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Which incarceration already accomplishes.

      No it doesn't, unless you believe that prison guards, prison staff, and other prisoners who are in the process of being rehabilitated are not part of our society. The expectation with converting all death penalty cases to life in prison is that we're going to take the most violent, dangerous, destructive people in the world, put them all in one place, and expect a segment of society to wait on them hand and foot for the rest of their lives. Anyone wishing to make that happen should sign up for guard duty with those prisoners. Otherwise, hypocrisy.

      They aren't "permanently removed from society" just because you, personally, don't have to interact with them on a daily basis. Someone else still does and you're putting their life (in fact, thousands of lives) at risk because of it.

      Ethics of death penalty aside, pretending the choice is it or letting murderers walk free is dishonest.

      Life in prison without parole is a death sentence; merely by different means. If we can't ever execute anyone because we can't be 100% certain of their guilt, then why is it morally or ethically sound to allow potentially innocent people to rot in prison for the rest of their lives? Or even just for a few decades? There's almost certainly more innocent people who've been rotting in prison for decades than innocent people who've been sent to Death Row. Not just nominally, but due to the higher burden of proof (and endless appeals system) for Death Row prisoners, I would suggest it's a virtual certainty that the rates of innocent people rotting in prison for the rest of their lives is also much higher. Why is that more acceptable than executions?

      Does this mean that contract killers should get leniency because, after all, they're not killing people for revenge but as mere business? Especially if they use a clean method - which, as the summary noted, is what "humane" really means in this context?

      They're committing murder. The state is not (by the very definition of murder). I would submit that all murderers should qualify for the death penalty. I would extend that out to any other individual who cannot be rehabilitated (assuming an effective means of rehabilitation is in place - which is admittedly not our current prison system).

      And keep in mind, this is all merely a thought exercise as it's all predicated upon major, fundamental reforms from the police investigations to the courtroom trials to the prison system. I'm not defending the criminal justice system we have today as it's vastly more flawed than need be and I'm not even defending the use of the death penalty within that system. I seek merely to demonstrate that there is nothing inherently wrong or unjust about the state executing guilty individuals who are truly beyond rehabilitation.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    294. Re:HOWTO by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, it does not go without saying that in our examination we must avoid the fallacy that in the last decades has frequently been used as a substitute for the reductio ad absurdum: the reductio ad Hitlerum. A view is not refuted by the fact that it happens to have been shared by Hitler.

      PS it turns out that ISIS is actually implementing Islamic law as it was actually written. So, it's not just justified, it's just.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    295. Re:HOWTO by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      I'm counting "life in prison" as "death sentence without the usual appeals and standards of evidence". None of the extra expense in a death sentence is the execution, it's all the extra scrutiny. If you're innocent, you should hope they're going for a death sentence rather than life in prison, because you have a higher chance of getting your life back.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    296. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huge gaps in your logic here.

      1. So you're saying the only way for a deterrent to be considered effective, is for history to show it was never used. Psychology, history, hell almost everything show this to be total BS. Statement reeks of a conflict of interests.
      4. Paraphrasing, "death is inconsequential to the individual, since you know, youll die one day anyway". the punishment isnt death itself per se, its an early death which sucks, you dense fuck. so let me ask, which is worse: your child dying at age 1, or dying at 101? according to you, they're equal, since "death is the ultimate fate of all living organisms" lol.
      6. Waitor, can i get some more digression?
      7. This is rather assumptive; it assumes the criminal was a positive net influence in their families/friends' lives, which is certainly not always the case.
      9. "The executioner is morally and ethically no better than the person being executed", which is because "[the court is saying] that SOME killing is okay". I know it sounds like youre closing an argument, but youre just widening the discussion. Your argument hinges on the assumption that any killing is wrong, which itself is a new argument, which you have not adequately reasoned/supported yet.
      10. "The idea that it's a punishment of the guilty having been thoroughly debunked" - this is why there should be a voter competency test.

      In my opinion, there certainly is a discussion to be had regarding the death penalty, but when you present shit arguments like the above (and start throwing ALL CAPS around too), you eat away at the credibility of the discourse. no one wants to waste time correcting a peer on basic reasoning, and its clear youre very emotionally changed on the topic - not a great combo.

    297. Re:HOWTO by Pentium100 · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that the whole legal system of the USSR was good, just that the conditions in prison were such that if one was sent there (be it for an actual crime or for speaking out against the Party) after being released, they did not want to return there. Unlike today where we hear about complaints from prisoners that they do not get enough vitamins or that not being able to get their girlfriends to spend the night with them is torture. You beat somebody up severely or killed them (either deliberately or by driving drunk at 100km/h in the city (speed limit 50)), you do not get to spend your sentence by having fun.

      There is a Russian movie about a guy who is likely to go to prison but does not want to (obviously). He sees on TV that some foreign country (forgo which, I saw that movie years ago) has TVs in prisons and good conditions in general, so he goes to that country and tries various sorts of low crimes (braking a window etc) to get arrested and sent to prison figuring that if he is incarcerated in that country, he won't spend time in a Russian prison.

      As for the death penalty and mistakes - I think that the death penalty should only be applied in those cases where he proof of guilt is beyond any doubt (rather than the lower requirement used normally).

    298. Re:HOWTO by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Ok. I can accep that. But if you were to do so anyway the most humane way is to put them in a room and thoroughly remove the carbon dioxide from the air. (Bubbling it through liquid nitrogen should work.) People only feel the need to breathe when the level of carbon dioxide builds up, so they'd pretty much stop breathing. They might not even live long enough to experience hypo-oxigenation, which, according to fighter pilots, is quite enjoyable...of course it also means your brain is shutting down, but you don't care.

      In fact, just put them in a room and slowly replace the air with pure nitrogen (plus water vapor). That would probably be a quite blissful way to die.

      Another alternative, much slower, is to put them in a room and give them all the booze and hash and other schedule I drugs they want...but nothing to do. Make sure it's well padded so they can't injure themselves without a lot of effort.

      But these all miss that the reason most people support the death penalty is they WANT to hurt the (purported) perpetrator. Any humane death penalty won't really satisfy those who insist that one exist.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    299. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because stabbings, rapes, extortion, murder and other types of violence never happen in prison. The #1 most likely person to commit such an act in prison is a lifer with no parole, they have nothing to lose and everything to gain such as notoriety and status among the inmate population.

      I did 18 years as an LEO, I have come to know one thing after the things I have seen, the world is better off without some people and some people simply need killing, costs be damned. Having to stand near the body of a tortured, raped and murdered child for 5 hours while the scene is processed will give you a different opinion on the death penalty. And if that doesn't do it, having to watch the video of it the killer made will.

    300. Re: HOWTO by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      some people are simply too dangerous to others to leave to their own

      Even assuming that's the case, a state that is allowed to execute its citizens is even more dangerous.

      why is it our responsibility to support them for the remainder of their natural lives?

      Executing a person is more than simply deciding not to support them. It's genuinely disturbing that you seem to think that a person's execution is a decision about whether to support them or not.

      Death penalty is not a secret, people know if you do this, chances are you are going to die for it.

      No, in many cases they don't. Such as the getaway driver for a robbery where something goes wrong and the other person kills somebody. Or the mentally retarded. Or the clinically insane. Or minors. All of these kinds of people have been executed by the USA and a lot of them can genuinely claim to have not understood the ramifications of what they were doing.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    301. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry you're too simple minded to realize ...... how many innocents had their lives taken by it.

      As the alternative to execution is life (or at least long) imprisonment, the "innocent" people are still going to be unjustly punished, have their "life" stolen from them. By your argument we must never punish anyone for anything, in case the verdict is wrong.

      It is somewhat easier to have your case re-examined when you are not dead. It happens all the time. People have a very casual attitude towards the state murdering innocent people here.

    302. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are deterred when they are dead, you stupid motherfucker.

    303. Re:HOWTO by argStyopa · · Score: 0

      1. It's pointless. It's not an effective deterrent, at least not for all people, otherwise you'd never need to use it.
      A: we have never executed more than 1/1000 of the men on death row. I would say the failure-to-deter is more a matter of inconsistent and weak application.

      2. It's prohibitively expensive. Most of the costs involve legal wrangling, after all, but that's still part of the cost.
      A: Bullshit. It's giving them repeated, desperate options that is expensive. You're convicted? You get one appeal. Fail? You're done. NOT expensive.

      3. It is irreversible. If you figure out you got the wrong person, you can't fix it.
      A: So what? I mean, sure, it's regrettable. But personally I support a woman's right to choose to abort; ergo, to be logically consistent if I'm allowing a woman to kill what may be an innocent, healthy baby who's done nothing wrong except to be inconvenient, I can certainly accept killing someone who's PROBABLY guilty (or if innocent of THAT particular crime, is guilty of tons of others as well as generally making life for others around them miserable for years).

      4. Even if you have the right person, it's not actually punishing HIM (or her,) since death is the ultimate fate of all living organisms.
      A: I don't care it it's punitive. I'm utilitarian: there are no recidivists from the death penalty. None.

      The person you would execute is receiving the exact same thing your own beloved child is doomed to get the day you conceive him or her.
      A: So? Seriously, you're overrating death. As far as I'm concerned, it's throwing out a non-contributing part.

      5. If you think you're getting the person being executed an earlier start on his/her eternal punishment, consider that eternity is the exact same duration,
      A: Strawman, now you're *really* stretching.

      6. In as much as there IS no eternal punishment, in the place many people believe their imaginary friend consigns "bad" people when they die, as it turns out.
      A: Still just a strawman, there is 0% way you know this is true, in any case.

      7. The people you punish are the friends and family of the people you kill, who often had nothing to do with the crime, even when you DO have the right person.
      A: then they should have worked harder to provide that person with a social safety net, to maybe help them be a human being than someone society is better off without.

      8. If you DO have the right person, consider the very real possibility that he or she is performing suicide-by-court-system and that you are playing right into a would-be suicides hands, by allowing, condoning, or supporting this stupid, counterproductive, barbaric practice.
      A: I'm fine with that. Happy to help.

      9. The executioner is morally and ethically no better than the person being executed;
      A: that's ENTIRELY your assertion. I look at it as taking out the garbage; a stinky, but necessary job.

      10. The idea that it's a punishment of the guilty having been thoroughly debunked, now let's briefly examine vengeance.
      A: again, not punishment, not vengeance. If I find a sharp piece of glass on the floor, I don't throw it away to 'punish' it or 'pay it back' for cutting me. It is what it is. And the best thing I can do is dispose of it before it hurts someone.

      11. It's a cowardly act to execute someone using someone else's hand.
      A: I'll do it for everyone else. Again, the world needs garbagemen. My idea is to simply put them in a 100' silo with a stairway to the top. They don't HAVE to commit suicide by jumping, they could just starve. Either way, it's nearly cost-free, and actually "green" - crows need to eat too.

      12. Restitution becomes impossible after the person dies,
      A: every single case of "innocent" being executed, the individual may be innocent of THAT case, but is a horrible, worthless person who has committed numerous other crimes harming people around them for decades. They're worth getting rid of. (Shrug)

      Not a single thing you said made me doubt my feelings on capital punishment one whit. Thanks, tho, for allowing me a nice list to comment on.

      --
      -Styopa
    304. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm satisfied with one out of every six executions being a mistake.

    305. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, you don't have black people.

    306. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prison is not to rehabilitate. That's fucking stupid.

      Criminals should be killed. I'll happily pay more taxes for that service, and you can thank us later for the safe society we dragged you into kicking and screaming.

    307. Re: HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1

      At the same time, they have zero time to commit crimes, hence they are committing _all_ crimes they can fit into the time they have!

      I think you have made a horrible mistake....

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    308. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is fascinating to view. Gives you a good estimate how much in touch with reality these people are...

    309. Re: HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1

      That is not going to happen, as there are zero negative consequences for those that screwed up. Power without accountability corrupts most people and the few that can handle it are certainly not found in the justice system or in politics.

      Here is a thought: Every judge and prosecutor gets a contingent per case and sentence sought of "maximum screw up". Say 10% of the sentence is the maximum. For each year, their failures known so far are tallied up. If they exceed the threshold, then they are in for it by whatever they exceeded. They can get one year of start-up bonus or so to allow new people to get into the profession.

      Executions can be converted to percentages of a life sentence by estimated total life expectancy. If they willfully suppressed evidence that cleared somebody or did other illegal things to the detriment of somebody convicted, they get 100% of that on their counter.

      Not perfect, but it would create at least some accountability and curb this trend to seek excessive sentences, and to do the least amount possible to clear the accused, as that trend comes basically from no accountability at all.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    310. Re:HOWTO by gweihir · · Score: 1

      You have that right. It takes a certain level of enlightenment to see it though and that is in short supply these days. Heaping more "wrong" on a "wrong" is not desirable in any way, except to a caveman mind-set. Said caveman has the excuse of not knowing better because it was hard to find out. Nobody that can read and has access to a library has that excuse today.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    311. Re: HOWTO by trenien · · Score: 1

      The difference is that in the latter case, you most probably get a much longer available time to realize your mistake and release the wrongfully accused (and maybe the gvt can even somewhat atone for the mistake). Unless you can raise the dead, it doesn't matter for the person whether you understand your mistake once you've murdered them (let's use the proper word, here).

    312. Re:HOWTO by swillden · · Score: 1

      Nitrous Oxide isn't a bad idea, followed by CO2 or N2 displacing all the O2, or simply lowering the pressure.

      If you don't want to include euphoria, just use straight N2 or He. The feeling of suffocation is triggered by CO2 buildup, not O2 deficiency, so a person able to freely respire a low CO2 gas mixture without any O2 feels nothing at all, positive or negative, but simply falls asleep. No needles, no poisons, no discomfort... they just fall asleep and then die. Technically they suffocate, but with no feeling of suffocation.

      You don't need any sort of special chamber for this. Just a typical hospital oxygen mask and a cylinder of compressed inert gas. It doesn't even matter if the person being executed gets a little bit of ambient O2, as long as the percentage of O2 in the breathing mixture is down around 2% or lower. You probably need to strap the person down so they don't try to remove the mask, but if you play it right they'll never realize when their death has begun... start with a continuous flow of air into from a compressed cylinder into the mask, then without changing pressure or temperature or otherwise notifying the person that the time has arrived, switch it over to the inert gas.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    313. Re:HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      I can understand where the need for revenge comes from. I can understand that some people have that pressing urge to do onto others as they have done onto them. Though that's not what is done. What happens is that they kill the person who killed the person that they loved. Or have that person killed by the state. Logically, in an "eye for an eye" situation we'd have to kill a person that this person loves.

      Because that's how we feel. We don't feel he wronged the person he killed. We feel that he wronged US by making us lose someone we love.

      Yes, we're selfish bastards. Get used to it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    314. Re: HOWTO by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And the public part serves what purpose in that case? At least read the parent someone replies to to get a hint of the context.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    315. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to have trouble with the definitions of the words you are using. Quite in line with the intellectual level displayed in your posting.

    316. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is about making an example out of people to discourage other lawbreaking.

      A famous radio personality once said "Capitol punishment does not deter crime, but it sure stops repeat offenders." There are people that are just too dangerous to keep alive. Ted Bundy comes to mind, he escaped prison at least twice and went on killing sprees both times.

    317. Re: HOWTO by hyades1 · · Score: 1

      As long as you're the first, I can live with that.

      --
      I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
    318. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      McVeigh was a suicidal nut without the courage to kill himself. So he had us do it.

      And we fell for it, and now he's a martyr to the idiot right.

      Nice going!

    319. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they understand what you're implying, but apparently don't have the backbone to actually state, which is that murder is an illegal killing.

      Maybe they believe that such a thing as legalized killing is repugnant and hypocritical.

    320. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is vengeance wrong?

    321. Re: HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      There's your false assumption, the guy is not perfectly healthy, in fact the is more sick than most people realise. Rehabilitate and release if possible, if not, terminate. Being better means actually being smart enough to accept that an active psychopath is not compatible with a modern society. And unless you have unlimited resources (ie live in fantasy land) you can choose to allocate your resources to housing, feeding and protecting these animals, or you can euthanise them and allocate your energy improving the lives of everyone else.

      A real world example, Ivan Milat brutally raped and murder 7 people in my area. He got life which will cost the taxpayer approx $10Million over the course of his life. Given the option of execution (after a few years of appeals), the tax payer could re-allocate at least $7million of that to more teachers, nurses or ambulances. Or regular people can suck it up, while this psychopath eats and drinks and watches cable TV for the rest of his days. I know which of those options is *better* in my universe.

    322. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > it's that they're released when they're still dangerous.

      The same people who want to abolish the death penalty want to abolish life in prison, you know. You can find many right here in this story.

    323. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're thinking of rehabilitation. Punishment has no such requirement.

    324. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fairness, 1,565 is not thousands.

    325. Re: HOWTO by adamstew · · Score: 1

      Where did you get the $10 million number? Federal average to house a prisoner in the US was $31,286 per year in 2010. Certain states have higher costs than others, but the federal average was $31,286 per year.

      If you even house every life-without-parole inmate for 100 years, that costs $3.1 million. I would suspect that the average number of years to house them is MUCH lower than that. If we assume that the average life-in-prison prisoner commits a crime at an age equal to 1/2 the average life expectancy and then lives until the average life expectancy, then the average life-in-prison prisoner will spend 39.35 years in prison. At a cost of $31,286 per year, it'll cost $1.23 million to house the average life. That is an order of magnitude less than your $10 million dollar figure.

    326. Re: HOWTO by adamstew · · Score: 1

      I never offered an opinion on the death penalty. I simply stated that the reasoning behind "why should it be our responsibility to support them" or "why should I, the taxpayer, pay for someone to sit around, get 3 meals a day, and watch cable TV", as it was put in another post above, was incorrect.

      I am of a mixed opinion on the death penalty:

      If you can prove beyond ANY doubt (not just beyond a reasonable doubt as currently required by the legal system) that they committed a murder, then I would be fine with the death penalty. I don't believe that the "beyond any doubt", as a legal standard, can currently be met by the current legal system.

    327. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > i guess you are happy with ISIS chopping heads of people because of their interpretation of law. In their eyes, its justified.

      I guess you're happy with letting them out after a few years, so they can do it again, because life in prison is also considered inhumane and I'm sure that being in prison actually made them a better person?

    328. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enlightenment is when you can, in fact, not mind paying your taxes to do just that. I don't think you got the point of the whole compassion and whatnot thing. Killing people is a slippery slope. Always was, always is, always will be.

    329. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Euphoria due to hypoxia? Really? Been through controlled hypoxia a bunch of times, never had any euphoria. Maybe I'm weird or something.

    330. Re:HOWTO by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Essentially though, each of these arguments is completely independent. So if you agree with one, and accept that it's relevant, even if you dismiss all of the others then you're accepting the basic premise that the death penalty is wrong.

    331. Re:HOWTO by YoungManKlaus · · Score: 1

      i would upvote you, but you already have 5 points

    332. Re:HOWTO by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      The reason, not excuse, to execute someone is simple, they've been found (sometimes wrongfully) guilty of having executed someone else themselves.

      FTFY.

      If there is any reason to never execute somebody, this is it.
      And yes, it happens: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W...

      If you are the judge of somebody wrongfully executed, you should be tried for negligent homicide.
      So if a judge is abolutely 100% certain of guilt, go ahead and give the order. My guess is nobody would ever be executed again.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    333. Re: HOWTO by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      By that logic, we should execute everybody.
      Crime rates will drop to zero.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    334. Re:HOWTO by DrXym · · Score: 1
      Belief in Heaven and Hell is besides the point. There are certain people whom society must either to suffer to live in prison their entire life or execute them. They decide one or the other and needn't have anything to do with an afterlife or retribution therein.

      Personally I see absolutely nothing wrong with executing people providing their crimes, guilt and standard of evidence merit the ultimate sanction. That doesn't mean I see the US system as a role model for this because it is clear to even a casual observer that it is not.

    335. Re:HOWTO by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You are arguing against due process. Guilt is never beyond question. How quickly you condemn strangers to death for an ill-thought-out sense of safety. The really pathetic thing is you seem to think you've actually thought this through and are not being a colossal, selfish person in the process.

    336. Re:HOWTO by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You are assuming the convicted is actually guilty. As we know that's not always the case, you should prefix your case with "For most cases..." and suffix it with ", but I'm fine with the occasional innocent paying for my shoddy logic with their life". This strikes me as rather perverse, as you are saying it's fine to kill innocent people. The only difference between that stance and that of a murderer is you are too cowardly to do it yourself. You sound really screwed up.

    337. Re:HOWTO by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So you think due process is a bad idea, and that trials and hearings can never go wrong. The most dangerous thing here is your logic, or rather your distinct lack of it.

    338. Re: HOWTO by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Where did you get the $10 million number?

      http://lmgtfy.com/?q=cost+to+k...

      Third one down...

    339. Re:HOWTO by Kaitiff · · Score: 1

      I would like for you and every other 'save the inmate' types to spend ONE NIGHT in a prison where capital criminals are held. There always has been and for the foreseeable future always will be some people that are not safe to be amongst others. Maybe someday these types of people can be made safe somehow, but speak to even one person who lost someone they love because a murderer was released or escaped from prison. What is inhumane is caging people like animals for decades in a very very small box with no contact with others. I don't like the idea of killing anyone.. I like less the idea of men and women running loose in society that DON'T have that reservation.

      Capital punishment should be horrible. It should be televised and every single inmate in every prison should be forced to watch. It should NOT be sanitary and clinical. Stand them up against a wall, have men with guns all fire with lethal intent to end their life. This process should not be dragged out for decades either. Once the appeals have been exhausted then the sentence should be carried out, and I think the governor of each state as well as the prosecuting attorneys' and judges should have to be in attendance as well.

      --
      If I sound stupid, it's not me talking....
    340. Re:HOWTO by terjeber · · Score: 1

      Execution is vengeance, not punishment. A civilized society doesn't engage in vengeance. Simple as that. The US in this regard is about as civilized as Saudi Arabia and The ISIS.

    341. Re:HOWTO by terjeber · · Score: 1

      And none of that has to do with the facts that some people do deserve it

      Lots of people deserve to die. Capital "punishment" is not punishment however, given the fact that the "punished" just stops existing and is therefore no longer neither punished nor capital. This is why the base difference between a civilized society and a non-civilized society is whether the government engages in acts of vengeance (capital punishment). No civilized society engages in vengeance. It's for the mentally deficient.

      The USA though stands shoulder to shoulder with Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and The ISIS in supporting capital punishment.

    342. Re:HOWTO by terjeber · · Score: 1

      One central requirement is that the person punished can learn something from it

      and experience it. Since the end of your life is the end of experience, the "punished" doesn't experience the punishment.

      Capital Punishment is vengeance, no more, no less. A civilized society doesn't do vengeance. A civilized society is governed by logic and reason. Sadly that hasn't been the case anywhere in the US since at least the late 1970s, and since the 1990s it's been all about Jesus, God, Santa Claus, The Tooth Fairy and other childhood fantasy figures.

    343. Re:HOWTO by Maritz · · Score: 1

      the other question is does it really matter? if they committed a crime* big enough to command death, does it really matter how?

      If you are a neurotypical human you may have empathy, conscience, etc - for someone afflicted with these traits, it's patently obvious that it matters. Perhaps you are atypical in this respect.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    344. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a false dichotomy. "Justice" and "revenge" are not two opposites of the single dimension on which penalties are justified. They are two reasons out of a larger number, and they are not mutually exclusive either.

      In particular, "to prevent innocents from being killed by recidivists" is a widely accepted reason on its own, in the larger class of "isolating known criminals from the environment in which they can commit crimes". To see how that's a different reason, consider that specifically this reasoning leads to penalties such as professional bans and DUI license revocations.

    345. Re:HOWTO by houghi · · Score: 1

      About it being expensive. The cost of the excustion could be cheaper if you use a bullet, If you want to make it even cheaper, just charge the family for the bullit. (Oh, wait.)

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    346. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Two school students murdered a 17 year old girl (using an axe, a hammer and a metal bar) then cut her body up into very small pieces and threw those pieces outside, while keeping one piece i the fridge for eating later. During trial one of the murders said that what they did was not cruel because they killed the victim before cutting her up.

      So why was cutting her dead body into pieces throwing them outside and keeping on piece in the fridge more cruel than simply killing her?

      She was dead, so she didn't feel anything.

      I'm not saying that this wasn't a crime, but the crime was murder, possibly combined with torture. Cutting her dead body into pieces doesn't make that any better or worse.

    347. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Satire?

      2. 4 rounds of .308 and a blank are cheaper than even a single day of prison.

      What's your point? What has that got to do with any of this? You think you're issuing some kind of clever point by point rebuttal, but all you're really doing is showing what a snide ass you are.

    348. Re:HOWTO by Maritz · · Score: 1

      "It's more expensive than life imprisonment"

      TBH, I fail to see how ending someone's life could be more expensive than feeding, clothing and caring for 20, 30, 40 years or even longer.

      The legal costs are higher, it goes on for longer, DR inmates cost more to house than general population, among many other factors.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    349. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I'd say that doing things like raping someone to death is pretty awful. Doing it more than once, and promising to keep doing it is pretty despicable. Showing zero remorse for doing it is despicable. Telling the brothers, mothers, and children of the raped-to-death woman, "Hey, thanks for helping to buy my meals every day!" is pretty awful. Telling them how much he enjoys spending part of every day thinking about the act of killing their family member - pretty awful, right? Ending that person's ability to keep doing so is definitely punishment.

      Cool, so two wrongs do make a right then?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    350. Re:HOWTO by mrclevesque · · Score: 1

      Call it religious or state retribution, or call it punishment, doing what you forbid is still neurotic.

      You can make up reasons that might seem convincing on the surface to a lot of people, but overall you're still encouraging more psychotic behaviors to be carried out.

      In other words, when it comes time to decide how to approach a social problem, especially if you're in power, you need to take into account the fact that people will tend to emulate your remedies --and-- emulate your use of faulty logic to justify them.

    351. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      It should not be about that. If someone cannot be rehabilitated. If they must forever be confined for our societies safety, they should be killed on compassionate grounds. Requiring someone to be punished in perpetuity like some sort of hell on earth is barbaric. “We live in a primitive time—don’t we, Will?—neither savage nor wise. Half measures are the curse of it. Any rational society would either kill me or give me my books.”

      Congratulations on deconstructing your own argument with that quote. Self evidently the answer was to give him his books.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    352. Re:HOWTO by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

      Psychopaths don't sympathize with anything...

      --
      Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
    353. Re:HOWTO by wisnoskij · · Score: 1

      Self evidently the answer was to give him his books.

      How do you get that? the quote is poking fun at the infantile punishment metered out for punishments sake onto Lector. It was not aimed at providing closure to some victim, it was not to discourage future crimes by either him or others. It existed simply to hurt Lector because they they wanted to hurt him. He was providing the only two ethical solutions. I think Dr. Lector himself would argue that given the option between making him as comfortable as possible while attempting to prevent further crimes vs simply ending the threat to society for once and for all, the latter was the wiser of the two ethical solutions. And all this is forgetting that there is no real human being who could be locked in solitary confinement, with books or no, in perpetuity and have any kind of life. Euthanasia will always be kinder.

      --
      Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
    354. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      flaimbait for stating timothy mcveigh deserved it.... wow slashdot.... wow

      You're surprised that someone who hated the government and used violence against it has a lot of sympathy on slashdot?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    355. Re: HOWTO by hucker75 · · Score: 1

      They're criminals, why do you care about them at all? Remove them from society so they can't endanger us, just kill them. It's cheapest (or would be if there weren't so many thieving lawyers about). There is no need for a death penalty case to take any more time or money than a life imprisonment case. Sure, you'll get the odd one wrong, but they're a very small percentage. The cost of keeping the CRIMINALS in jail for the rest of their life just has to be absurd. An alternative for the treehuggers who don't want to kill guilty criminals, is to make them work to earn their keep. Give them all the jobs nobody else wants to do. Bring back chain gangs.

    356. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rope is 100% organic and reusable, so it's completely green, and by reducing the offender's carbon footprint to zero, we are benefitting the world.

    357. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Or at least the prison should be how it was when my country was part of the USSR - no TV, no complaining that you do not like the conditions there and also hard work for some. When people got out of prison they did not want to return there at all, unlike some criminals now who get out of prison, start committing crimes again and go back to prison shortly after.

      Any argument which concludes with admiration for the USSR's justice system is inherently flawed.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    358. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Those of us who oppose the death penalty see no reason to "fix" the system, and instead prefer to keep it as dysfunctional as possible until there is enough popular will to abolish it.

      Revealing a typical left wing tactic. When popular opinion opposes what you want, rather than argue the case and convince people to do things the way you would prefer introduce "improvements" to the current system which actually make it worse, then use the results of these "improvements" to argue that the system is hopelessly flawed and must be replaced.

      Yes, the prison and justice systems in the US are run by fanatical left wingers desperately trying to undermine the moral fabric of society, and probably doing something with fluroide.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    359. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I would, though, like to hear your opinion on sending a man to work every day so that a bit of his paycheck can be used to buy breakfast, lunch, dinner, and much more for the person who raped his wife to death.

      If someone stole my car or burgled my house, I wouldn't be particularly thrilled about paying for their time in jail. That doesn't mean I think they should be executed.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    360. Re:HOWTO by gzuckier · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps if you knew a little bit more about the issue you wouldn't be making silly opinionated statements as if they were fact. I'm sorry you're too simple minded to understand that some people are not worth letting live, but thats the reality of it. Not everyone is worthy of life, deal with it." Good thing we have people like you who know more than us to decide! How many folks are in the death panel, or is it just you? Uh.. just wondering... what do you if your name comes up? Just curiosity, no concreyte plans at all you need to concern yourself with at all.

      --
      Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
    361. Re:HOWTO by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I wonder if you'd snap out of it if someone, say, raped your wife (or mother, or daughter, or best friend) to death after torturing her for fun.

      The price you pay for living in a civilised society is that you're not allowed to simply abduct such people and beat them to death yourself. The benefit of living in a civilised society is that you don't have to abduct such people and beat them to death yourself to get justice.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    362. Re:HOWTO by gzuckier · · Score: 1

      Killing is not for punishment. No one who says that legal system is about punishment knows what they are talking about. Legals systems are about civil obedience. When the victims, the populous, cry out for blood you need to give it to them or face civil unrest. It is about making an example out of people to discourage other lawbreaking.

      After a few thousand years of this experiment failing to have eradicated crime and/or antisocial behavior, perhaps giving a shot at plan b is in order.

      --
      Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
    363. Re: HOWTO by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      The definition for the adjective "plural" is, more than 1. In english we frequently pluralize words by adding the letter S to the end of the word. Hence, the word thousand becomes thousands once more than 1000 units are involved.

    364. Re:HOWTO by Methadras · · Score: 1

      That is simply an untrue statement. Acts of deliberate, calculated murder and treason have a basis in execution for the sake that 1) Justice is served not only to the victim(s) and their families, but 2) That society at large is served by knowing that those that perpetrate such evil have forfeited their rights to exist when they made the same judgements on those that they killed. I'm not even using the deterrent point of view because executions are not a deterrent and they never have been. I'm coming from the point of view that aggrieved individuals and victims must have a basis for justice and vengeance against those that have been done wrong by them. Modernity is an irrelevancy in this regard.

    365. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is he? Or are you just twisting the word so that you feel justified in your revenge and make yourself out to be the better person?

    366. Re:HOWTO by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      It is a long step from saying that people will promote "solutions" they think will make things worse because they cannot get people to agree to their preferred "solution" to saying that those people are running things.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    367. Re:HOWTO by andydouble07 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the left wing has been applying this exact tactic to the US Postal Service for the past several years.

    368. Re: HOWTO by BuckaBooBob · · Score: 1

      And if they are a constant threat to the lives of the people that have been put in charge with their psychiatric care?

      There are so many bleeding hearts out there that want to protect the rights, freedoms and lives of people that have had ultimately removed another persons right to live or be brutalized by another..

      No one ever thinks about the safety and wellbeing of guards and people that have the charge to look after inmates.. How do you punish someone thats already in prison? Keep them there longer? Life in prison with no chance of parole.. WHat can you possibly deter that person from inflicting harm on law abiding people that have been put there to look after them during their incarceration let alone other inmates..

      If you really think prisoners are treated harshly and deserve a better quality of life in prison you should go work in a prison for a year or so and see if you change your mind...

      rehabilitation only works for a very small percentage... to the rest prison needs to be a deterrent some place they do not want to go back...

      --
      Who needs WiFi when we can have Packet Over Sheep! http://datacomm.org/PoS-InternetDraft.txt
    369. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are bringing in their own equivalent and starting to understand.

    370. Re:HOWTO by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about eradicating crime?

      Who even has a 'plan B' that credibly claims to 'eradicate crime and/or antisocial behavior'?

      So no, giving 'plan B' a shot is not in order.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    371. Re:HOWTO by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      It's not the particular lack of logic that disturbs me so much as the ready willingness to dehumanize people.

    372. Re: HOWTO by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure that there is or ever could be a social order that could remain standing and not have criminals. Human beings are just too varied in our motivations, morals, and ability for empathy. I think we can definitely improve on the current social order and drastically reduce the amount of crime, just as we have been doing for decades. But I don't think we'll ever get to a point where crime is eliminated, kind of like how you can't reach zero by subtracting 99% of the remainder.

    373. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who said anything about eradicating crime?

      Who even has a 'plan B' that credibly claims to 'eradicate crime and/or antisocial behavior'?

      So no, giving 'plan B' a shot is not in order.

      This guy:

      " It is about making an example out of people to discourage other lawbreaking."

    374. Re:HOWTO by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Statistics Proove

      Worst use of statistics on /. in a decade. Completely clueless.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    375. Re:HOWTO by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Learn to read.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    376. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do I sign up for the job passing sentence AND carrying it out?

    377. Re:HOWTO by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      How do you infer that I suggest due process is a "bad idea"?
      I'm absolutely not against trials.
      I explicitly state that even after a guilty verdict, if there is a flaw in process, method, law, or circumstance, they get an appeal.
      I do not believe in an infinite chain of appeals based on the serial presentation of trivial disputes delayed as much as possible as a procedural method of commuting a death sentence to life imprisonment. In fact, I'd argue that is in itself inhumane, the constant dangling of appeals to hope, rather than the swift exaction of the legally-determined sentence.

      In fact, it's opponents of capital punishment that want to throw the baby out with the bathwater: by asserting that since there are *some* flaws in the system, it should never employ the ultimate punishment.
      If anyone's denying the value of due process, it's them.

      --
      -Styopa
    378. Re:HOWTO by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      If you're going to execute people and don't want the mess of a head shot, I'd say put em in a gas chamber-like room, and flood it with enough CO2 to displace all the oxygen

      CO2 plus water forms an acid. That is way holding your breath becomes painful after some length of time.

      A painless option would be to use a continuous nitrogen purge. Then the condemned runs out of oxygen without a build up of CO2.This is something that anyone who nearly died while using a rebreather device can confirm. If you don't check your oxygen supply often enough and the low supply warning fails, you don't feel the pain associated with CO2 because the rebreather is "scrubbing" the CO2 out of the air you exhale. And because the system is recycling the nitrogen, you also don't get the implicit warning from having to "suck air" when your air tank pressure gets low.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
    379. Re:HOWTO by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Due to the slow and expensive nature of due process in (not very reliably) making sure that the people we are going to kill have satisfied the legal requirements to be killed, I've read that it's more expensive than life imprisonment. That's the victim's tax dollars at work.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    380. Re:HOWTO by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, for me it's *very much* about the humanity.

      However, I treat people as intelligent beings worthy of respect and able to make choices for themselves.

      First, let's tack down those shifting goalposts and remember that we're talking about executing "people" who have:
      - been convicted in a court of law, AND
      - had that conviction reviewed (appeal) for procedural, bias, etc errors and still found guilty.

      There's just two possibilities at this point.
      1) the person actually did it.
      2) the person didn't do it and has been wrongly convicted.

      In the former case, my goal is in no way punitive. I frankly don't believe that for the most hearty sociopaths, psychopaths, etc that commit the crimes that warrant capital punishment, that 'punitive' measures even reach them (much less any sort of rehabilitation). I don't frankly care. My point is utilitarian: these "people" (as you call them) have willfully made a choice to set aside their humanity and act in as inhumane a way as we can conceive, for some sort of benefit. As rational actors*, they did this but they have to live with the consequences of that choice. The rational thing for society to do in return is to remove this dangerous thing, and prevent it from hurting anyone else.

      In the latter case - and I note that in this long, long thread of personal attacks, there has not been provided a single, concrete, contrary example to my original assertion: the cops don't just drive up and grab John Q Public off the street, and charge him with a capital offense. The individuals "innocently" executed are, by ANY standard, the absolute dregs of society, causing harm, misery, and untold pain to the people around them in many cases for DECADES. For every crime that they have on their arm's length rap sheet, there are probably at least a dozen others for which they were never caught. So yes, I'm saying again, as rational* actors they've made that choice, and while they may have been innocent of that particular charge, I'm willing to accept that they were worthless scum that we can simply be better off rid of.

      *rational: some people will assert that these individuals are crazy, and thus not responsible for their actions. OK, but that seems to beg the question. If you have an unstable explosive that could harm people around at any moment, do you save it, give it therapy, maybe some counseling in case hopefully it can be useful? No, you dispose of it because it's simply freaking dangerous to everyone, and there's no desperate shortage of explosive that we can't find some later if we need it. There are 7 billion people on this earth. If you have 7 billion of something, you can lose a few and not even notice.

      --
      -Styopa
    381. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      If someone stole my car or burgled my house, I wouldn't be particularly thrilled about paying for their time in jail. That doesn't mean I think they should be executed.

      Who said anything about a burglary or car theft rising to the level of capital punishment? Now, there are people on death row because they broke into a house to steal stuff, found someone home, and then ended up beating, gang-raping, and killing the mother while the children watched, and then killing the kids and setting the house on fire in a lame attempt to hide their crime. When someone who sets out to burgle a house comes across a situation like that, and makes the choice to go completely barbaric like that - and shows no remorse afterwards - does your sense of whether or not the father, returning home to his smoldering house and tortured-to-death family might feel a little differently on the subject ... does that change any? Can you put yourself in his position?

      Now send him off to work each day, financially ruined and with his family dead, knowing that down the road from him is the guy who did that - and he's forced to help to feed and house them, for as long as they can be kept alive in a box, likely for many decades. Does that change your calculus at all?

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    382. Re: HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I certainly agree, a society without crime is like an individual without "bad" thoughts, sterile and uninteresting.

    383. Re:HOWTO by Gob+Gob · · Score: 1

      ...... in the hope that the rest of us civil beings can live normal, happy lives without them.

      Firstly there is nothing civil about killing other humans as a punishment.

      Secondly - what if a person confesses to a crime they did not commit and is executed? People sharing your position a gravely unaware of the danger they are in having the guilty walking free. This is just one of many examples that once you go beyond the the point of no return you introduce greater risks and unknowns.

      How about instead of killing these broken people we study them and see if we can learn more about what caused the issues in the first place.....I dunno - maybe we could look to *fix* problems rather than kill off symptoms...?

    384. Re:HOWTO by tricorn · · Score: 1

      Certainly CO2 shouldn't be used without previously rendering the person unconscious. I read that some studies had some indications of distress from straight N2 suffocation, hence using N2O first might be more humane.

      Since part of the "humane" aspect of it is how it appears to observers, that should be taken into account as well. I don't know if CO2 would cause a faster death than N2 when used in conjunction with N2O, or if there's a difference in visible signs while it's happening.

    385. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Statistics Proove

      Worst use of statistics on /. in a decade. Completely clueless.

      Best troll ever. Completely effective, and not at all irrelevant and pointless.

    386. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      Do you apply the same muddle-headed moral relativism to all topics?

      Name calling in the first sentence. Wonderful.

      Let's say you've got $10,000 in your hands:

      1) It was the life savings of a little old lady, and you beat her over the head, killing her, and took it.

      or

      2) Someone very wealthy liked you, and gave it to you.

      Doesn't really matter the words we use to describe what led to you having $10,000, right? Because all that matters is you now have $10,000. It's the same outcome! Whew, glad that all of those pesky value judgements are safely out of the equation from now on. The end justifies the means! How and why no longer matter, just the results! Thank you for making everything so simple, now.

      Wow, way to misrepresent me. Do you think I think the words don't matter in describing those two situations you gave, of course not! It is interesting that you had to make that stuff up to answer me, it is totally tangential, and has nothing to do with what I said. You didn't say why your example was equivalent to what I said, did you? That's rather dishonest.

      I did say that it didn't matter whether neilo called execution 'murder', this is because anyone who reads it knows it is an execution. It doesn't matter whether he called it 'killing' or 'murdering' in this case, because the information conveyed was the same. Thus you saying that:

      What you're showing, here, is that you don't actually understand what the word "murder" means.

      is totally irrelevant, using the word 'murder' does not change the information someone reading that comment gets from it, so who cares that he used it, maybe you could have come up with an actual counter argument instead.

    387. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      No, I'm saying that making a guy spend part of every day working to feed and house the person who raped is wife to death is evil.

      It is a tax burden that everyone shares, you'd be crazy to think someone was deliberately making the victim pay it, that statement about making the victim spend part of every working day paying the murderer is hyperbole. Do you think it will be that much better for the hypothetical husband if the hypothetical murderer was put to death? I don't. It won't be sunshine and roses for the husband, we both know that. Compensating the victim is a much better thing for them than having the perpetrator executed, and the victim would have gained money then, much more than their own taxes go to the murderer, so it wouldn't be like having the victim pay the perp at all. Yes, it is at a small expense to individual taxpayers, but it is nice to have a social security net.

      I do believe having inalienable basic rights for everyone including the right to life, trumps the cost of keeping the criminals locked up rather than having them executed. The cost of keeping a dangerous person in jail does give me pause for thought, also whether someone's life in jail is any good. It isn't convincing me at the moment, simply because the cost does not seem all that great, compared to throwing basic rights away.

      Also, I noticed you skipped the bit about judging a life to be worth a pretty small amount, you do seem eager to have people killed.

      Also, this discussion has been about the worst murderers, because those are the only examples you gave, so you could give them the vilest description. These are not the only people on death row. There are people who are on death row because they trafficked drugs for example, yes this is in another country. The discussion is far from complete without mentioning this.

    388. Re:HOWTO by phorm · · Score: 1

      Barring extreme senility, disease, or other physical condition, some people are never not "still dangerous."

    389. Re:HOWTO by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      "The individuals "innocently" executed are, by ANY standard, the absolute dregs of society, causing harm, misery, and untold pain to the people around them in many cases for DECADES. For every crime that they have on their arm's length rap sheet, there are probably at least a dozen others for which they were never caught. So yes, I'm saying again, as rational* actors they've made that choice, and while they may have been innocent of that particular charge, I'm willing to accept that they were worthless scum that we can simply be better off rid of."

      That is what I take issue with. It doesn't matter what else they may have done. Justice can only be about what it is provable that they have done in a court of law, as a minimum. Otherwise we're just hoping on a sled careening down a slippery slope. I would rather see us lose a few innocent people to murderers because we couldn't prove it than condone executing people who might have committed a capital offense, but probably deserved it anyways according to someone.

      We have the ability to incarcerate people for indefinite periods of time to protect the rest of us. And as expensive as that is, it is still cheaper than the consequences and process of putting them to death. Additionally while they are incarcerated it is entirely possible they could be exonerated and or prove useful in the resolution of other unsolved crimes.

    390. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Wow, way to misrepresent me

      Hard to say if "you" are represented there or not. But it does add clarity to what you said.

      Do you think I think the words don't matter in describing those two situations you gave, of course not!

      Then why did you treat them that way?

      It is interesting that you had to make that stuff up to answer me

      It's perfectly reasonable to take your rhetorical construction and to apply it to another scenario so you can see the flaws in what you said.

      is totally irrelevant, using the word 'murder' does not change the information someone reading that comment gets from it

      Of course it matters. Words mean things. The reason we have different expressions to convey the concept of murder and the concept of the execution of a death sentence carried out against someone who chose to commit murder is: those are not the same things! Labeling them as if they are, and tainting your communication with the connotation of a word chosen when you know it's an inaccurate, agenda-loaded word choice meant to bias understanding of what's said, is not just some breezy situation to dismiss as if it's some linguistic quirk or just the act of someone who's got a childlike vocabulary and doesn't know better.

      One chooses the word "murder" to describe an act because one thinks the act is actually murder, and wants to persuade others to perceive it the same way. Don't play dumb like you can't tell the difference.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    391. Re:HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +100.

      I'm about as right wing as it gets -- but LIBERTARIAN right wing.

      If it is wrong to kill, why is it right for the state to kill?

      Insanity.

      Execution is legalized murder, nothing more.

    392. Re:HOWTO by EdgeCreeper · · Score: 1

      Do you think I think the words don't matter in describing those two situations you gave, of course not!

      Then why did you treat them that way?

      Because your example is completely different. In the original comments case he used murder to describe executions, any reader would still know it is an execution, the word 'murder' just carries emotional connotations in this case. In your example I guess the words you would be referring to is 'I got $10000', so if someone said this to someone they would not know how they got it. If it was option 1 from your post, then the audience would have no idea that it was from bashing an old lady over the head. Or if option two, given the money. That answer is not analogous, it only looks the similar in the most superficial way.

      It is interesting that you had to make that stuff up to answer me

      It's perfectly reasonable to take your rhetorical construction and to apply it to another scenario so you can see the flaws in what you said.

      As I have answered previously, it is not the same. A construct, like a program, does not have to be valid on all inputs. The example you gave, wasn't alike. The construct was not the same either, you replaced it with a generalization for all words, it was specific to that case. I am repeating this but, in the original comment 'murder' carried an emotional connotation, in your example the audience would not have had a clue what really happened.

      is totally irrelevant, using the word 'murder' does not change the information someone reading that comment gets from it

      Of course it matters. Words mean things. The reason we have different expressions to convey the concept of murder and the concept of the execution of a death sentence carried out against someone who chose to commit murder is: those are not the same things! Labeling them as if they are, and tainting your communication with the connotation of a word chosen when you know it's an inaccurate, agenda-loaded word choice meant to bias understanding of what's said, is not just some breezy situation to dismiss as if it's some linguistic quirk or just the act of someone who's got a childlike vocabulary and doesn't know better.

      One chooses the word "murder" to describe an act because one thinks the act is actually murder, and wants to persuade others to perceive it the same way. Don't play dumb like you can't tell the difference.

      If you wanted to use neutral language, then you would use 'unlawful deliberate killing' for what the criminal did and 'lawful deliberate killing' for what the state did. But generally people don't talk like that. Most people can cope with communication that has emotional connotations with it.

    393. Re:HOWTO by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      he used murder to describe executions, any reader would still know it is an execution

      No, a reader hearing that the government "murdered" someone might think we were hearing about something done a la Che Guevara (who liked to line up people he didn't like, and have his revolution shoot them dead without a trial, etc). That's an "execution" that's really a murder. The Islamic State "executes" their judgement about whether or not, say, some poor bastard who's guilty of simply being insufficiently Islamic should have his head lopped off his body with a hunting knife - again, murder. So when someone refers to the death of a prisoner as murder, there's ample reason to consider that choice of word as being deliberately meant to color the reader's understanding of the "information" (to use your word) being conveyed. To, essentially, alter the information.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    394. Re: HOWTO by dl_sledding · · Score: 1

      Also, you absolutely used the incorrect term. It is impossible for a Government to have morals. A Government may (or may not) have ethics, which are defined in professional or legal ways. Only an individual can have morals: it is a *belief* that something is either right or wrong. A Government cannot have beliefs, only a person can.

      So, based on this information, if capital punishment is defined as ethical in the legal sense, a Government has not broken any ethical boundaries by using capital punishment. Your argument is therefore illogical.

      Don't anthropomorphize an entity like a Government, or you'll be doing exactly the same thing as those who say businesses are people. And if you believe Governments have morals and yet businesses should not be treated as people, well, then, I have no time to argue with you because you have beliefs that are not logical and trying to convince you otherwise is a waste of time.

    395. Re:HOWTO by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      some people do deserve it. timothy mcveigh for one example

      McVeigh? Oh, you mean the freedom fighter who was murdered by the government for his attempt to start the War of Liberation of the American People from the Curse of Washington? The future will not look kindly on the people who murdered this martyr, and the supporters of that government will be first up against the wall when the Revolution comes.

      It looks a bit different from the other end of the telescope, doesn't it?

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  2. It's time to start running!!!!! by Charcharodon · · Score: 2

    Nothing like a little "Pay Per View" to cover the costs of justice.

    1. Re:It's time to start running!!!!! by hitmark · · Score: 1

      Gladiatoral combat? Two persons enter, none leave?

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  3. What? by Greyfox · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Just get a New York City cop to choke them. That seems very effective. Problem solved. You're welcome!

    I mean, you could just not execute people. You know, seeing as how so many innocent people have been sent to death by racist juries or prosecutors extracting confessions from them with unethical measures. And how it costs a lot more to execute someone than it does to keep them in prison for the rest of their life. But that's just crazy talk! We can't have a vengeance-based legal system with thinking like that!

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re: What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't just say it costs more to execute them than keeping them in prison for life. That'll just get the crowds riled up and demand summary measures.

      No, you have to make the connection to doing it properly, and even then the innocent still face the death penalty. So the process as deliberate and careful as it is now, is not enough.

      And some people will still want it quick and dirty.

    2. Re:What? by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      That only works if they are fat, out of shape, and highly upset that they've been arrested for like the 12th time for breaking, you know....the law.

      (Frankly I find New York is chock full of stupid laws, but at the same time, you get what you pay/vote for.)

    3. Re:What? by gewalker · · Score: 0

      The cop did not choke him -- this leaves a mark every time. He died of a heart attack. Were the cops guilty of brutality. Yes. Every takedown is brutal AFAIAC. I don't know if this met the legal definition of police brutality and neither do anyone else. But they did not choke him.

      The law was brutal because NYC has to make sure they collect very high tobacco taxes

      .

    4. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      upset that they've been arrested for like the 12th time for breaking, you know....the law.

      Except he breaking the law. He broke up a fight between other people.

      He had previously been arrested for selling cigarettes but was not breaking the law at the time of his death.

    5. Re: What? by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      I honestly don't see why anyone would ask this question in the first place, frankly. Either you want vengeance and will be satisfied to see them explode in a shower of guts, or your conscience is going to speak up for the first time in years and tell you that what you're doing is wrong. You shouldn't be complaining about wanting to have your cake and eat it too. Killing a dude is serious business. The people complaining need to face that or not do it.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    6. Re: What? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Nah, they are already wrestling with a necessary evil (execution). In a twisted sort of way, it's done humanly and discretely so it will be less evil.

      Quit frankly, I'm not sure what the problem is. It's not you throwing the switch, it's not you on the receiving end of the switch. And it definitely sounds more just than giving a mass murderer less than 4 months prison sentence per victim who has said he would kill more people if released.

      Sometimes it's just better to end the problem permanently. That's a necessary evil but one that many people are willing to not only accept but expect.

    7. Re: What? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      It might be a necessary evil in some cases, but the main problems are:

      1) Making sure you don't execute an innocent man. How many times has a combination of witnesses who falsely recollect (either on purpose or just due to the fact that people's memories are always worse than they think they are), an overeager prosecutor (death penalty conviction = tough on crime campaign slogan = election to higher office), and a desire to hold SOMEONE responsible resulted in a death penalty conviction of someone who was later shown to be innocent? How many times has that "later shown to be innocent" come AFTER the execution took place?

      2) Making sure the execution isn't inhumane. Ok, we've decided via a court of law that John Smith is guilty. He's exhausted all appeal opportunities designed to help prevent innocents from being executed (see #1). It's time to execute him. There is always some element that would like to see the person suffer before death. Left to those devices, we could resort to something like slowly sawing off limbs/appendages while he's fully awake. That would definitely result in agony before death. However, that would also be highly inhumane. On the other hand, we could give him a painless drug that puts him to sleep and then have him only breathe nitrogen. However, those "revenge elements" start objecting to his peaceful demise. So we get the situation where we're trying to find a cruel way of execution - but not TOO cruel.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    8. Re: What? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      1) Making sure you don't execute an innocent man. How many times has a combination of witnesses who falsely recollect (either on purpose or just due to the fact that people's memories are always worse than they think they are), an overeager prosecutor (death penalty conviction = tough on crime campaign slogan = election to higher office), and a desire to hold SOMEONE responsible resulted in a death penalty conviction of someone who was later shown to be innocent? How many times has that "later shown to be innocent" come AFTER the execution took place?

      And exactly how many has that happened to? I've looked and all I can find is that about 4% of death row inmates end up with convictions overturned or the death penalty converted to life in prison, And if an innocent person still made it through to be put to death, wouldn't that make whoever lied guilty of murder to homicide to some degree?

      2) Making sure the execution isn't inhumane. Ok, we've decided via a court of law that John Smith is guilty. He's exhausted all appeal opportunities designed to help prevent innocents from being executed (see #1). It's time to execute him. There is always some element that would like to see the person suffer before death. Left to those devices, we could resort to something like slowly sawing off limbs/appendages while he's fully awake. That would definitely result in agony before death. However, that would also be highly inhumane. On the other hand, we could give him a painless drug that puts him to sleep and then have him only breathe nitrogen. However, those "revenge elements" start objecting to his peaceful demise. So we get the situation where we're trying to find a cruel way of execution - but not TOO cruel.

      As far as I am concerned, the people on death row knew there was a penalty of death associated with their actions. Why is this not considered suicide by those people? As for cruel, we have worked hard and successfully to prevent cruelty in executions up until this drug manufacture decided not to sell the drugs for the purpose of executions. The firing squad, hanging, electrocution and gassing people were all replaced by drugs and are now only being considered or taken back up due to the lack of the drug. So I don't buy the cruelty aspect and I think the execution is an extension of committing suicide.

    9. Re: What? by itzly · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, we could give him a painless drug that puts him to sleep and then have him only breathe nitrogen. However, those "revenge elements" start objecting to his peaceful demise

      So, first beat him up until the revenge elements are satisfied, and then give him the painless drug.

    10. Re:What? by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
      but was not breaking the law at the time of his death

      Repeating over and over again "I didn't do nuthin" is hardly an indicator for innocent. A reasonable and innocent person would have been upset, but at the same time cooperative. "Officer I wasn't selling XXXXX, where is your proof?" "Well let's get this over with"

      He was acting like a 7 year old that had just got caught punching his sister for the 12th time, after being told repeatedly not to, and was trying to avoid the impending ass whooping he knew was coming.

    11. Re: What? by Maritz · · Score: 1

      So I don't buy the cruelty aspect and I think the execution is an extension of committing suicide.

      Yeah totally. Execution is suicide in exactly the same way that vandalizing someone's car is punching yourself in the face. i.e. not at all, in any conceivable way.

      I would honestly have more respect for pro-death penalty people if they just admitted they get a satisfying feeling from meting out violent vengeance. I might not agree, but I could understand. For them, it seems, the idea that you might kill the odd innocent person (such as, in all likelihood, Todd Cameron Willingham) is ludicrous - despite incompetence being a hallmark of our species, and despite the obvious bloodthirsty nature of prosecutors.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    12. Re: What? by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      And exactly how many has that happened to? I've looked and all I can find is that about 4% of death row inmates end up with convictions overturned or the death penalty converted to life in prison, And if an innocent person still made it through to be put to death, wouldn't that make whoever lied guilty of murder to homicide to some degree?

      Well this is the issue isn't it... how do you know if the person was guilty or not? the 4% you cite are the ones who actually got justice after serving long prison terms... it doesn't count the people still in prison but innocent, nor the ones executed.

      If you kill someone then you deserve to get the death penalty right? well if the state (you, me, and everyone who does nothing to change the death penalty law thereby accepting them) executes an innocent man, that's murder and you deserve the death penalty.

      Even at 4% it's certain we are executing innocent men... and we're all to blame.. why do we get to murder and not pay the price we demand of those we put to death?

      especially because it costs less to house a man till he dies (and this allows the opportunity to eventually free him if innocent)!!!!!

    13. Re: What? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yeah totally. Execution is suicide in exactly the same way that vandalizing someone's car is punching yourself in the face. i.e. not at all, in any conceivable way.

      If you know the possible consequences of an action is your own death and decide to do those actions, how is that not your fault? I mean pull a gun on a cop, very few people will blame the cop for shooting and killing you. If you decide to act in ways that will cause your death, it is the same as suicide.

      As for the rest, I really do not care enough about the death penalty. If I go on a killing spree, I expect I will be killed in the end. If I do not, I really have nothing to worry about. I can however see someone wanting to see the killer of their loved ones dead. In fact. I would likely do it myself if I knew who killed one of my loved ones.

    14. Re: What? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well this is the issue isn't it... how do you know if the person was guilty or not? the 4% you cite are the ones who actually got justice after serving long prison terms... it doesn't count the people still in prison but innocent, nor the ones executed.

      If they were trialed and convicted, made it through the appeals process, DNA evidence, and witnesses and so on and still on death row, I'm satisfied enough in their guilt. But we are not talking about people still in prison, just people on death row. There is a very high standard for being sentenced to death and an elaborate appeals process that takes a very liberal approach.

      f you kill someone then you deserve to get the death penalty right? well if the state (you, me, and everyone who does nothing to change the death penalty law thereby accepting them) executes an innocent man, that's murder and you deserve the death penalty.

      Nope. It would be whomever lied in court to convict the prisoner. We do not just flip a coin and say you need to die. Some people might like that but it just does not happen unless the cops kill someone (there have been more unarmed people killed by cops since 1999 than claimed innocent people executed).

      Even at 4% it's certain we are executing innocent men... and we're all to blame.. why do we get to murder and not pay the price we demand of those we put to death?

      Like I said, it would be whomever lied in court. If they are convicted and no one lied, it would be accidental just like you crashing your car after sliding on ice and killing someone. But those instances are rare, the bar for a capitol punishment case is high and the death sentence would most likely be withheld without someone lieing or manufacturing evidence.

      especially because it costs less to house a man till he dies (and this allows the opportunity to eventually free him if innocent)!!!!!

      Actually, if you are not on death row, you are less likely to be set free because less resources are devoted to appeals and process for prisoners not on death row. If you are on death row, one of the reasons it costs so much more is because they do so much more to ensure you are not the innocent person you claim to be. Regular prisoners do not get this extra attention.

  4. Easy answer: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't.

  5. Please stop. Just stop by DanDD · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please stop killing people in the name of justice. Just stop.

    --
    "Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the future of the human race." - H. G. Wells
  6. job description? by k6mfw · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wonder what kind of occupation of how and why someone would pursue a career in designing execution methods.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
    1. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because some people deserve it.

    2. Re:job description? by demonlapin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's called anesthesiology. Oh, sure, I learned how to keep people alive in a medically-induced coma while they're being cut open, but that also means that I learned a whole lot of different ways to flip the switch to the "off" position. Two sides of the same coin.

    3. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Engineers design death machines and processes: Mechanical, Electrical, Civil, and Chemical Engineers for past and current methods used in the USA.

    4. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      “Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgement.”

        J.R.R. Tolkien, The Fellowship of the Ring

    5. Re: job description? by mstockman · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately for that theory, anyone trained as an anesthesiologist has also taken an oath to do no harm, so that eliminates everyone who has the skills from using them.

      Oh well.

    6. Re: job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Taking an oath doesn't mean you have to follow it.

    7. Re: job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? I was under the impression as long as things are "lawful" the law can trump anything, oath or otherwise.

    8. Re: job description? by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

      Really? I was under the impression as long as things are "lawful" the law can trump anything, oath or otherwise.

      What? Are you going to force anaesthesiologists to perform executions? How? By threatening them with the death penalty if they don't do it?

      --
      Stefan Axelsson
    9. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called anesthesiology. Oh, sure, I learned how to keep people alive in a medically-induced coma while they're being cut open, but that also means that I learned a whole lot of different ways to flip the switch to the "off" position. Two sides of the same coin.

      Wrong! Lethal injection was *not* designed by any medical doctor or by a medical scientist or even by any professionally qualified person. It was designed by a fake engineer who deceived people about his professional status, the same guy who worked on many electric chairs in the US and a Holocaust-denier: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_A._Leuchter Also see "Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter Jr." on Netflix.

      The fact that an unqualified, fraudulent amateur was hired many times over many years is a matter conveniently overlooked by death penalty supporters.

    10. Re: job description? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Just another argument for using simpler methods for execution. Take a gas chamber and replace the oxygen slowly enough that the individual loses consciousness, then eventually dies peacefully. Why we've come up with all these extraordinarily complex methods of carrying out what ought to be an absurdly simple sentence is beyond me. Put the person in a chair, play some classical music, drop the O2 levels, and let the life of a violent and destructive individual end so the rest of society may be spared.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    11. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Luckily for us, we don't have to design execution methods, history provides more than enough err.. inspiration in that subject. My personal all-time favorite is an ancient Persian method known as scaphism (WARNING: read the details at your own peril).

      The point is that modern execution methods (even the ones used by batshit crazy ISIS) are relatively clean and painless, so criminals are not really that afraid of breaking the law, ergo death penalty is not that strong of a deterrent. Make death as shameful, painful and agonizing as possible and people will be so friggin scared that they rather kill themselves than face the alternative, thus saving us millions of dollars in legal fees.

    12. Re: job description? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The Hippocratic Oath is purely symbolic in modern medicine. It is not a requirement for medical licensure, and does not have any force of law.

    13. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what kind of occupation of how and why someone would pursue a career in designing execution methods.

      Check out the documentary: Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter, Jr. by Errol Morris. It is about just such a topic.

    14. Re: job description? by swedoc · · Score: 1

      Nope, no oath here (Sweden). Still an Anaesthesiologist. As demonlapin said, it's very easy to "flip the switch" to off. Still, I would not want other peoples lives on my conscience. Apparently most normal people are like that...

    15. Re:job description? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NO, they are the problem with the current procedure being too complicated.
      THey are in the business of putting folks to sleep with the intent of waking them back up.
      They don't always get it right.
      This is what makes them sort of go to folks in this area.
      The result has at times been neither painless or effective.

      This is really ashame because this is not a hard problem.
      Simply giving the person Nitrogen to breath is both painless and effective.
      It is the temptation to add frills makes for the problem.

    16. Re:job description? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Do you even read Wikipedia?

      I'd be quite good at designing execution systems, as well as pain-based torture systems, if I were so inclined. (I'm not.)

    17. Re: job description? by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      What about vets? do they take any oaths that would prevent them acting as executioners or assisting in the planning?

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    18. Re: job description? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      You do realise that you are spending your time concocting devices which, if put into practice, would be used to kill innocent people, right? People just as deserving of death as you or your loved ones are. These are the people who will spend their last moments in one of your desired killing machines. Yes, most of the people through it will be guilty, but some won't.

  7. Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Jeremi · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a bit odd that there isn't more consideration given to the idea of death by nitrogen asphyxiation. It seems to be a fairly foolproof and painless method of execution, if we must have the death penalty.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    1. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Pope+Hagbard · · Score: 2

      This. Several states still have old disused gas chambers that should be easy to retrofit for nitrogen asphyxiation. I'm not a fan of the death penalty because even today we have innocent people being jailed and/or executed, but if we must do it, this is probably the best and most humane method.

    2. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Right wingers: "No! The bad man must thrash and howl with pain as he contemplates his mortality or else my blood lust will not be sated!"

      Left wingers: "No! We must have images of people thrashing and howling with pain to whip our protesters into a frenzy!"

    3. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a bit odd that there isn't more consideration given to the idea of death by nitrogen asphyxiation. It seems to be a fairly foolproof and painless method of execution, if we must have the death penalty.

      Or Helium, which has the added bonus of being amusing, plus instantly detectable if there's a leak.

    4. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about carbon dioxide asphyxiation? - Higher levels of CO2 will naturally make you sleepy and lower your breathing rate - eventually the person's blood will become excessively acidotic and they will die - but they will be asleep well before they suffer. When we needed to anesthetize mice in the lab I used to work for we simply placed them in a large beaker with a chunk of dry ice and covered it - 5 minutes later the mouse was asleep and we could do minor surgeries on them before they woke up 10 minutes later. Heck if you wanted to make it a little pleasant you could add 20% nitrous oxide into the mix (providing additional analgesia/anesthesia).

    5. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by demonlapin · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The problem with nitrogen asphyxiation is the optics suck. One critical insight into the three-drug death penalty method was the paralytic. As neurons die, they "wave goodbye" by triggering muscle contractions. So even though they're utterly unconscious, they will still have seizure-like activity if you don't paralyze them.

    6. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by jtgd · · Score: 1

      I think it is also a more humane way to slaughter animals; cattle, pigs, chikens, euthanized dogs and cats... (sorry for being off-topic)

      --
      J
    7. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just cover their head with a bag and hit them on the head with a bat. It's really not that hard to kill someone. Ask the guy facing the death penalty how hard it was for them to kill.

    8. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what Oklahoma is looking at. The summary dishonestly calls this "the gas chamber".

      I oppose the death penalty in any case, and would prefer it to be violent so that people can't pretend it's humane, but it rubs me the wrong way that the summary's author was so dishonest about it.

    9. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by jonnythan · · Score: 3, Informative

      CO2 is the primary driver of respiration. Breathing high levels of CO2 makes you feel like you're asphyxiating, just like when you're holding your breath. It's painful and miserable.

    10. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by ganjadude · · Score: 1

      well, it is a chamber.. its being filled with gas, what else would you call it???

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    11. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by charyou-tree · · Score: 1

      Xenon would be better. Above an inspired concentration of about 70%, it's a general anesthetic. Sleep first, perfect pain relief, then hypoxia, then death.

      Of course, observers would still see movement and agonal breathing, and would (incorrectly) exclaim that the condemned is "suffering" despite being under general anesthesia.

    12. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well not only this but isn't there a whole set of practices around assisted suicide? Am I missing something?

    13. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not give the poor SOBs a choice? I'd take a bullet to the head (or a guillotine) over asphyxiation. I imagine it's more immediate and less frightening.

    14. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Twinbee · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're absolutely right. We HAVE found a humane way, and nitrogen (or argon) asphyxiation is not just just painless, but also maybe even pleasant. Here is the proof (you only need to view the first 5 mins, but the whole 10 are fascinating):

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      I think the death penalty's quite barbaric, but if we must have it, then that is the way to go.

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    15. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Preceded by a few sleeping pills and maybe a stiff drink.

    16. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      Does xenon or argon suffer from that problem too?

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    17. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by jdschulteis · · Score: 1

      well, it is a chamber.. its being filled with gas, what else would you call it???

      The phrase "the gas chamber" has the connotation "hydrogen cyanide poisoning", so with respect to nitrogen asphyxiation it is misleading in spite of being accurate.

    18. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're going to kill someone, it's hardly more humane to kill them.

      The concept of taking one's life with a soft pillow or a hard rock being different is just bullshit to make the executioner feel better. The truth is that you are taking away all that the person is, and ever will be; there's no mercy in such an act regardless of technique.

    19. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capital punishment is a form of social scapegoating. Without hideous suffering, the "punishment" part and the symbolic "expungement of evil" from the social group is missing. Without the show, you might as well not do it.

    20. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Drishmung · · Score: 4, Insightful
      That is very much the heart of it.

      Consider at one extreme, public decapitation. However, only 'barbaric' cultures do this. So, the quest in the USA in particular was for a more 'humane' method, one that, incidentally, does not traumatise the executioner or the witnesses too much. (And that's a thing to consider. You probably don't want the sort of person who really, really enjoys their job to be an executioner in the first place [the normal solution to this is to appoint a condemned prisoner, but that has other problems]); and you probably don't want to send your humane executioner insane simply from doing their job either).

      And so, the quest for 'humane' methods that don't traumatise anyone, which historically got side-tracked by the shiny of technology (poison gas, electricity).

      Lethal injection goes to extreme lengths to pretend that all is sweetness and unicorns: victim is put gently to sleep, then paralyzed (so on-lookers don't freak out---of course if prisoner is not unconscious, this is the stuff of nightmares), then heart is stopped (apparently agonising if not unconscious). So. Many. Ways. To. Go. Wrong.

      And it's all down to the pretence that the state can kill someone 'humanely'. Without upsetting anyone, not even the condemned.

      --
      Protoplasm. Quiet Protoplasm. I like quiet protoplasm.
    21. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      Anyone who has breathed a little too much from a can of whipped cream and passed out could have told you it would be a pleasant way to go.

    22. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      I was going to post exactly this. Why a) does any US state still have the death penalty and b) do they use such barbaric ways to administer it as lethal injection? Even drowning would probably be better, and nitrogen asphyxiation better still.

    23. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

      How about Argon, or one of the other noble/inert gases?

      --
      Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
    24. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's all down to the pretence that the state can kill someone 'humanely'. Without upsetting anyone, not even the condemned.

      It's all insanely hypocritical. The pretense of being allegedly humane and medicalizing the procedure is clearly a big PR priority, and those needs come first.

      I think many of the so-called ethical arguments can be dispensed with by a single political argument, which is this: THE STATE SHOULD SIMPLY NOT HAVE THE POWER TO TAKE LIFE AS PUNISHMENT. Why? Because history has shown this power will invariably be abused at some point. End of argument.

      The only supporting arguments in favor of the death penalty are all about vengeance and entertainment, since economic and preventative arguments do not hold ie to satisfy the bloodlust of the populace, a characteristic strategy of totalitarian regimes.

    25. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by boa · · Score: 2

      "How about carbon dioxide asphyxiation? - Higher levels of CO2 will naturally make you sleepy and lower your breathing rate "

      Humans have something called hypercapnia, which may trigger all kinds of reactions, including panic. So CO2 may be less than ideal.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

    26. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Why on Earth do we need observers? Make the chamber windowless, run it for several hours with a heart monitor that turns on after say a couple hours, and then come by and collect the corpse. How hard is that? You can use any gas that can replace oxygen slowly enough to not cause pain and suffering. Plenty of research on that one.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    27. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      I struggled against suggesting helium, for obvious reasons.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    28. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by nine-times · · Score: 2

      It's important to understand why the debate is coming from on this issue. On the one hand, most people will agree that if you're going to perform executions, they should be "humane". Not everyone agrees on what that means. Performing painless executions have never been difficult, but whenever it's seriously suggested, people object that they don't want it to be completely painless. There are people who insist that the execution needs to be a form of punishment, and so it needs to always stay a bit scary and painful.

      And you might think that's crazy, but there are enough people who think that way that it's politically infeasible to go against it. If a politician pushes to make executions completely painless, he'll be branded as "soft on crime".

    29. Re: Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what Oklahoma is using the gas chamber for. I believe legislation has passed and it just needs the Governor's signature.

    30. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Xenon has anesthetic properties, so possibly not. Argon probably would.

    31. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally think explosives would be one of the best ways. Explosion shockwaves travel faster than nerve impulses. Have the head surrounded by explosives, set them off and the brain will be destroyed before any pain signals reach it. So you can pretty certain there will be no physical pain. Only the usual fear and trauma that precedes the actual execution (which happens for whatever method except perhaps death by snoo-snoo or similar?).

      The US is pretty good at making explosives (Military Industrial Complex and all that), so it doesn't matter if sedatives aren't available.

      The injection method seems to cause a lot of pain and discomfort in too many cases. And the electric chair is barbaric. I really don't think suffocation (whether by nitrogen or something else) is provably painless.

      Of course per the OP's point it doesn't look too good to have a headless corpse, so perhaps it's better to use explosives to obliterate the entire body.

    32. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So you're fine with the idea of a perfectly-innocent person being shut in a box for a few hours with a heart monitor, while he is left to die. Good to know. You are a lovely person.

    33. Re:Nitrogen asphyxiation? by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      Xenon would be better. Above an inspired concentration of about 70%, it's a general anesthetic. Sleep first, perfect pain relief, then hypoxia, then death.

      Nitrous Oxide (N2O) is also a general anesthetic. Is easy to manufacture. Xenon is a rare element.

      As for plain nitrogen, I know, personally 2 people who almost died from hypoxia while using a rebreather while scuba diving. They were not checking their oxygen supply often enough and, in both cases, the low supply warning did not function. They simply lost consciousness. Fortunately, their dive partners noticed and were able to connect spare oxygen bottles in time.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
  8. Its strange by execthis · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Considering that assisted suicide techniques are well-researched and well-documented, it seems very strange that they wouldn't simply use any of the preferred, pain-free methods such as the exit bag. What gives?

    1. Re:Its strange by Pope+Hagbard · · Score: 1

      Lots of death penalty proponents think revenge/making an example is a valid reason for this punishment. A quick, painless death won't satisfy their bloodlust as much as a firing squad or electrocution.

    2. Re:Its strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just illustrates how completely idiotic decision-makers are in our country. Like completely, dangerously, should-not-be-allowed-to-reproduce-dly idiotic.

    3. Re:Its strange by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, I may support the death penalty in limited cases*, just in a 'it can always get worse' deterrent. But even I bang my head when I hear somebody spouting that it wouldn't hurt enough.

      My thought is that you're putting down a 'mad dog' at that point. There's no real point to making them suffer.

      Plus, Nitrogen asphixiation:
      1. Requires no drugs from countries that might refuse to export them to us if we use them for executions.
      2. Resources are readily available from any industrial gas supplier, including welding shops.
      3. Requires no trained medical staff
      4. Does NOT require tying the prisoner down if you use a chamber
      5. Is really, really hard to screw up.

      *My general rule is '3 or more, or deliberate torture for one'

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    4. Re:Its strange by gweihir · · Score: 1

      The intentional killing of people comes with many sexual fetishes attached, often from emotionally suppressed religious types. It has to be a "punishment" form of killing in order for that fetish to work. The desired outcome is not that this person is dead, but that it was destroyed and suffered. The assisted suicide methods do not qualify, as they are trying to make the experience as pleasant as possible.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    5. Re:Its strange by stdarg · · Score: 0

      I support the death penalty, but the act of killing itself is just a small part of the punishment. I think the real punishment is the anticipation. Dostoevsky gave a pretty good account in "The Idiot."

    6. Re:Its strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given the amount of lies coming out of cops and prosecutors these days (one in California just got caught forging a child molestation confession for a guy, there's a shining beacon of american justice for you) I'd say that Kafka's account of anticipation in The Trial is more fitting.

    7. Re:Its strange by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      See my reply to Jeremi above.

    8. Re:Its strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The intentional killing of people comes with many sexual fetishes attached, often from emotionally suppressed religious types. It has to be a "punishment" form of killing in order for that fetish to work. The desired outcome is not that this person is dead, but that it was destroyed and suffered. The assisted suicide methods do not qualify, as they are trying to make the experience as pleasant as possible.

      Methinks you doth project too much

    9. Re:Its strange by tshawkins · · Score: 2

      We also routinely humanely kill millions of cattle every year, why not just use the same method, a large metal cylinder driven by compressed air into the side of the head. Its about as instantanious as you can get. Alternativly the guilliotine was also considered to be pretty damm fast.

    10. Re:Its strange by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Have a look into the relevant scientific literature before claiming BS...

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    11. Re:Its strange by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Most assisted suicide technique are drug-induced. The problem with that is the same problem that they've been running into with lethal injection - medical companies are unwilling to supply drugs if they know it's for execution, especially as EU has a direct prohibition on that, and most of them have strong presence in Europe. So you can get a batch once and start using it for executions, but when it runs out, that's it - and worse yet, all those people who needed assisted suicide also don't get their drugs (because EU embargo operates on the reasonable assumption that once the drug crosses the border of this country, it can be used for whatever means).

    12. Re:Its strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just in a 'it can always get worse' deterrent.

      But it is _not_ a deterrent. Study after study have been unable to show that the death penalty is an effective deterrent, and the same goes for all severe punishments.

      So, what is you argument for supporting the death penalty now?

    13. Re:Its strange by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Fine, we'll ship all our worst child raping, torturing, completely batshit crazy murderers to the EU and they can deal with them.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    14. Re:Its strange by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Seeing as you can never be sure that the accused actually committed the crime, even with a confession, you are either not for the death penalty, or are for killing innocents. Pick one.

    15. Re:Its strange by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Or you could try to figure out why you have so many more of them, and work on that, instead of throwing your hands in the air and calling for innocents to be caught up in your deadly rampage. Or simply house your guilty like a sane country.

    16. Re:Its strange by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      I'm actually pro-death, I'm for killing everybody, eventually. ;)

      To actually be serious, you're presenting a false dilemma. I do not view it as cognitively dissonant to be both against the imprisonment(not just execution) of innocents, while supporting imprisonment and execution in specific cases.

      I mean, I'm sure that if I accused you of being for the imprisonment of innocents you'd disagree. I'm completely capable of supporting the death penalty while acknowledging that, rarely, an innocent party may be wrongfully executed. A tragedy, but not really all that more tragic than the dozens of innocents who die in prison every year. It doesn't mean that I'm 'for killing innocents'. So no, I'm not picking one of your artificially limited positions.

      That being said, if you start restricting executions to serial killers, spree killers, and hitmen, the odds of 'getting it wrong' go way down. When you only have to convict a dude of 3 murders to qualify them for the death penalty, when you have conclusive evidence for 12, it's not that hard.

      "Even with a confession". I think confessions are crap most of the time. They're extorted and tricked out of the suspect more often than not, targeting those of diminished or lower mental ability. While we're on the topic - MOST bad convictions I've read about, where the person sentenced to death was later found innocent(mostly before their execution, thankfully), involve serious amounts of police and/or prosecutor misconduct, which has me howling(and writing my representatives, they know me well, my goal is to write them at least monthly on SOMETHING) for THEM to spend time in prison.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    17. Re:Its strange by LessThanObvious · · Score: 1

      My preference is for public execution by gun to the back of the head, to be completed exactly three months after conviction. Paying for lengthy appeals and decades of sitting on death row costing the tax payers money is not effective. It should be swift and without apology or undue spectacle. Either, do it and do it quickly out in the open, or abolish it completely and stop wasting resources.

    18. Re:Its strange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally I think we just take off & nuke them from orbit -- it's the only way to be sure.

  9. Self-service options. by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 3, Funny

    Give them the choice of suicide or ______________. (fill in the blank)

    I'll start: Using /. beta on an old smartphone while waiting in line at the DMV.

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    1. Re:Self-service options. by jtgd · · Score: 1

      Give them the choice of suicide or ______________. (fill in the blank)

      I'll start: Using /. beta on an old smartphone while waiting in line at the DMV.

      In other words, induced suicide?

      --
      J
    2. Re:Self-service options. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give them the choice of suicide or ______________. (fill in the blank)

      I'll start: Using /. beta on an old smartphone while waiting in line at the DMV.

      I'm pretty sure that would be considered cruel and unusual punishment.

  10. Just hang them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The risk of a more violent than expected snap is not terribly important; you're killing someone very very quickly with that. to the extent that ANY of this shit can be "humane" at least make it quick.

  11. I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Jarik+C-Bol · · Score: 2

    So here's how you do it. You build a chair, adjustable to the height of the condemned. The condemned is seated, strapped in and sedated. A headrest is positioned very precisely at the back of the skull. The headrest contains a captured bolt projectile system, and is precisely aligned with the Medulla Oblongata. This captured bolt system is wired to a bank of seven switches, where one is randomly connected. The "firing squad" stands prepared, and at the allotted time, each member of the squad flips their switch. The bolt destroys the Medulla Oblongata, causing instant death.
    No messy chemicals, no "everyone in the firing squad missed on purpose" no accidental decapitations, no trashing around under electrical shock, just a thin rod removing the part of the brain that makes humans function.

    --
    I've decided to Diversify my Holdings. I've divided my cash between my left and right pockets, instead of all in one.
    1. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Remove the bank of switches, put in a mechanical timer. The prisoner is executed, not by any one 'person', but by the failure of a dozen people to flip the safety switch or resetting the timer.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    2. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > no "everyone in the firing squad missed on purpose"

      Personally I've viewed this as a vital check. If nobody scores a hit, commute the sentence. At least 4 of the guys on the squad think he does not deserve to die.

    3. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is how slaughterhouses kill cattle. Except they drive the piston throught the top of the skull. Same effect, though.

      And why not just cut out the human element in the actual execution entirely? Strap him in to this contraption at 23:45 and set the timer for 16 minutes. That's the last human interaction. After that, everybody can just sit back and wait for the machine to trigger the killing blow.

    4. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Imrik · · Score: 1

      Or they think that they don't want to be the one to kill him.

    5. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by beelsebob · · Score: 1

      The point of the bank of switches would be to cause reasonable doubt about which of the people did it. Your single switch would leave one person who's action (not inaction) caused a death.

      That said, the rest of the comments in this thread are right, the correct way to execute someone in the 21st century is to not execute people in the 21st century.

    6. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      You'd face objections from the family: They want their dead returned to them without any holes or gore. That's one of the main reasons fireing squad was abolished.

    7. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you sedate the prisoner, then you still need to obtain a sedative, which is exactly the main problem with lethal injection.

    8. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by cdwiegand · · Score: 1

      You're right!! We need to invent time travel, and send them back to the DINOSAURS! If they can convince the local dinosaurs to give them clemency, they can live. That way we don't need to execute people in the 21st century! YAY!

      --
      . Define sqrt(x) as something really evil like (x / rand()), and bury it deep. Watch your coworkers go nuts.
    9. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the family needs to do a better job of reeling the person in before they do something that gets them the death penalty. Otherwise, the family needs to STFU.

      "It takes a village" and all that.

    10. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      Wait, doesn't the family also object to their loved one being returned to them deceased? Seems like we really aren't taking their objections too seriously already.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    11. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by Rick+in+China · · Score: 1

      Essentially an ancient way to kill sheep, with an anonymous guess factor thrown in for the button presser's.... not sure exactly sure what. So, the goal when executing a human is to make it so that whomever provides the approval gets to be anonymous, yet the executors (in doing their job) don't get the individual responsibility, but, who was responsible for the decision that ultimately said "execute him"? I would imagine that if you vote "Yes" to execute someone, or if some person made that decision, they would all be fully willing to flip the switch. If not, then the lack of responsibility in any of those parties should be called into question. How can you say "Execute that person" yet not be willing to execute that person yourself? Why must that be made subject to "I pressed, but don't know if it was me who ACTUALLY did the act, therefor can sleep well..." nonsense? No. If you choose to execute someone in a group or individually, be prepared to perform the act, no?

    12. Re:I'd like to solve the puzzle please. by pseudorand · · Score: 1

      no "everyone in the firing squad missed on purpose"

      I think you're missing the point of a firing squad. It was used as a form of military execution in order to introduce some measure of due-process into an order from some commander when due process was impossible during wartime. If you're a soldier on the firing squad you can't disobey orders, even if you object in principal or for the specific situation. But everyone missing on purpose allows soldiers to dissent from the commander without having to go it alone. The commander could choose another set of soldiers, punish the dissenters, or do it himself or something, but if the entire squad missed on purpose his authority is pretty much undermined and he's more worried about preventing mutant than having the execution carried out.

      I'm against the death penalty. But if we have to have it, firing squads, with the caveat of "if everyone misses, the verdict is reversed and the accused goes free", are by far the very best way to do it. Who cares if death isn't instant or painless. Who wouldn't risk a slightly more painful death (and even that's questionable) for a chance at freedom and justice.

  12. Just Switch to Nitrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Running the gas chamber on nitrogen would work, and should be quite humane as those things go.

  13. Why not hypoxia? by ZorinLynx · · Score: 3, Interesting

    With hypoxia (lack of oxygen), you just fall asleep and, if continued long enough, die painlessly.

    Hypoxia is easy to implement, just replace the air in the room with 100% nitrogen. There will be no suffocation reflex, since that requires carbon dioxide. It is a completely painless way to die.

  14. Nitrogen Asphyxiation by MrKevvy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    * Our atmosphere is around 80% nitrogen so usage can't be restricted, very inexpensive to purify, doesn't consume resources needed elsewhere (ie medically)
    * Painless and humane: the victim just goes to sleep. They may become giddy beforehand
    * No risk of leaks or poisoning as long as the areas around the chamber are open to the outside air... the chamber needs only be moderately airtight

    Ideally this would be the time to reflect that perhaps, after numerous proven instances where innocent people were put to death or narrowly avoided it with a death-row exoneration, that a 21st century civilized society should abandon this barbaric practice, but if saner heads don't prevail at least there is this ideal method of it.

    --
    -- Insert witty one-liner here. --
    1. Re:Nitrogen Asphyxiation by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      after numerous proven instances where innocent people were put to death or narrowly avoided it with a death-row exoneration

      I truly don't understand this argument against capital punishment. People who receive hefty non-capital sentences don't get the luxury of automatic appeals or access to legions of highly qualified lawyers that come out of the woodwork to take capital cases at the appellate level. Frankly, if I was to be convicted of a crime I didn't commit, I'd prefer my chances of eventually being vindicated if I was sentenced to death. Anything less than that and both society and the system forget about you.

      I also find this argument a tad bit hypocritical, because most of the people making it don't lift two fingers to reexamine the guilt or innocence of people who receive non-capital sentences. It's a bit like pro-life politicians that loudly condemn abortion while simultaneously cutting the social safety net. "Protect the children! Until they're born, then fuck 'em, it's a dog eat dog world...."

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    2. Re:Nitrogen Asphyxiation by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Well, if we get rid of capital punishment, it would be logical to reassign the resources currently spent on all those costly appeal process to people serving life sentences and such. I don't see how this is a contradiction to GP's point - your problem is with the process elsewhere, and it is obvious that it can be fixed. OTOH, introducing death penalty to the system does not really fix it, it just adds another category of (arguably worse) potential for abuse.

      BTW, purely from humanitarian perspective, I think that all people serving prison sentences longer than some duration should be provided with an option of assisted suicide. If you're in for life, and you know you did it, and you don't want to suffer living in a cell for 50 more years until you die, it's a logical option - and for the society, it's less costly.

    3. Re:Nitrogen Asphyxiation by swillden · · Score: 1

      No risk of leaks or poisoning as long as the areas around the chamber are open to the outside air... the chamber needs only be moderately airtight

      No chamber needed. A typical hospital oxygen mask with a good flow of pure N2 into will do fine.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  15. Carbon Monoxide. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Simple, painless, quick. The victim just passes out and dies.

    1. Re:Carbon Monoxide. by invictusvoyd · · Score: 1, Informative

      systemd is faster .. but not exactly painless

    2. Re:Carbon Monoxide. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      systemd is faster .. but not exactly painless

      Yeah, we hear it drags a whole oceanful of butthurt weenies with it all squarking in unison about systemd.

      Your anus-discomfort about systemd is about as insightful to read as a couple of 12yr-olds arguing Playstation vs Xbox.

      Grow the fuck up.

  16. Carbon Monoxide? by JDAustin · · Score: 0

    We always hear how Carbon Monoxide is called the silent killer because its colorless, odorless, etc. It also painless as people who die from it just pass out and don't wake up. So whats the issue with this?

    Of course, if we go back to public executions, (which if we have the death penalty, we shouldnt hide it), hanging or firing squad is best.

    1. Re:Carbon Monoxide? by Firethorn · · Score: 0

      I prefer nitrogen because CO can be dangerous to others very quickly if the gas chamber isn't 'purged' correctly before they open it up, if there's a leak, etc...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    2. Re:Carbon Monoxide? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carbon Monoxide sounds reasonable.

      Or, if they wanted to be a little more creative - pure Nitrous Oxide.
      I've knocked myself out a few times with that, and its a great way to go.
      When coming out of it, I'm always get this feeling of 'Oh great. I'm back. Back to this sucky reality'

  17. Humane Methods and Definitions by eyepeepackets · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The guillotine was originally adopted by the French as an evolved and humane method for taking a human life and, considering what we've seen with alternative methods this past century, I have to agree: It's fast, relatively painless (quite possibly completely painless when one considers the shock reaction of the body,) somewhat messy, but has great symbolic and even theatrical value. Granted, the upper classes world-wide hate this device with a fearful passion, but that is actually part of its value.

    --
    Everything in the Universe sucks: It's the law!
    1. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by neilo_1701D · · Score: 2

      The guillotine .. It's fast, relatively painless

      So several seconds of awareness and sensation (see here; SFW as it discusses the physiology) is perfectly acceptable to you?

      I don't agree that the State murdering a person when the State has deemed murder illegal to be anything other than hypocrisy.

    2. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by master_kaos · · Score: 1

      Well how about instead of at the neck, it instead chops the head in half. Or how about a good old fashion shotgun in the mouth.
      Plenty of ways to kill someone instantly.. Of course usually the instantly leaves a mess behind.

    3. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by elainerd · · Score: 1

      Excellent idea. The French provided Lady Liberty for New York Harbor, now if we could just get a set of guillotines for the Washington Mall area.

      --
      Faith: Belief in Truth. Superstition: Belief in Falsehood.
    4. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse murder and killing. States deem murder illegal, but self defense is trivially not murder, and that's also a kind of killing. There's a whole arc of crimes that someone can be guilty of (or not) after unambiguously killing someone.

      Hypocrisy isn't a very good critique.

    5. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The guillotine ... the upper classes world-wide hate this device with a fearful passion, but that is actually part of its value.

      I'll only support the death penalty if we send all the upper classes to the guillotine right now. Now THAT's what I call a legitimate use of the death penalty (jk).

    6. Re:Humane Methods and Definitions by UnderCoverPenguin · · Score: 1

      The guillotine .. It's fast, relatively painless

      That assumes the blade is sharp enough and travels correctly and swiftly down the track.

      --
      Don't try to out wierd me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you, free with my breakfast cereal. --Zaphod Beeblebr
  18. There are so many simpler and more humane methods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Putting aside whether a modern country should execute criminals, I don't understand why filling a chamber with CO2 or some other gas is not the current method. It would be quite simple to do, and the prisoner would slowly and gently drift towards unconciousness. Or is the point of execution a cruel event that should just terrorize people?

  19. Just use missiles with a twist of imagination. by Kekke · · Score: 3, Funny

    If you guys attach one with duct tape to every missile you shoot at foreign country, your death rows would be empty in a few days ....
    Win/Win ?

    1. Re:Just use missiles with a twist of imagination. by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      What, and screw with the balance of the missile? We already have enough problems with them hitting things we don't want them to hit.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  20. Not a technical problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Part of the issue seems to be that the death penalty is expected to inflict retribution. It would be straightforward to execute someone by exposing them to low air pressure. Done slowly enough (easily calibrated beforehand and measurable), the being person executed will gradually become more disoriented due to lack of oxygen, pass out, and be dead within minutes. No guns, no medical professionals, just an air pump, some valves, and a moderately well-sealed room. No suffering either, which is why it isn't considered a valid alternative.

    1. Re:Not a technical problem by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      It takes work to make a room that can withstand the pressure(see how pressure chambers are built.

      Now, we can do the same thing while keeping the pressure up via injecting a neutral gas, such as Nitrogen. Heck, with Nitrogen you can have the room be fairly leaky(think airplane leaky), and because N2 is harmless as long as it's not displacing too much oxygen, having the area outside the execution chamber being well ventilated is enough.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  21. Head ripping off by gotan · · Score: 2

    Head ripping off is considered a most humane, swift and painless method:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfsMMVgIToA

    --
    "By the way if anyone here is in advertising or marketing... kill yourself." -- Bill Hicks
  22. There is no way. by ckatko · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It has been proven (as if it needed to be) that we've executed an innocent person.

    http://www.theatlantic.com/nat...

    Any idea that you can "humanely" murder someone is a damned lie.

    Moreover, remember the Central Park jogger case? Where they rounded up five minority scapegoats and said they brutally raped a pretty white girl? Everyone, including Donald Trump himself, was rallying to execute these kids. Now, it turns out they were all innocent. They spent 15 years of their lives in jail and they were LUCKY because they weren't executed. They had all of their primes taken away from them but they still get to live what's left.

    The death penalty is for revenge, not justice. And the ones who pay the price when we're wrong isn't the prosecutors. Life in jail means innocent people have a chance. Death penalty removes that chance and replaces it with a false sense of faith in the system.

    1. Re:There is no way. by gweihir · · Score: 1

      The death penalty is for revenge, not justice. And the ones who pay the price when we're wrong isn't the prosecutors. Life in jail means innocent people have a chance. Death penalty removes that chance and replaces it with a false sense of faith in the system.

      You know, that may be one of its attractions: People that are dead find it harder to have their cases re-opened. The "justice" system is so badly broken these days that it relies mostly on propaganda and lies to stay alive.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    2. Re:There is no way. by jbolden · · Score: 0

      I have to say if I'm poor and accused of a serious crime my best chance for justice might be if it becomes a death penalty case. If I consider an execution to be 80 years removed of life then probably a death penalty decreases the chances of wrongful time. Even if I were to use a number like 500 or 1000 the better scrutiny would still make up for it.

        Our system is not great with poor people. That's a very serious problem. Arguably charging some with capital crimes makes it better not worse.

    3. Re:There is no way. by stdarg · · Score: 0

      Eh, the Central Park Jogger case is a great example of people being appropriately punished, just the reasoning is a bit off. They all admitted they were out committing various crimes that night, just not THAT crime. The people who were going out attacking random people in gangs should all be put to death.

    4. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the ones who pay the price when we're wrong isn't the prosecutors.

      I'm all for finding a way to change that. Perhaps firing them and blackballing them from their livelihood if they screw up would make them a bit more careful. And by "blackballing", I mean to prohibit them from practicing law in any form (even as a paralegal) for the rest of their lives in any capacity that allows them coverage of the jurisdiction they were working for when the mistake occurred. So if they're local, they have to work in another local-level government or in another state, but not federal, because then they would have potential coverage of the banned area. If they're state, they have to work in another state. If they're federal, they have to work in another field entirely, or move to a foreign country.

      Egalitarianism isn't without it's authoritarian bitch-slappings. It just does it based on known and standardized criteria.

    5. Re:There is no way. by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      As if entombing someone alive is some kind of humanitarianism. If justice is miscarried simply execute the witness, prosecutor, and/or judge.

    6. Re:There is no way. by rossdee · · Score: 1

      The death penalty should only be used when there is absolutely no doubt of guilt.
      There are cases that qualify, where the murderer is caught in the act, like some of these mass shootings.

      And as for method, well a high velocity large calibre bullet through the head would seem to be pretty reliable and humane.
      We aren't going to run out of .50 cal bullets and the manufacturers are not going to say "you can't kill someone with our product"

    7. Re:There is no way. by ganjadude · · Score: 0

      The death penalty is for revenge, not justice

      They dont always have to be mutually exclusive however

      --
      have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    8. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It has been proven (as if it needed to be) that we've executed an innocent person.

      http://www.theatlantic.com/nat...

      Any idea that you can "humanely" murder someone is a damned lie.

      Moreover, remember the Central Park jogger case? Where they rounded up five minority scapegoats and said they brutally raped a pretty white girl? Everyone, including Donald Trump himself, was rallying to execute these kids. Now, it turns out they were all innocent. They spent 15 years of their lives in jail and they were LUCKY because they weren't executed. They had all of their primes taken away from them but they still get to live what's left.

      The death penalty is for revenge, not justice. And the ones who pay the price when we're wrong isn't the prosecutors. Life in jail means innocent people have a chance. Death penalty removes that chance and replaces it with a false sense of faith in the system.

      By that logic, you can never punish anyone unless there is absolute logical certainty as to their guilt. You even touch on that yourself when you say the kids convicted of the Central Park "wilding" "had all of their primes taken away". That can't be returned to them any more than an executed person can be brought back to life.

      And you seem to miss the fact that "justice" is nothing more than society's revenge dressed up with procedures and pomp. Underneath all the trappings, it's enforced by the threat of brutal violence.

    9. Re:There is no way. by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      Oh, lets stir the pot a little more...

      If New York, and New York City, would allow individuals to take personal responsibility for their well being and carry a gun, I'm pretty sure that either the crime rate would drop, or there would be more than a few dead gang members who tried to attack random people....

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    10. Re:There is no way. by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      I second what you say and I want to add the death penalty also prevents learning what motivates murderers and also other despicable people. Psychologists can study these people like Charles Manson. Then there are others that were put to death such as Rosenbergs (sp? the couple accused of selling atomic secrets) so as time goes on and viewpoints change, we miss on what there side of the story is. Saddam Hussein was hanged shortly after US occupation, supposably he really believed he had WMDs because his staff said so out of fear so they propped up this myth. And another was Saddam was more concerned of invasion by Iran instead of US. I also think he could have spilled a lot of dirt on various world leaders including those in US during his time in power. But he is conveniently dead so all this is subject to conjecture.

      Getting back to life in jail means innocent people have a chance, few years ago Michigan (or some other state in that region) the governor put a halt on all death penalties even though he was pro-death penalty. Reason was a study showed 160 death row inmates were found innocent due to DNA testing. I don't have details on the story, I heard of it briefly mentioned on a radio news program.

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
    11. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So how do you correct the mistake when it is proved the cops lied on the stand / planted evidence to get that conviction or the da failed to disclose some evidence that would have cleared the person.

      Or do we kill them all for being party to a murder?

    12. Re:There is no way. by neilo_1701D · · Score: 1

      Eh, the Central Park Jogger case is a great example of people being appropriately punished, just the reasoning is a bit off.

      Being tried for murder when you were doing nothing of the sort is appropriate?

    13. Re:There is no way. by neilo_1701D · · Score: 1

      As if entombing someone alive is some kind of humanitarianism.

      It's not... but at least it can be partially undone if mistakes are made.

    14. Re:There is no way. by neilo_1701D · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The death penalty should only be used when there is absolutely no doubt of guilt.

      What about the mentally ill?

      Horrific things happen with the mentally ill (bus passenger decapitates another, for example). Do they deserve the death penalty?

    15. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "minority scapegoats" were far from innocent, and now they got 40 million for their troubles.

      According to a police investigation, the main suspects were gangs of teenagers who would assault strangers as part of an activity that became known as "wilding". New York City detectives said the phrase was used by the suspects themselves to describe their actions to police.[36] This account has been disputed by some journalists, who say that it originated in a police detective's misunderstanding of the suspects' use of the phrase "doing the wild thing", lyrics from rapper Tone Lc's hit song "Wild Thing".[37][38]
      Map of Central Park

      April 19 was a night when such a series of gang attacks occurred. A group of over 30 teenagers, including the suspects, who lived in East Harlem entered Central Park in Harlem around 110th Street at approximately 9 pm.[12]

      The teenagers attacked and beat people as they moved south, on Central Park's East Drive, and on the park's 97th Street Tranverse, between 9 pm and 10 pm.[12] Between 105th and 102nd Streets they attacked several bicyclists, hurled rocks at a cab, and attacked a man who was walking whom they knocked to the ground, assaulted, robbed, and left unconscious.[12][26] A schoolteacher out for a run was severely beaten and kicked, between 9:40 and 9:50.[12] Then, at the 97th Street Transverse at the northwest end of the Central Park Reservoir running track, at about 10 pm they attacked another jogger, bludgeoning him in the back of the head with a pipe and stick.[39][12] They pummeled two men into unconsciousness, hitting them with a metal pipe, stones, and punches, and kicking them in the head.[32][26] A police officer testified that one male jogger, who said he had been jumped by four of five black youths, was bleeding so badly he "looked like he was dunked in a bucket of blood."[40]

    16. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were innocent of the crime for which they were convicted, meaning that the City had the problem of ruining its own ability to prosecute, and having to own up to their own actions. Well, actually, the Settlement avoided the admission of responsibility part, but that's lawyers for you.

    17. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But... that is already the requirement for a guilty verdict, essentially. I suppose the only additional requirement you would impose is that no juror has an unreasonable doubt...

    18. Re:There is no way. by fnj · · Score: 1

      The death penalty should only be used when there is absolutely no doubt of guilt.

      It's a coward's way out, and I'll tell you why. Guilt is never 100% certain. I mean that literally. NEVER. Not ever. Eyewitnesses can be deceived or malicious. DNA tests can be in error (that has happened). There are situations where the probability of guilt is very, very high. Close to 100%. So close that the uncertainty approaches zero. But it will never BE zero.

      This is why the concept of "beyond a reasonable doubt" evolved. It is a high standard, but there is no metric. It is by definition a judgement. If "beyond a reasonable doubt" isn't good enough, the only honorable decision is that you don't favor capital punishment, period, end of story.

      I can respect both the viewpoint favoring capital punishment for heinous crimes, and the viewpoint that capital punishment is NEVER justified. But I could never respect the concept of "capital punishment, but only when guilt is magically certain". It is a dodge.

    19. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes me laugh the double standard in the USA, you want to right to bare arms to protect your selves from the state, but also you trust the state to decide that there is no doubt of guilt.

      In evolved countries we don't let the state kill the citizenry.

    20. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say that like you think those thugs are innocent. They committed perjury by lying in court. They all lied and plead guilty. They protected serial rapist and murderer Matias Reyes by stopping the investigation. They helped a serial rapist and murderer! They made sure he stayed free so he could rape and kill again. They are at the very least guilty of being accessories and certainly of obstruction of justice.

    21. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moreover, remember the Central Park jogger case?

      You mean the one where the five lied in order to protect a murderer? They admitted to the crime and plead guilty. They lied in court and claimed they committed the crime. The real killer Reyes was left free to rape and kill again. He terrorized my neighborhood. People here are still pissed at those five criminals for doing that to us. Reyes had that opportunity because of those five liars. People died because of the crimes those five committed. I can't believe you use the word innocent to describe people that commit perjury and allowed a serial rapist and killer to stay free to commit more crimes.

    22. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From:

      http://articles.chicagotribune...

      "It seems impossible to say that they weren't there at all, because they knew too much"

      The five thugs admitted to beating, raping and killing the jogger. How can you defend that? The Armstrong report proved their guilty. Maybe Reyes came along later and finished the job, but those five certainly did it.

    23. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. I'm not all that sentimental about humans. If there's a human that cuts someone else's head off they should be permanently removed from the population. An efficient death penalty process without decades of going back to court is a nice, clean, effective, and cheap way of dealing with them. Make the death is painless as possible, but get rid of them. It's unfortunate that they have a mental illness, but those are the breaks. You got shitty jeans that make it unsafe for you to be with the rest of the herd.

    24. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't want to use a high caliber bullet. You use a low one. A high caliber bullet can enter an exit without causing death. A low caliber bullet enters, richochets in the cranium destroying the brain and person dies.

    25. Re:There is no way. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      One way to circumvent it, in a sense, is to allow death penalty if the person found guilty confesses with full knowledge and understanding that this means death. This doesn't make the guilt 100% certain still, but it does provide consent, which is arguably more important here.

      Or how about a more subtle way that amounts to essentially the same thing. If someone is in prison for life (whether life sentence, or something ridiculously long that they cannot possibly outlive it), make them eligible for assisted suicide. Purely voluntary, no-one is going to push you there, require judicial review with judge interviewing the prisoner etc to make sure there's no abuse; but if they really would rather die than rot in a cell, isn't it only humane to let them make that choice?

    26. Re:There is no way. by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Most forms of mental illness do not diminish your capacity to understand that murder is wrong. So, most mental illness does not exculpate people. Furthermore, the choice in such cases usually comes down to death penalty, life imprisonment, or lifetime commitment to a specialized psychiatric institution. It's not obvious which fate would be preferable.

    27. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the very same argument that no civilized society should execute convicted prisoners, no person can kill another without being considered mentally ill in some form. If you can prove the proper scienter -- which in legal terms is often different from moral terms -- then those people should be put down as well, yes.

    28. Re:There is no way. by lloy0076 · · Score: 1

      Yes; the less mentally ill murderers around the better. I haven't met a dead murderer who can murder yet. FFS you left wing nellies.

    29. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "mentally ill" - LOL. You idiot. Surely you mean "possessed by evil spirits", because that is just as scientific as saying "mentally ill". According to you, the more heinous the crime, the more likely the perpetrator is to be "mentally ill", and thus should be LET OFF, according to your stupid line of thinking...

      How about the third world piece of shit who cut the head off that poor man, gets the ELECTRIC CHAIR, and is actually made to PAY for his crime? But oh no, Slashtards like YOU want him to be allowed out into OUR society, to ruin yet more people's lives. You fucking sociopath. You're a murderer by proxy.

      ps LOL at the article you linked to - "seat mate" indeed. What the fuck is a "seat mate"? Oh, you mean somebody who happens to have the misfortune of merely sitting next to a third world piece of trash, who then goes on to brutally murder them? You fucking idiot. Words fail me.

      That piece of shit is going to be RELEASED, because Canada is now a Zionist occupied shithole:

      http://www.vice.com/read/the-man-who-decapitated-his-seatmate-on-a-greyhound-bus-in-winnipeg-is-getting-out

      And even THAT article refers to the victim as a "seatmate". What.The.Fuck.

      Let's hope they do release Vince Li, so the PUBLIC can execute that worthless fucker. Or perhaps he can come and live with YOU, you fucking idiot.

    30. Re:There is no way. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Moreover, remember the Central Park jogger case? Where they rounded up five minority scapegoats and said they brutally raped a pretty white girl? Everyone, including Donald Trump himself, was rallying to execute these kids. Now, it turns out they were all innocent. They spent 15 years of their lives in jail and they were LUCKY because they weren't executed. They had all of their primes taken away from them but they still get to live what's left.

      That isn't an argument against any penalty, that is an argument against the piss-poor enforcement and judicial systems. Assume for a moment your justice system is top notch and always gets their guy, then is the punishment justified? If it was your kids raped and murdered? Your daughter packed raped multiple times and left to die on the street? Fuck that, those animals do not deserve the privilege of life. If you can't figure out a way to find the right guy then that is the problem, not the sentencing.

    31. Re:There is no way. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 2

      The death penalty should only be used when there is absolutely no doubt of guilt.

      What about the mentally ill?

      What about them? If you rape and murder then you lose your privilege to life. A bear doesn't know it shouldn't kill, but if it does we take it out of circulation. It's the same deal.

    32. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They had all of their primes taken away from them but they still get to live what's left. ... Life in jail means innocent people have a chance. Death penalty removes that chance and replaces it with a false sense of faith in the system.

      I think you're wrong. When someone goes into prison for life, they become a drain on society. Despite the less-than-glamorous living conditions in prisons, it costs a shit load of money to keep them there. Then there is the legal costs of appealing their convictions. This would leave them a lifetime of appeals that you and I, productive and tax-paying members of society, would pay for. We would share their punishment. I don't want to pay to put a roof over a convicted felon's head while he wastes away in prison.

      Death without appeal? No, that's taking it too far. Yes, give them a chance. Life in prison? Again, why? You said it yourself: prison time deprives life. By its very concept, so does death! The death penalty is just the frugal alternative to life in prison.

    33. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Colorado movie shooter, the Tucson shooter, even the Boston bomber are clearly guilty. Yes, give them their trial, but after leaving them in an uncomfortable solitary padded room for a year or two, take them out. They were caught red handed, it doesn't matter if they were insane at the time or not.

      The amount of taxes that 10 people pay to the state each year goes to house those prisoners and provide legal council. It is money that would be much better spent on schools, environmental protections, new technology, and mental healthcare.

    34. Re:There is no way. by gshegosh · · Score: 1

      Just to add a voice of different opinion. I'm not sure if I'd prefer spending 15 years in prison (and probably losing everything I had - family, money, good name, youth) or being killed painlessly.

    35. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sure, why not? we have a very stringent definition of what constitutes a defense of insanity. run of the mill psychopaths go to jail just like kleptomaniacs go to jail just like compulsive rapists go to jail. these are dangerous, damaged people. do you want them walking around?

    36. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Do they deserve the death penalty?

      If they could be cured, such that they would not do it again, I would say no.

      If they would do the same if let out again, it's probably the more humane option, rather than locking them away forever.

      I won't even consider the option of releasing them as a danger to others.

    37. Re:There is no way. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      And what if that person has an undiagnosed mental illness, or is taking the blame for the real killer who has threatened their family?

      However you dress this up, if people can be executed, innocents will die.

    38. Re:There is no way. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      So you openly admit that innocents get found guilty, and yet think the death penalty is somehow a good idea. You are either terrible at logic or a horrific person. Your choice.

    39. Re:There is no way. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      And what if that person has an undiagnosed mental illness

      The same question is applicable to all forms of assisted suicide. Basically, if the system has enough checks for regular people, it should also be good enough for criminals - we're simply treating life sentence as a terminal illness that causes suffering (which is not really all that far fetched).

    40. Re:There is no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interestingly enough the killer in that situation can now leave his mental hospital for short periods unescourted

    41. Re:There is no way. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Please don't judge other's logic when you are so demonstrably poor at it yourself.
      Judgment and penalty are two different concepts, hiding behind one to avoid the other is also a type Strawman. Maybe you've heard of that when you went to logic school?

  23. Hire Jihadi John. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ISIL are the experts, consult them.

  24. Re:There are so many simpler and more humane metho by satch89450 · · Score: 1

    CO2 is *not* a pleasant way to go. The body reacts to the excess. Better to drown in N2 or even helium. The advantage of N2 is that the bystanders can be protected by moderate venting of the chamber and fans blowing in the viewing area, so that N2 doesn't pool around the observers.

  25. restrict then further restrict by turkeydance · · Score: 1

    and then ban. that how it works. mostly.

  26. How.... by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

    How is it that we can put people to sleep every day by the thousands, cut them apart, sew them back together, and wake them back up -- and this is considered normal medical care -- but for some reason the same procedures aren't good enough for performing an execution?

    I don't particularly like our implementation of the death penalty, but this aspect of the argument has just never added up for me.

    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    1. Re:How.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because killing an unconscious person just won't do.
      How is that supposed to give the grief-stricken family any reveng^W^W^W^W closure?

    2. Re:How.... by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, a doctor could kill someone quite easily if it weren't for that inconvenient oath they took to do know harm with the knowledge they've been given. They won't even look at it as a very very very late term abortion. Stupid ethics, always screwing up our fun...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    3. Re:How.... by Irate+Engineer · · Score: 1

      How is it that we can put people to sleep every day by the thousands, cut them apart, sew them back together, and wake them back up -- and this is considered normal medical care -- but for some reason the same procedures aren't good enough for performing an execution?

      Because most medical professionals went into that profession to save lives?

      Which means getting someone to do this requires A) someone with the actual skills to properly insert the needles and administer the drugs and B) someone not so fussed about the fact that what they are doing is going to kill someone. Someone who meets criteria A is not likely to fulfill criteria B and vice versa. A and B aren't necessarily mutually exclusive, but the overlap is probably damned small

      --

      Left MS Windows for Linux Mint and never looked back!

      Vote for Bernie in 2016!

    4. Re:How.... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      Aside from the fact that the doctors aren't allowed to harm a patient by their oath, the manufacturers of the drugs are mainly based in Europe and there are laws preventing them from selling the medications to be used for killing people. If the US used one of those drugs in an execution the manufacturer would be prevented to selling it to the entire US for all uses. So one execution would prevent operations until a replacement source could be found (not an easy task).

  27. Or how about by DiSKiLLeR · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or how about we stop this barbaric practice? It's 2015. We're not living in the fucking middle ages anymore.

    What the fuck is wrong with Americans, I swear.

    --
    You can tell how powerful someone is by the magnitude of the crime they can commit and be able to get away with.
    1. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's much better to lock these people up for decades until they eventually die from age. Or would you prefer releasing the worst of the worst back into society?

    2. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck is wrong with Americans, I swear.

      Alright, maybe we should take our ball and go home to the United States. What then? The European armed forces are in a shambles. Putin is gobbling up Ukraine and Isis is on the doorstep of Turkey with easy access to the European nations. Perhaps you would prefer Mr. Putin or Mr. Baghdadi? No? Well then maybe you should shut your trap and be grateful for the protection provided by us idiot Americans and our superior firepower.

    3. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      If moral arguments don't persuade, let's look at it from a pragmatic point of view. If you're committing a capital crime, why not reduce your chances of discovery and capture by disposing of any possible witnesses? I mean, what are they going to do if they catch you, kill you again?

    4. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup 2015... all we have left are sissy liberals.

    5. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the "worst of the worst" ? We lock them up until they're reformed. Or, as you point out, they die. Their choice.

      We can't make them reform, and they can't make us let them out. But we have all the time in the world.

      Europe prohibits not only the death penalty but also "life without possibility of parole" as punishment. All the guilty must in principle be capable of release, even if that's an extraordinary long shot. For example, a man who tortured and murdered his wife and daughter and was successfully caught after botching his suicide died in prison. He was always very likely to die in prison, but the law said it was NOT acceptable to just "throw away the key". Periodically a government minister had to satisfy themselves that he remained dangerous or at least unrepentant. If some day he had been able to see that what he did was wrong, accept his responsibility for what happened and change his outlook so that it couldn't happen again, he might have been eligible for a normal fixed tariff such as 10 years. Unsurprisingly he was instead eventually able to successfully kill himself.

    6. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahaha. The "Islamic State" no more represents a coherent threat to Europe than does an angry five year old with a water pistol. In Syria they can drive around in a pick up truck with an AK47 and they're masters of all they survey, but even the crappiest EU nation has _police forces_ that could pick off these clowns. They're stuck fighting over the same deserts and wastelands as all the other Islamist lunatics for the past thousand years or so.

      We're as worried about ISIS having "easy access" to Europe through Turkey as you are about Mexican drug lords having "easy access" to Washington DC through Texas.

    7. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Alright, maybe we should take our ball and go home to the United States. What then? The European armed forces are in a shambles. Putin is gobbling up Ukraine and Isis is on the doorstep of Turkey with easy access to the European nations. Perhaps you would prefer Mr. Putin or Mr. Baghdadi? No? Well then maybe you should shut your trap and be grateful for the protection provided by us idiot Americans and our superior firepower.

      As an American, I am embarrassed by this post.

    8. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, what barbarians elected UTAH to represent the entire country? My god, it's hard to believe all americans are like minded and agree with each other on everything.

      What the fuck is wrong with whatever the fuck you are?

    9. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >We're not living in the fucking middle ages anymore.
      >What the fuck is wrong with Americans

      Yeah, just ignore enlightened Europe and Japan why don't you. Most recent executions were in 2014.

    10. Re:Or how about by BarbaraHudson · · Score: 1

      The drug lords have ea$y acce$$ to Washington - they don't need to go through Texas.

      As long as illegal drug addiction is treated as a crime instead of a treatable condition, illegal drugs will remain very profitable for the cartels.

      --
      "Transparent" is a shit show that trades on every stereotype going. A man in drag is NOT a transsexual.
    11. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe somebody named "Diskiller" is such a pussy.

    12. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or how about we stop this barbaric practice? It's 2015. We're not living in the fucking middle ages anymore.

      What the fuck is wrong with Americans, I swear.

      It is quite interesting to look at the list of countries with active capital punishment, it is mostly extremist islam sharia law countries, communist dictatorships and good old US of A. These are the countries that think alike on this topic.

    13. Re:Or how about by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      This is what they said about the Taliban in the 1980's.

      It isn't so much ISIS that is the problem - it is the shitbirds that they will provide safe haven for.

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    14. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      @DiSKiller, you obviously never had a love one killed by one of these criminals, I did and let me tell you, your perspective would change in a heartbeat.
      In our case, he got 20 years in prison and that was 30 years ago.. He's a free man, how's that middle ages for you?

    15. Re:Or how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Yank, and a Red State Right Wing Yank

      AND I THINK EXECUTION IS MURDER.

      It's wrong, wrong, wrong.

  28. Helium or other inert gases by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You get hypoxic, get a headache, pass out and die all within a few minutes and because you're expelling the carbon dioxide there is no feeling of struggling to breathe.
    Or how about a razor sharp blade positioned at the highest point on the spine and when you flip the switch it simply fires forward and severs the spinal column causing the damage typically caused by hangings.

    Or hell just hang them and if their head pops off just sew it back on. It's not like they can complain afterwards.

  29. Re:Please stop. Just stop by stdarg · · Score: 0

    Nah. Killing is justice for some crimes.

  30. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about all the bleeding heart liberals pay 50% more taxes to keep all these murderers, rapists, and child molesters alive then?

  31. 2 issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the 2 main issues are time, and pain.

    What is wrong with a swift beheading ? Guillotine, sword, etc..

    Not the shit them IS and others misuse with a knife and hacking through, but a proper swift single stroke quick cut of the neck to sever the head and nerves.

    Hell.. give them a high dosage of morphine, LSD before the cut..

    And to those that say "stop killing", "killing doesn't work" .. well your so called justice system doesn't work. Correctional facilities do not work. I'd rather rid the world of child rapists/killers, cold blooded killers and those that operate in dangerous gangs, than lock them in a 4 star facility with internet, phones (legal or otherwise) and the means to join gangs, create fear/terror and communicate with the outside world to continue performing their deeds.

    Either kill them, or turn every prison into Château d'If where every room is solitary without access to any freedom (you know.. punish them for what they did, not just a slap on the wrist or "correcting"..)

  32. Bullet to the brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    destroy the nerve center before it even has a chance to process the signal of pain.

  33. Easy by VonSkippy · · Score: 2

    Heroin overdose (like 700 mg). No shortage of that drug (just check your evidence locker), certainly not painful - you nod off and don't wake up, easy to administrate, only downside is it's not all that quick.

    1. Re:Easy by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

      According to what I learned from some murder documentary, a lethal overdose of heroin can be a horrible way to die.

  34. Re:There are so many simpler and more humane metho by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    I don't understand why filling a chamber with CO2 or some other gas is not the current method.

    The human body uses CO2 levels to 'detect' asphyxiation. While 'quick', filling a chamber with CO2 would be quite stressful to the condemned as they'd experience all the effects of asphyxiation - gasping, hyperventilation, etc...

    That's why you use pretty much anything BUT CO2. Helium, Nitrogen, Argon, etc... It's just that Nitrogen tends to be the cheapest and most readily available of the industrial gasses. Put an 'air freshener' in the vent and they can't smell a thing, and even talking won't clue them in on that the gas has been switched.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  35. "Illegal" drugs? by Bomarc · · Score: 1

    Not a big fan of execution (takes to long, cost to much, arbitrary application) ... however:
    Why not use such drugs as cocaine, heroin and the like? There should be a good stock pile of it, they need to test the purity for trials, and when the when necessary dispose of it (the drugs). During the execution ... the perpetrator won't feel a thing ... and if they did, they wouldn't care about it.

    1. Re:"Illegal" drugs? by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      they need to test the purity for trial

      No they don't. Container weight, transport medium weight, etc. all get counted in as teh weight of the drug.

      Think 20 micrograms of LSD, mixed into a half gram or so of water... on a 1 gram sugar cube. There you have someone who had 1.5+ grams of LSD...

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    2. Re:"Illegal" drugs? by Bomarc · · Score: 1

      In court room....
      Defense attorney: Did you test it for purity?
      Cop/CSI: No
      Defense attorney: Did you test to determine percentage of illegal substance?
      Cop/CSI: No
      Defense attorney: Can I borrow a bill from your wallet? (if necessary... Here, I'll let you keep one of mine.)
      Defense attorney then runs water over bill into a small container. Then tests water for cocaine (80% chance that it will test positive)
      Defense attorney: (several actions ... )
      1. Move to suppress evidence as Cop/CSI is/has a (potential) conflict -- he has drugs on his person.
      2. Move to suppress evidence as anyone including Cop/CSI has drugs on their person.
      3. Move to suppress evidence as anyone including Cop/CSI has drugs on their person, as something as simple as a dollar bill from anyone can show drugs on their person, there must be a test or standard to show purity and quantity -- and show evidence that something other than contact with a dollar bill to needs be established before evidence can be entered. (this one is under the assumption of large distribution quantity)
      ....or any other such / similar action

    3. Re:"Illegal" drugs? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      They would need to be move off the schedule 1 declarations first. There is likely a lot of resistance to doing so because as a schedule one drug, they cannot be prescribed for any reason and are considered to have absolutely no medical use.

      There would likely be a lot of opposition to even creating an exception for executions to the schedule one classification. This would come from people who oppose capitol punishment or even people who conceived slippery slope arguments. Right now, it's illegal under federal law.

      The same is also true for Marijuana in the states that legalized it and the only thing stopping federal prosecution is refusals of local law enforcement to cooperate and an order from the president to not prosecute in states that have made it legal. But federally, it is a schedule one drug and the federal government doesn't even recognize medical uses of it.

  36. Ask Israel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to supply the drug they use to execute their enemies.

  37. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, it is actually cheaper to do just that.

  38. Re:Please stop. Just stop by arielCo · · Score: 1

    You misspelled "retaliation" there. Nobody is being indemnified and no dead come back to life when the killer is killed.

    --
    This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
  39. Primitive Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the difference between the nut jobs in Syria, and these nut jobs?

    1. Re:Primitive Americans by turkeydance · · Score: 1

      blood all over the place. yuuch.

  40. Actually it depends on concentration by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    One problem with CO is if the concentration isn't high enough you will get symptoms of headache and nausea before the person dies.

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  41. Hypoxia or Carbon Monoxide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carbon monoxide is a colorless odorless gas that kills you painlessly. You get confused, you fall asleep and when exposed long enough, you die. CO accidently kills hundreds of people every year in America.

    The effects of hypoxia are also very well known because the air force and airplane makers have a vested interest in their pilots and passengers not dying from hypoxia in mid flight. Hypoxia victims suffer a similar fate to CO poisoned. You get confused, pass out, and if left there long enough, never wake up.

    Do you know why we don't use these well known methods?

    The people in charge of executing people don't believe it's a deterrent if it doesn't hurt. It's not enough to kill them. They want it to hurt the entire time they are dying.

    Knowing that, I'd like to propose a bill I've named "The Fargo Initiative" to solve the problem of expensive executions. All death row inmates will henceforth be thrown into a large industrial wood chipper. It's quick, it's cheap, it's reliable, and you can even decide if it's quick and painless (head first) or for major offenders, slow and painful (feet first).

  42. Re:Please stop. Just stop by msauve · · Score: 1

    But, the murderer is no longer a burden on society.

    --
    "National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
  43. Beheading - once Islam takes over by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    But that, probably, won't happen for another ten years.

  44. history of electrocution by lkcl · · Score: 1

    the reason why electrocution exists is because tesla's competition - when he invented AC electricity - wanted to demonstrate that it was "unsafe". so they electrocuted cows and other animals in front of various influential people. when demonstrated in front of a texas governor, the individual concerned considered the method of killing to be sufficiently effective as to warrant its deployment for the murder of people who had committed crimes

    although i do not specifically know, one way or the other, i would be very surprised if, at the time, an evaluation as to whether this murderous method was considered to be too barbaric or not. unfortunately however humans have a habit of using past decisions as a means to justify current and future ones, regardless of overwhelming evidence or opinions. honestly: much of humanity still has a lot to learn.

    1. Re:history of electrocution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hardly think Edison was concerned about safety, more like driving the competition out of the race pure and simple.

      Edison also built the first electric chair with the express demand that it be powered with AC. Which it was unfortunately for Edison AC really isn't all that good at killing people and the execution was a monumental failure. The convict had to be electrocuted several times before it finally stuck and the scene was generally described as horrific. Which sorta backfired on Edison because people didn't care that it was powered by AC as much as they recalled who it was that built the chair.

    2. Re:history of electrocution by Maritz · · Score: 1

      I believe you might be thinking of Westinghouse/Edison. Edison had an elephant (Topsy) executed with AC to show everyone how 'dangerous' AC was. He tried to have the process become known as 'being Westinghoused'. Edison was a complete dick.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  45. ISIS bungee jumping? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    No strings attached.

    I think that might only be for gays.

  46. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nah. Killing is justice for some crimes.

    You conveniently overlook the truth that many innocent people have been
    convicted and sent to prison for execution. If these innocent people are executed, that is
    a travesty of justice and one such event is more than enough reason to outlaw
    the death penalty.

    Besides, the death penalty is the easy way out. If you really want to punish someone,
    put them in solitary for the rest of their life. I have been locked in solitary for months
    myself and I assure you that years of such imprisonment would be worse than death
    by a wide margin.

  47. This is so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We already know how to put animals down humanely, vets do it all the time.
    The fact that this is even a problem goes to show just how god damn stupid people are.

  48. Re:Please stop. Just stop by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    only because of the insane appeals process. there is no reason someone should be able to appeal 30 times

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  49. Nitrogen asphyxiation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's cheap, painless and effective.
    This isn't a technological problem, it's a moral one - it isn't that there aren't effective,'humane' methods out there, it's that it is simply wrong.

  50. Re: Please stop. Just stop by arielCo · · Score: 1

    Then kill every criminal whose cost as an inmate is substantially less than the expected contribution to the economy after release.

    --
    This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
  51. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't do the crime in the first place. But if you are in a position to take ones life, you should accept the fact that yours may and should be taken as well.

  52. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Ichijo · · Score: 1

    The zero-one-infinity rule says otherwise.

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  53. Re:Please stop. Just stop by BitZtream · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sure, when people stop killing other innocent people, we'll stop killing them right back.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  54. Re:Please stop. Just stop by beelsebob · · Score: 1

    Well, it's more expensive to execute people than to keep them in prison for life, so... Quite easily I'd imagine.

  55. Ask Socrates. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I seriously doubt the "how" is a genuine question because there are many plants that will suffice and they have been used for millennia.

    This is really about the why isn't it? Why to do kill your social garbage, I'll tell you why, because you subtly changed the wording of you version of the Bible to permitted the State to execute it's citizens, because you are hypocrites. Thou shalt not murder, or thou shalt not kill? In the USA the State can kill humans because it is not murder.

  56. Re:Please stop. Just stop by BitZtream · · Score: 0

    Only because of bleeding heart liberals who make things so difficult and allow repeated appeals and re-trial long after there is any doubt of guilt.

    And only if you compare the cost of prison versus the legal costs involved in the death penalty. The instant you start including legal costs for life imprison it goes right back around to being stupid to let them live.

    --
    Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
  57. Sick of this Idiocracy by DeBattell · · Score: 1

    I'm so sick of this Idiocracy I'm about ready for a nice benign dictatorship.

    1. Re:Sick of this Idiocracy by dbIII · · Score: 2

      I'm so sick of this Idiocracy I'm about ready for a nice benign dictatorship.

      Now that's a sign of Idiocracy! It's only benign if you are one of the people the dictator wants to keep happy. Ferdinand Marcos was a "benign dictator" for years until he started treating the right people the same way he was treating the wrong people. Robert Mugabe was seen as that for a long time too.
      I challenge you to find one dictator of the 20th century who didn't have people killed without trial.
      Oh, but this time it will be special will it? How? What will rolling back to the days of King John improve?

  58. X Ray Dissolution by cramerican · · Score: 0

    Insert subject into consumable refractory casket. Lower and seal consumable casket head; presumably a high quality optical port (sapphire? We are living in the ultimate age of decadence, after all). Attach xenon-pumped X Ray impulse driver head. Confirm governor_pardon=0. Verified state android hands over execution to firing computer. Random number generator determines X-Ray frequency for identification of remains. Apply, I don't know...50MJ to the chamber, as in a 1 second impulse at 50 megawatts? That would require a half acre substation and cap bank - but again, this is government money, folks. After 1 second exposure to the output of a submarine reactor in the space of a phone booth, I would expect the subject to be glowing on his chair. If not, raise cap bank to 250 megajoules. Not a problem, as long as we leverage the public bonds properly. Cool remains and transfer custody to family or state. ** I am basically, practically, almost, completely, 99.995% against capital punishment... **

  59. simple by BradMajors · · Score: 1

    A bullet in the back of the head is a humane and reliable method of execution. The reason we don't do it is because the witnesses don't want to see the prisoner's brains splatter about the room.

  60. Let's start with the science ... by CaptainDork · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ... the death penalty is an effective form of revenge and piss poor at deterring crime.

    Citation: Google, Yahoo!, Bing, and stuff.

    --
    It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
  61. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your belief that only guily people are being killed is amusing.

  62. You are aware... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...that DNA has proven quite a few convicted criminals innocent, are you not?

    1. Re:You are aware... by Rei · · Score: 1
      --
      "Are you hungry? I haven't eaten since later this afternoon." -- Primer
  63. you don't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    unless they make over 1 million a year, then bring out the guillotines

    1. Re:you don't by Torvac · · Score: 1

      but for the lolz, hunger games are kind of fun.

  64. CO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CO. I hear this works too. Just ship the condemned off to Colorado. :)

  65. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Ichijo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But justice in the USA is mainly about revenge. Legal types even have a fancy name for it: "retribution." Protecting society is a secondary purpose, but that doesn't require the death penalty. It only requires keeping people locked up until they are no longer a danger, but we can't even get that right.

    If the main purpose of justice were rehabilitation, there would be no killing in the name of justice, and people wouldn't come out of prisons more dangerous to society than when they went in. And prisons would be much nicer places, more like hospitals or universities than like dungeons.

    Unfortunately, we are not a very smart nation.

    --
    Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
  66. This problem is a symptom of something else by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Is nobody else alarmed about what this need for importation says about what happened to the US chemical industry?

    1. Re:This problem is a symptom of something else by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That they respect international patents and trade agreements?

    2. Re:This problem is a symptom of something else by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

      Compared to the need for killing people on a regular basis ? Not so much.

      --
      The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
    3. Re:This problem is a symptom of something else by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      I started out as a Chemistry major. Changed that quick enough when even my professors wondered just what I was planning on doing for a living. All of the CE's that I know that are working in their field are metallurgists.

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  67. Ho-ho-ho by Etherwalk · · Score: 2

    Yes, DiSKiLLeR, why don't we take death more seriously?

    1. Re:Ho-ho-ho by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      DiSKiLLeR: Maybe it means he is against killing?

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    2. Re:Ho-ho-ho by Maritz · · Score: 1

      Might be a Christian thing. Like, Jesus was dis-killed on day 3. Lucky us.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    3. Re:Ho-ho-ho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tu quoque.

  68. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    But, the murderer is no longer a burden on society.

    And there's that 0.00% recidivism rate.....

  69. Why not CO instead? by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    CO poisoning has the unique effect that the CO molecules attach to hemoglobin in the same way as oxygen so the blood chemistry doesn't change.

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  70. What's wrong with a good dose of Morphine? by xaxiomaticx · · Score: 0

    Or just overdose them with anesthesia drugs. Not that I'm exactly a fan of the death penalty but as long as they're still doing it surely there must be some viable options.

    1. Re:What's wrong with a good dose of Morphine? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      As soon as you do it, every European manufacturer of your drug of choice will be forced to stop all exports to US.

    2. Re:What's wrong with a good dose of Morphine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Europeans have cut vital commercial ties with Russia on US orders. They have harmed their own economies, on US orders. They're about to go to war with Russia, on US orders. If push comes to shove, they will cave in on this as well. Euros are our bitches, now and forever.

    3. Re:What's wrong with a good dose of Morphine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So sad but true, now. Forever is very long and everything happened in much less time (you're somebody's bitch until someone else pays more.)

  71. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    The zero-one-infinity rule says otherwise.

    No, it says that they should get one appeal.

  72. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    Your belief that only guily people are being killed is amusing.

    Your apparent belief that guilty people only kill once is naive and foolish. More innocent people are killed by repeat killers than innocents are by the State.

  73. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If the nine jurors that rendered the verdict had to compose the firing squad, I would feel somewhat better about the death penalty.

  74. Re:Please stop. Just stop by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    give them their appeal, and on appeal, if the appeal falls through, go directly to your fate, not back to your cell. problem solved.

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  75. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by aliquis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Face it: Yes, it is wrong to kill any human being. Some people, however, have committed crimes so heinous that they no longer qualify as human beings, just because they happen to have a particular DNA sequence.

    .. and some people decide that's because they don't believe in the same god, don't accept the same society rules, are homosexuals, ..

  76. Re:Please stop. Just stop by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    your attempt to change the topic is amusing. we are talking about people who deserve it, not the few innocents who fall through the cracks. And while I do want more safeguards for that, and DP should only be used in the most serious crimes where there is real proof vs circumstantial proof.

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  77. Squaring the circle by lorinc · · Score: 2

    constant search for a humane means of taking a human life

    There is no such thing. Either you accept the fact that by killing someone you leaving the humane domain, or you renounce killing people.

    I'd prefer americans to stop that archaic and illogical practice.

  78. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    How many is many?

    Near as I can tell, they say about 4% of death row inmates end up getting their sentences either overturned or commuted in some way to avoid the death penalty. That 4% number cannot be transferred to those actually put to death because it stems from the overly abundant checks within the system on death penalty cases. I'm willing to suggest that more innocent people die from accidents revolving around police in high speed chases than on death row who were innocent.

  79. A hammer! by terbo · · Score: 1

    With a hammer, of course!

    --
    If you're interested in facts I'll tell you what they are and I'll give you sources - Chomsky on The Big Idea
  80. Re:Please stop. Just stop by PlusFiveTroll · · Score: 4, Informative
  81. This is an easy one by BlackHeron717 · · Score: 2

    By definition there is no humane way to take a human life. Stop trying to solve paradoxical word problems and actually deal with the issues that cause aberrant behavior.

  82. People aren't precious by argStyopa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Every example I've seen of someone executed "who was innocent" has been scum otherwise. Certainly, they may have been innocent of that specific crime, but they've generally been worthless wastes of human flesh causing misery to the people around them for their entire lives.

    And even IF they were perfectly innocent people, so what, really? This world is infested with 7 billion people. They're not precious snowflakes, they're utterly, completely, expendable. We cheerfully will cut out healthy tissue to excise a tumor; if we occasionally sweep up a non-scum person, really, so what as long as the bulk of bad guys are correctly executed.

    Oh, and to the original point? Gravity's free. Put them in a cement 100' silo with a stair to the top. Either they starve to death, or jump off the top. Either way, it's toxin-free, zero-cost, energy-efficient, and afterwards crows get to eat, so it's green too.

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:People aren't precious by Falconhell · · Score: 1

      The world certainly is infested, with uncaring assholes. Why not the rest of the world a favour and kill yourself, you would help make it a better more civilised place.

    2. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are advocating that every mistake of the justice system still yeilded the correct result because the justice system wouldn't have seen the person unless the person was already deserving of the punishment?

      If that's your stance, why even have a justice system? Just let the police do whatever the fuck they wish with every human being they run across, as there is obviously no need to quality-control law enforcement because it's probably due to whomever they happen to come across.

      In short, you're defending the mistakes of the justice system by blaming the victims who are known to be innocent. You are the problem.

    3. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do us all a favour then and volunteer yourself for execution

    4. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This logic is so awesome, you should be one of the guys wrongly convicted as murderer. Then you should be given access to this slashdot account of yours. Then we will look for consistency in logic.

    5. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ARGSTYOPA?

      PLEASE JUSTIFY YOUR EXISTENCE.

      (c.f. Red Dwarf, The Inquisitor)
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tGO79BtWUI

    6. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if it was you ?

      I Mean you really do not understand the concept of justice. It's not about making the victims feel better, that is a possible, not-mandatory side-effect.

        You give justice in the name of the people, of society as a whole. It has to be impartial and as close to infaillable as possible.

        Between 12.5 and 15% of the inmates in death row today are innocent of the crime theur were convicted for. That is not maginal. that is 1 in 8 ffs !

    7. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you seem pretty scummy. how about we start with you?

    8. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, we should start executing people because we don't like them, or because they might not be specifically guilty but guilty in general? I suggest we start with you, and the people who considered you "interesting".

    9. Re:People aren't precious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a worthless dick yourself. Maybe you volunteer for being the first to go with this silo treatment?

    10. Re:People aren't precious by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Every example I've seen of someone executed "who was innocent" has been scum otherwise.

      The problem with your outlook is that for every innocent person you just justified being killed, You just said that you are accepting of people who actually commit capital crimes being allowed to get away with the crime.

      You cannot accept innocent people being killed without accepting that the guilty can go free.

      So why do you think people should get away with murder?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    11. Re:People aren't precious by Maritz · · Score: 1

      This world is infested with 7 billion people. They're not precious snowflakes, they're utterly, completely, expendable.

      Best lead by example and euthanise yourself; it would be awful to be outed as a hypocrite. ;)

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  83. Re:Please stop. Just stop by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

    Justice has several purposes. Deterrance, protection, rehabilitation and 'retribution' - providing comfort to the victims. The problem is that there is another very negative element too: Collective vengence. The social desire to see those who offend society made to suffer. Worse, this can be counterproductive to the rehabilitation role: Programs aimed at educating prisoners are widely seen as 'soft on crime,' while there is widespread support for any policy that increases the difficulty released prisoners face in finding housing and employment. In large part due to this attitude, the prison system in many countries has turned into an industrial-scale system for taking minor offenders as input and turning them into hardened criminals with gang connections who, upon release, find themselves effectively unemployable and thus with a strong incentive to turn to serious crime.

    The deterrance aspect only works for crimes in which the offender knows beforehand that they have a significent chance of getting caught.

  84. Cost by Livius · · Score: 1

    Forget the arguments about ethics - it's simply cheaper to put someone in jail for life than to pay out all the legal fees and appeals involved carrying out capital punishment.

    1. Re:Cost by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Maybe in your country where lawyers are treated better than doctors and teachers, but in many other countries that is not the case. Maybe you should fix that part first, and the rest will take care of itself.

  85. Chasing the revenge vote by dbIII · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Anyone who deserves execution does not deserve a quick, painless termination, they deserve to suffer as much as possible.

    That's what this is all about - chasing the "revenge" vote where it's more important for justice to be seen to be done instead of actually done. Such folk would be much happier with the Chinese system of a more than a 99% conviction rate.
    But do we really want to go that way? Letting the state have that much power sets things up for the execution of people who annoy the state instead of commit what we normally see as capital crimes.

    1. Re:Chasing the revenge vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly this is a major component of why some of the world views the US as fucking barbaric.

  86. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by the+phantom · · Score: 3

    False dichotomy. You are asserting that the option is to execute or parole after some maximum term. You are intentionally neglecting the option of life in prison without the chance of parole. Your argument is rendered almost entirely moot by such a sentencing option.

  87. Oxymoron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Humane, execution. Pick one.

  88. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ganjadude · · Score: 5, Informative

    I believe you need to read Rosseau. There is something called "The Social Contract", which is something of a "shrink wrap license" you agree to by being born

    We have gone over this time and time again that EULAs are unenforceable. therefore Rosseaus "social contract" is bunk.

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  89. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Justice is only about revenge. What else is there?

  90. Sentenced to Death...by Roller Coaster! by Irate+Engineer · · Score: 1

    I don't think this is found at Disney World:

    The Euthanasia Coaster

    --

    Left MS Windows for Linux Mint and never looked back!

    Vote for Bernie in 2016!

  91. Would it be more humane (less cruel) to . . . ? by adjectivity · · Score: 1

    Ignore the debatability of any society forcibly putting an individual to death for whatever reason (justice, order, deterrent, sadism, zealotry, etc) and consider the following: Is it less "cruel and unusual" to let the condemned individual choose the method of capital punishment from an approved list?

    1. Re:Would it be more humane (less cruel) to . . . ? by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

      Death by snu-snu

      --
      I've got better things to do tonight than die.
  92. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is something called "The Social Contract", which is something of a "shrink wrap license" you agree to by being born into a society, that by doing so, you agree to abide by that societies rules.

    Ridiculous. You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point. There is no meeting of the minds, no clear agreement. If this so-called "social contract" existed, it would be a contract of adhesion which no human being in history ever explicitly agreed to, and any competent court would throw it out with prejudice after a cursory hearing.

    --
    "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  93. Capital punishment is so over by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The USA is the only G7 country that still executes people and they don't care if it's a woman, a juvenile, or someone with autism. The only other countries that execute people with the gusto of the USA are China, Iran, and North Korea. Instead of trying to come up with new methods the US should be phasing out this barbaric practice.

    --
    Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
    1. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Pope+Hagbard · · Score: 1

      'ere, now. Texas isn't the whole USA.

    2. Re:Capital punishment is so over by obarthelemy · · Score: 1

      Actually, they don't care that much if it's someone innocent either.

      --
      The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
    3. Re:Capital punishment is so over by macsforme · · Score: 2

      Check your facts. The USA doesn't execute juveniles, nor defendants who were juveniles at the time of the crime. People are found incompetent to stand trial all the time for conditions far less debilitating than autism. And if you're inferring that we should only execute men and not women, I hope you have a really good reason for why we should discriminate that way.

    4. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The U.S. does not execute juveniles. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled against that.

      But juveniles execute other people. Such as the worthless P.O.S in New Hampshire who was about 1 month short of his 18th birthday when he went looking for an isolated house for the specific purpose of breaking in and murdering everyone inside for kicks. He and his buddies tortured and murdered a woman, and left her daughter for dead (the only reason she survived - barely at that - was that they thought they had succeeded in killing her).

      Then the U.S. Supreme Court handed down another ruling saying that juveniles could not get mandatory life in prison without parole. So the P.O.S. got another sentencing hearing. But the U.S. Supreme Court left judges with the authority to hand down life in prison without parole in specific cases, so I'm guessing that the judge reaffirmed the original sentence.

      In MA, the bleeding heart state Supreme Court judges ruled that juveniles cannot be sentenced to life in prison without parole, period. So if this crime had happened in MA, after this state ruling, neither the Legislature nor the judge would have been allowed to mandate that the murderer be locked in a cage for the rest of his days. The citizens would have been forced to live with the prospect of him getting out to prey again.

    5. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about Japan? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Japan#Executions_since_1993

    6. Re:Capital punishment is so over by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Adopting a policy because it makes us more like Germany, Italy, Japan, or France is hardly a convincing argument, given the current state and the history of those nations. You really need to free yourself from the misconception that Americans care, or should care, what Europeans or Asians do or believe.

    7. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was declared unconstiutional to execute someone for a crime commited while they were a minor.
      Life without parole I think is also considered cruel and unusual punishment for minors. They can still do indeterminate sentencing though.

      My opinion is that the entire system all barbarism.
      I've done some research on the topic and identified two primary causes that seem to be the root as it were. If these two were addressed I think there wouldn't even be a need for prisons. It's my hope that one day others will see things this way and put a stop to the practice of long term incarceration as means of punishment. Punishment is vengence not justice. Justice can only be served when people are made whole again, but in the case of certain crimes such as murder, there is no way to make people whole.
      Justice in those cases can only be served by weregild systems once the root causes are addressed.

      The 2 causes I identified are #1 mental illness and #2 lack of opportunity to participate in society, i.e. poverty & lack of education. Many times these go hand in hand.

      #1 was a factor in almost everyone I had met while researching this. We are using jails and prisons to house the mentally ill far away from society. This denies them treatment and prevents them from ever fully re-integrating. Forced medication is probably not the right answer. I don't believe we have a sound enough theory of mind and we barely are beginning to see glimpses of what goes on under the surface.

      Nevertheless, depression, schitzophrenia, border line personality disorder, fetal alcohol syndrome. These people are commiting crimes because they are sick. Even with drug crime, I've found that most drug users I've encountered, started doing so as a way to self medicate many of these same illnesses. All of these people need treatment, not shunning.

      I am of the opinion that society would be better served by converting jails into actual mental health facilities and learning to get around this eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth junk.

      #2 is the one we are most equipped to deal with right now. Many crimes involve an attempt to seek resolution of economic need, either real or percieved. Would a person rob a bank for money if he or she had all that they needed? I highly doubt it. Would many of the white collar crimes that are commited, be something the perp even considered were it not for the pressures of status and power? Again, doubtful.

      Lack of particaptory opportunity can be addressed today by changing the way we think about the world.
      Our society is in a golden age and we live in a true state of abundance. One far beyond anything the world has seen before.
      We produce more food than can ever be eaten. So much so that we literally burn the excess in an attempt to keep the prices high enough to make it worthwhile to produce.

      Knowledge can spread freely around the globe in seconds and an education that may have taken a lifetime to achieve just a generation ago, can be had in a few short years of intense self directed study. However we place a lot of emphasis on piece of paper issued by an institution that is a product of a bygone era. Why?

      We are in an age where we can build machines that do almost every labor intensive task imaginable. As this state progresses, unemployment will become endemic and enventually may be virtually universal. This does not have to be a bad thing. It could free the human mind to pursue arts, music, science or anything you might be passionate about. Unfortunately, our society says that you must have money to buy things you need, just to survive and the only way to gain that money is to work. This way of thinking is a product of a society of scarcity, not one of abundance. Money isn't nessecary if we all cared as much about those standing beside us as we do those standing inside us.

      Wouldn't the world be a better place if everyone could participate in their own way? Contribute what they want?

      But maybe I'm just asking too much from th

    8. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, mental illness doesn't begin to explain all crime. As for the lame "it was poverty and lack of opportunity that made me do it" excuse, that's a slap in the face to the many, many people who are poor but who DON'T go out raping, murdering, robbing, and beating the living **** out of their neighbors.

      There are plenty of criminals who were getting a fair shake in life or a lot more than a fair shake in life, but who chose crime anyway. Consider the cases of Michael Milliken or Bernie Madoff. Don't tell me that these two were suffering from poverty and lack of opportunity, when they would have been filthy rich (compared to the average, honest, hard worker) even without their crimes.

      Consider also the cases of the Boston Marathon bombers. The United States let them in (giving them a highly prized opportunity that many applicants legally waiting in the immigration line would like to have), and the younger brother was getting to go to college while living in an area that many consider highly desirable. Yet these two set off bombs that killed several people and maimed dozens more. They followed that up with a crime spree where they murdered a M.I.T. police officer as he sat in his parked patrol car, carjacked a vehicle (putting the owner in justifiable fear for his life), and had a wild shootout with cops. During this shootout, the younger brother, desperate to escape justice, drove over his own brother.

      What purpose does it serve to execute (NOT "murder", as you inaccurately put it) a Boston Bomber, or lock one away for life without parole? That's one terrorist who won't be murdering and maiming more innocents with bombs. One terrorist who won't be fooling a rehabilitation advocate with the magic words "I'm rehabilitated, let me out", words that are lies with the single purpose of getting the terrorist out of prison where he can maim and kill again.

    9. Re:Capital punishment is so over by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Less crime, higher quality of life, longer life expectancy. Yeah - sounds terrible! Americans should care about facts, instead of warm fuzzy feelings of nationalism. Then maybe they'd get their shit together and stop throwing poor people under the bus so rich folks can have even more money.

    10. Re:Capital punishment is so over by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      Less crime, higher quality of life, longer life expectancy. Yeah - sounds terrible!

      Yes it does. I am from Europe, and I don't want the US to turn into Europe.

      Americans should care about facts, instead of warm fuzzy feelings of nationalism

      So you are saying Americans are nationalists because Europeans are saying that Europeans are superior?

    11. Re:Capital punishment is so over by Maritz · · Score: 1

      Well; the drugs in the lethal injection are scarce now so they would probably prefer to only execute the guilty in instances where the injection is to be used.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  94. Three easy methods by Qwertie · · Score: 1
    What's the big deal here?

    I believe that those suffering from a terminal illness should be allowed to apply for assisted suicide or euthanasia, and clearly whatever patients ordinarily choose for this purpose would be equally appropriate for condemned killers.
    • - Morphine.
    • - An overdose of what Micheal Jackson was using (propofol). Remember that he used this stuff frequently simply to go to sleep at night.
    • - Carbon monoxide: a gas famous for the fact that victims often aren't even aware of it.
    1. Re:Three easy methods by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

      Agree. I can't understand how Oregon allows a doctor to write a prescription for something that will kill you, yet some state can't obtain drugs to execute people. Which is fine by me, since I don't think they should be executing anyone anyhow.
      And as you said sufficient morphine, or propofol, or other strong narcotics will kill you, and that stuff is available from any pharmacy supplier. Perhaps their ethics prevents them from supplying executioners.

  95. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    1971 is incorrect as it wasn't just Europeans that put them on trial. It was also the U.S. and the Russians. On occasion, Rudolf Hess was Ok'd to release by one power or another but the Russians said nyet. It would have taken the consent of all the participants to release them early. Hess served a life sentence without parole and he certainly wasn't any near as bad as Hans Frank or Goring.

  96. Co2 AND O2 Displacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Co2 *AND* O2 Displacement
    Is without much doubt at all, the most peaceful/painless/cheap(vs drugs) way to end life... That they don't use it today, is only because they wish it not to be a painless experience.

    I am pro-death penalty, and imo if it's beyond a reasonable doubt, without a doubt... It shouldn't be quick and painless but drawn out and broadcast as a true deterrent to those who might think of following in 'those footsteps'.

    1. Re:Co2 AND O2 Displacement by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

      Apparently you haven't been around enough mentally ill or socially defective people - they aren't deterred by it (painful death), may even see it as a challenge.

  97. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Chess_the_cat · · Score: 5, Informative

    If a someone released from prison murders again then it's the State that failed to rehabilitate. Civilized countries like Norway have a very low recidivism rate because their justice system isn't about revenge it's about helping people who are mentally disturbed. http://www.nytimes.com/roomfor...

    --
    Support the First Amendment. Read at -1
  98. Why not bring back banishment? by duck_rifted · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1. It gets the deranged out of our society.
    2. Their life to that point is effectively over.
    3. We avoid all the problems with execution.
    4. Considering that the only countries that would take them would probably enslave them, they'll die anyway.

    1. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Banishment to an enclosed survival-of-the-fittest jungle is actually reasonable when compared with execution because that shit really scares the hell out of assholes even more - unregulated open jail with no facilities. But of course, disease is something that you have to deal with then.

    2. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Society, European Council, Human Rights. You will have to police your civilian population even more to keep sympathy from bringing the dregs back into society. Worse, they will probably be sheltered and protected by other sympathetic people. If a murderer can get publicity and actual help from the outside thanks to his pretty looks, you can bet your life your banished will get help somewhere along the way.

      2. They will be a rogue element. Probably hundreds of thousands of them. Instant legion of the damned, how many can you provoke to attack border guards and other installations in exchange for food and other trinkets?

      3. You have created not only a dynamic problem, but a bigger problem.

      4. Your enemies would gladly give them a castle in the sky in exchange for their help in doing whatever evil they wish against you.

    3. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is the point of life imprisonment. People unable to be rehabilitated asre banished their.
      Banishment was used lately by sending all el-salvador inmates back to their country. Now it's hell over there. And children are immigratin en-masse to the US.
      We are 7 billion people, we cannot banish our criminals elswhere, would you like to take EU and Cannadians criminals in ?

      Execution is a permanent banishment. Actually I think unless prisons get at least as good as in Norway, or even better, maybe execution is actually more human
      and leads to less suffering.

    4. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by WGFCrafty · · Score: 1

      You want to end up accidentally creating another Australia? No thanks!

      (kidding)

    5. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by leathered · · Score: 1

      They should designate an island, say Manhatten, build a wall around it and put all the criminals in there. Hey, I've just had an idea for a movie.

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    6. Re:Why not bring back banishment? by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      Or the USA. Georgia was a prison colony and lots of other convicts were shipped to other colonies as punishment. I've got four lines of scottish ancestry that were all sent here for cattle rustling.

  99. Some people should be dead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree the death penalty is bad because innocent people can lose their life. But I also recognize the fact that there are many instances where someone has been proven 100% guilty of a horrible crime, and that the world would be a better place if they were put down.

    So yes, let's get rid of the death penalty, but not because it's inhumane or barbaric. Because it's dangerous to the few innocent people who may get caught up in it.

  100. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tlambert · · Score: 4, Informative

    False dichotomy. You are asserting that the option is to execute or parole after some maximum term. You are intentionally neglecting the option of life in prison without the chance of parole. Your argument is rendered almost entirely moot by such a sentencing option.

    The following countries have abolished "Life without parole":

    Bolivia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brasil, Cape Verde, Columbia, Costa Rica, Croatia, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Kosovo, Macau China, Mexico, Montenegro, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Portugal, Republic of Congo, Serbia, Spain, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Vatican City, Venezuela

    The following countries have life sentences, but have mandatory consideration for parole after some set period:

    Argentina, Belgium, Canada, Chile, Cyprus, Caech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Georgia, Greece, India, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Republic of Macedonia, Republic of Moldova, Monaco, Nepal, New Zealand, Pakistan, Romania, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Switzerland, Republic of China, Turkey

    So no, the argument is not "moot".

  101. However the person wants... by vanye · · Score: 1

    ObMontyPython: Being chased over a cliff by naked women...

  102. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Le+Marteau · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > you agree to by being born into a society, that by doing so, you agree to abide by that societies rules.

    I have no doubt you actually believe that horseshit. That statement makes some of the more hilarious proclaimations Christians are so fond of saying seem rational and reasonable in comparison.

    --
    Mod down people who tell people how to mod in their sigs
  103. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tlambert · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ridiculous. You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point. There is no meeting of the minds, no clear agreement. If this so-called "social contract" existed, it would be a contract of adhesion which no human being in history ever explicitly agreed to, and any competent court would throw it out with prejudice after a cursory hearing.

    Try using that argument to opt out of the "income tax" portion of the social contract.

  104. Fitting punishment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should be executed in a manner fitting the crime. If their victim died a slow painful death, so should they. If the victim was raped first, shove a spike up their ass and let them slide, aka Vlad The Impaler. Screw this wimp ass justice system, do it right and watch crime rates drop real fast. Stop providing free housing and meals to thugs, get rid of them.

  105. Diethyl Ether ? by Rollgunner · · Score: 2

    Good old-fashioned inhaled Ether. The anesthetic properties preclude the possibility of pain, and increasing concentrations will cause sedation, unconsciousness and then respiratory paralysis (death). Literally painless. Just have to be sure the gas chamber doesn't accidentally explode.

    1. Re:Diethyl Ether ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does the condemned man get a last cigarette? :-)

  106. So what is the alternative ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For those who kill folks for fun or whatever their reasons, ( serial killers and the like ) do you just lock them up for life ?

    It's more humane to kill them than to force their suffering in a confined cell for the rest of their life. So for those who are appalled at the idea of the death penalty, are you saying you're perfectly ok with what amounts to psychological torture for the rest of their lives sitting in a prison cell ?

    1. Re:So what is the alternative ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, lets just give them free housing, meals, healthcare, and education instead. After all, our vets don't need it after serving and protecting our country.

  107. Old school best school by WinstonWolfIT · · Score: 0

    Firing squad. Or double the executioners, 6 of 7 at the head, 6 of 7 at the heart.

    1. Re:Old school best school by Gumbercules!! · · Score: 2

      Indonesia is about to execute a bunch of people, including two Australians, which is big news in Australia. They use the firing squad approach, and in the executions they carried out in January, using some 20 people firing at once - some with blanks and some with real, so the people never know if they really killed someone or not. Even still - the death is by no means quick., the fastest death by firing squad was six minutes. Others took far longer to bleed out or have internal organ failure.

      It's especially big news in Australia at the moment because the two Australians (charge: drug trafficking in 2005) to be executed any day now are generally regarded by all as fully remorseful and fully reformed - even by the people executing them. Which begs the question - what's the point of a prison system based on reform if you just kill people even if they actually do reform? The two in question are said to be so well regarded in the prison they're in that other inmates have volunteered to stand in for them an be executed in their place.

      The real pity here is that they're going to be executed not because of their crimes but because Indonesia's government wants to show its people how they can stand up to international pressure (something the majority of Indonesians want to see them do). So basically, they're going to be killed for political purposes, not because of their crime. That's no reason to execute someone.

      Don't get me wrong - I'm not in favour of drug traffickers - but their "victims" all chose to take drugs, too.Compare that to someone who actively was involved in the Bali terrorist bombings a few years ago - I'm talking physically carried the actual bombs to the actual night club where 202 people were killed and many more mained - not just someone peripherally involved - and that guy has been released from prison in Indonesia already. But foreign drug traffickers? No - they get killed.

    2. Re:Old school best school by WinstonWolfIT · · Score: 1

      That's specifically why I mentioned 6/7 at the head. There's no delay to two pills to the head, let alone 6.

    3. Re:Old school best school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't get me wrong - I'm not in favour of drug traffickers - but their "victims" all chose to take drugs, too.

      I am. If it weren't for drug traffickers, how would I get my drugs?

      Won't somebody think of the recreational drug users?!

    4. Re:Old school best school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are some Australians so upset about this? Indonesia did not change its laws after these smugglers were caught. The penalty for drug trafficking has always been severe, regardless if we think the punishment fits the crime or not.

      They had smuggled drugs in Indonesia previously. Some of them had drug charges in Australia as well. The reason why they were finally caught was because of a friendly tipoff from Australian police, right? Maybe the majority of Australia's anger should be directed toward the authority figures who made the call to Indonesia as one would presume they were fully aware that their citizens could be executed. They could have waited for the flights to arrive in Australia and arrest the smugglers then.

    5. Re:Old school best school by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Indonesia is about to execute a bunch of people, including two Australians, which is big news in Australia. They use the firing squad approach, and in the executions they carried out in January, using some 20 people firing at once - some with blanks and some with real, so the people never know if they really killed someone or not.

      What a bunch of spineless sissy cunts. If you are going to have firing squads, Everyone should be doing head shots, should have scopes and personalized to show that each shooter shot the perp in the head. No deniability allowed. Because if people have to have plausible deniablility that they were the one to kill the person, it's admission that there just might be something wrong with cold blooded executions.

      You want to do this shit, you've gotta really want to, and take enjoyment in snuffing out another's life. Some people do. ISIS does.

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  108. So what SHOULD we do with serial killers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Or how about we stop this barbaric practice? It's 2015. We're not living in the fucking middle ages anymore.

    So, you have someone who unrepentantly rapes, dismembers and possibly even eats little children. Don't make me look up serial killers, it's not hard to find someone this horrible. What do you suggest we do with them?

    A) Let them free after X years.
    B) Lock them in a tiny box for life.
    C) Kill them.

    Please feel free to explain your reasoning as to which option is most humane. Also, please assume that their next victim, should they be released will be you or someone you love. They will strike at a time you are unable to fight back.

    1. Re:So what SHOULD we do with serial killers? by ax_42 · · Score: 1

      > Or how about we stop this barbaric practice? It's 2015. We're not living in the fucking middle ages anymore.

      So, you have someone who unrepentantly rapes, dismembers and possibly even eats little children. Don't make me look up serial killers, it's not hard to find someone this horrible. What do you suggest we do with them?

      A) Let them free after X years.
      B) Lock them in a tiny box for life.
      C) Kill them.

      Please feel free to explain your reasoning as to which option is most humane. Also, please assume that their next victim, should they be released will be you or someone you love. They will strike at a time you are unable to fight back.

      a) should not happen
      b) is what is done by civilised countries (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anders_Behring_Breivik for an example)
      c) is done by barbarians (Saudi Arabia, North Korea, China, USA..... -- pretty cool list to be on, right guys? Human Rights FTW)

      And don't get me started on when you find the wrong person guilty......

  109. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

    So is your argument why homosexuals are still thrown in jail for being homosexuals in Europe and North America?

    --
    -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
  110. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    Justice is only about revenge. What else is there?

    Real justice?

    You get what you deserve for your wrongdoing nothing more nothing less. Justice has nothing to do with revenge.

  111. Bullets are cheap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and fast

  112. Well, well, well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just classy gentlemen in this thread, I see.

    Ex-sanguination? I believe that was what we did to chicken back when I was young.

    > "As states revert to earlier methods of execution—techniques once abandoned as backward and flawed—they run the risk that the death penalty itself will be seen in the same terms."

    No, they run the risk of making the entire country look backward and flawed.

    No, scratch that, there's no risk: the country _is_ backward and flawed for having a death penalty.

  113. Carbon Monoxide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It puts you to sleep and you die. With a modified gasoline engine the fuel costs would be at most $4 to kill someone.

  114. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sjames · · Score: 1

    In each case of an innocent being killed by the state the courts, several judges, at least one jury and the prosecutor swore that the victim was proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt, even when the evidence was circumstantial. How do we make them quit lying?

  115. The Crushinator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Barbarians...

    Put them in a cell, introduce a vaporized sleep agent during the night. Bed/Toilet retract into the floor then 100 tons of concrete and ceiling drops on them. Absolutely instant and painless. Not much for viewing though.

    But unless someone has killed someone, in public, with a good number of trustworthy witnesses? Shock collar and put them to work on an apple farm. Prisons are just as barbaric as executions; They penalize the victim (no recompense for loss), society (paying to house and feed the criminal), lead to further crimes through networking and training, and really only exist to benefit Corrections Corporation of America. Picking apples will keep them alive long enough to exhaust their appeals process, teach them a useful skill, benefit society, and they might even be proven innocent.

  116. Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mistakes by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Execution is not a deterrent because they take place behind walls and virtually no one sees them. Out of sight, out of mind. If they are going to execute people, then do it in the public square in a way that shocks people (hanging, guillotine, etc). Couple that with executing prosecutors and cops who through malice or complete incompetence cause an innocent person to be executed. Like as not, the latter will reduce to an absolute minimum the former. And when an execution does happen, people will be shown the consequences if they murder in no uncertain terms.

    If you don't do it in public, then don't execute people. Without being a real deterrent it serves no purpose and is more merciful than keeping them in a cage (but for fuck's sake, stop giving them TVs and other shit that makes the time go fast).

    --
    -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
  117. Call me radical... by JimMcc · · Score: 0

    but how about if we don't kill people?

    After all, aren't we punishing them for supposedly killing in the first place? What makes the government morally right for taking an action that they condemn in others.

    1. Re:Call me radical... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So by your standards, courts would not be allowed to fine thieves and fraudsters, or to imprison kidnappers?

  118. Animal Shelter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take the condemned to the local animal shelter. Most shelters kill thousands of animals every year, quickly and painlessly.

  119. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will happily allow my taxes to be adjusted based on changing all executions into life imprisonment, so long as your taxes are not adjusted.

  120. "most humane" ? No. "Less troubling" ! by obarthelemy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Executions are by no means done the most humane way, nor is anyone attempting to do them the most humane way. They're done the most telegenic way, so as not to bother the audience: Having your butt stuffed with cotton *before* being executed is not humane, but hey, that way no shit comes out when they kill you, and you die clean and smelling great !
    To me, humane (if there is a "humane" way to kill people) would be quick and painless. Drugs or electrocution aren't. I'm fairly sure guillotine is the most reliably quick and painless way, but the blood ! You almost feel like you just killed someone !

    --
    The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
  121. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sjames · · Score: 1

    Deliberately killing someone is well recognized to be a much greater offense than accidental killing.

  122. Heroin by kylemonger · · Score: 1

    A massive heroin overdose seems equally humane. And as we've demonstrated for the past thirty years at least, despite our best efforts we cannot stop heroin from entering this country.

    1. Re:Heroin by Random+Nobody · · Score: 1

      The "two-drug cocktail" was essentially this. Overdosing is a relatively long and painful to watch process, as demonstrated by the witnesses of when they tried it after the "three-drug cocktail" wasn't available. Granted the "three-drug cocktail" appears nice but can be botched without detection due to the the paralytic.

  123. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ganjadude · · Score: 1, Funny

    umm, the income tax is actually found in the constitution, not any "social contract"

    Better yet. where is this social contract so i can have my lawyer take a look at it and see if it stands up

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  124. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    You do not get the death penalty for accidentally killing someone.

    Or are you trying to excuse the accidents leading to death in order to cry against the intentional deaths of people who intentionally killed others? Strange how one justifies things if that was the case.

    But here is a thought exercise for you. If someone knows they would be getting the death penalty for murdering people in a certain way (usually more than one person and intentionally with heinous acts of violence), wouldn't that be the same as them committing suicide? We already have suicide by cop, and there are strong arguments for doctor assisted suicide, why is this considered different?

  125. Re:Please stop. Just stop by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    even when the evidence was circumstantial.

    you answered your own question. if the evidence is circumstantial, DP is off limits

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  126. Use a bolt-gun by msobkow · · Score: 1

    They claim the bolt-guns used to kill cattle and pigs are humane. Use those.

    After all, it's not like there is anything "humane" about an execution. Stop candy coating the situation. Blow their damned heads off with a 12-guage at close range -- the brains will be all over the wall before the neurons have a chance to register pain. Sure it's ugly, but so is all death.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Use a bolt-gun by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It's even uglier when the person is innocent.

  127. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The most hilarious part of your statement is that if you don't want to be put to death, just leave.

    Hard to emigrate when you're on death row, isn't it? Hell, hard to emigrate at all because of your bullshit "social contract" which prevents other countries from taking on new patients... sory, immigrants.

    That's like strapping someone to a chair with a gun to their head and saying to them they're free to leave, if they can. Otherwise, we'll shoot you. I mean, pretty much literally, isn't it?

    Because of your bullshit social contract, and the fact that emigration is basically impossible, some are pissed off enough to take option (D), fight to the death. I think it's a terrible option myself, but that's why we see the rise in terrorism today.

  128. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sjames · · Score: 1

    I am calling your excuse for the mistakes in the death penalty specious. You claim that since there are more accidental deaths in police chases than there are intentional but wrong executions, we needn't be overly concerned about wrongful executions is simply wrong.

  129. Keep it gross by spaceyhackerlady · · Score: 1

    If it's too clean, too clinical, people lose sight of the barbaric atrocity that execution is.

    They also start to think that because it's clean, there's no reason to stop it. It should frighten (and gross out) any sane person.

    ...laura

  130. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by omfgnosis · · Score: 5, Interesting

    you agree to by being born into a society, that by doing so, you agree to abide by that societies rules.

    That is categorically not what the "social contract" means. The "social contract" is an expression that one must suspend some "natural rights" (i.e. the freedom to "do whatever you want") in order to obtain the benefits of living in a society (i.e. to protect rights that need social defense). Like any contract, it's one that must be entered into consciously, not by birth or decree; the perversion of such a "contract" to mean one inherits it by birth is a road to domination and stagnation. Being born conveys only liberties, not responsibilities. Being a member of a community conveys both. It is up to a person to choose the latter, and it is up to a child's guardians to convey the benefits and consequences of such a contract. And it is up to every person to negotiate the social fluidity of all of these.

    Society's rules are also not static, and they typically only change through rebellion. This process can be peaceful or bloody, just or unjust, depending on the rules and the rebellion. The most just and peaceful evolution comes from a confluence of evolving "social contract" that challenges outdated or unwarranted rules; the least comes from the collision of an unflinching status quo with an unflinching reality. Wars are often fought, in either case, and often the "social contract" is discarded wholly in the process.

    The people you listed above, had they been freed, elderly and in a different world? They would have little purchase to do any further harm. That isn't to say there is no reason to guard against a resurgence of past monstrosity, and it isn't even to say that the world isn't better absent some of the worst monsters. But the world changes—nay, people change the world—and tossing monsters into a world that was once their own but isn't any longer... doesn't give them a lot of leeway.

  131. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "social contract" is a fiction created by the elite to keep the rest of us in line. It's something to which we are all supposed to accede, yet it's only enforceable one way. Rich men don't go to jail unless they harm other rich men or have in some other way broken the elite's kleptocratic rules in some way.

    The (very few) times in our history when there has been something like a working social contract were periods when there were grass roots movements to enforce those rules. Labor unions, the civil rights and women's movements of the 20th century were a few such institutions.

    And make no mistake: the rapidly metastasizing surveillance state is nothing more than an effort to make sure such institutions can never again exist.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  132. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    Most courts accept it as a given, without blinking an eye. Inertia is the strongest force in systems of power.

  133. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by the+phantom · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I understand what your point is. My point was that the person to whom I responded created a false dichotomy, with life without parole being an option not addressed. I did not claim that "death", "life without parole", and "parole after X years" were the only options (my intention was not to create a false trichotomy, but merely to point out that there were options not considered by the OP).

  134. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by russotto · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only real term in a "social contract" is "Society (i.e. the government) may change the terms of this contract in any way, at any time, prospectively or retrospectively, and the individuals all remain bound by it."

    In other words, it's bunk.

  135. What Century are they in? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a country that prides itself on so many things, that, ironically it doesn't have, it is a remarkably backward country. Executions are unnecessary and cruel. Simple as that. There is absolutely no good reason for them, regardless of the crime.

  136. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by omfgnosis · · Score: 2

    Honest question, since there's a list of nazis up above: if an elderly Adolf Hitler were forced to live in prison for 50 years and released into modern life, what more harm could he do?

    I dare say he could produce an astonishingly smelly old man diaper.

  137. Dr. Kavorkian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody bothered to look at Dr. Kavorkian's proven and well tested method?

  138. Swift and sure method? Double tap. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Seriously. If you want to execute someone and be SURE about it without untoward cruelty?

    Two bullets to the head, of the largest possible caliber to fit in a handgun, in rapid succession.

    If you want to feel more "humane" about it, drug person to sleep first.

    *POW!*POW!*

    End of story.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  139. Very simple... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    You send them to Carousel to be re-born.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  140. Figured out how to kill cows in humane fashion... by shihonage · · Score: 1

    But not humans? Unfortunately the contrived intravenous and electric chair methods which result in horrendous suffering are result of idiots thinking that shooting someone in the head is "gross". Well, overcome your childish sensibilities. All death is gross. But this method is humane.

  141. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    And your assumptions seem wrong too. We accept all sorts of risks in life and this is just no different. There are plenty of opportunities to find innocents and stop them from being executed. In fact, you get more chances and more legal support if you are sentenced to death than if you received life in prison. The far vast majority of innocents are weeded out before it happens.

  142. Re:Swift and sure method? Double tap. by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    Handgun? are you a cruel bastard? All hand gun rounds are slow and barely lethal. yes even the big silly rounds.

    20mm hypersonic round out of a 42" long rifle to maximize velocity, the head will completely explode into hamburger bits, Zero pain, The brain will not even finish processing the sound from the shot being fired before they are so scrambled that you can't have pain.

    Or simply about 30 kilos of high explosives as a hat will also be the most humane. Plus you will have a 100% chance of success and 0% chance of suffering.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  143. Never understood the sophistry by fnj · · Score: 1

    I never understood the sophistry involved in the quest for a "humane" execution. You are depriving someone of their LIFE. How humane can that be?

    OK, I can hear you guys before the chorus starts. "But, but, suffering!" I'm not sure why that bothers certain people so much in this particular context, but rather than going down a long path of logic against deaf ears, I'm perfectly willing to concede it. There are methods that are guaranteed to involve no physical suffering or discomfort whatsoever. Inhalation of 99.995% helium or nitrogen is one. A fully encirling explosive helmet would be another. Just a hand grenade under the chin is pretty goddam instant and sure.

    I'll give you another one. You know all those amps in a electric chair? Skull sizzling; eyes popping out; convulsions? It's utterly pointless horseshit. You don't need that. Two tiny needles with a local anesthetic, insertied to touch the heart, with an AC current of literally microamps will cause instant fibrillation and consciousness will be lost in a few seconds with no drama whatsoever. Lights out, baby.

  144. The root of the argument is punishment itself by Tony+Isaac · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are a lot of posts here and elsewhere saying that we should "just stop," that capital punishment is immoral and should be abolished forever.

    Is ANY kind of punishment moral and justified?

    Is it logical that the severity of the punishment should be proportional to the offense?

    How do you decide what is the most severe form of punishment that is moral and justified, if punishment of any kind is moral and justified?

    1. Re:The root of the argument is punishment itself by mdsolar · · Score: 1

      You might be asking is there such a thing as guilt? The basic answer is yes. So, a punishment must seem to be deserved to the one who is punished if a conscience is present. Otherwise, it cannot be a background for mercy. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T...

    2. Re:The root of the argument is punishment itself by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The immorality of death penalty stems not so much from its extremity, as from its finality. If you imprison someone wrongly, and later find out, you can let them go and compensate them monetarily for the time lost in prison. If you shoot someone, not so much.

      Also, you're using that word, "punishment". Not everyone agrees that justice should be about punishment at all. Some of us prefer to think in terms of threat containment and rehabilitation (when possible). From that perspective, death penalty doesn't offer anything that life sentence doesn't already cover, but comes with a few additional downsides.

    3. Re:The root of the argument is punishment itself by Trepidity · · Score: 0

      1. No, punishment per se is not justified. Or at least even if it might theoretically be in some cases, trusting the state with this power is not a good idea.

      2. However, society does need to be protected in extreme cases, and this is properly the state's job. Ideally this can be done through preventative measures, ranging from police patrols to education. But yes, some people (hopefully a small number) may have to be physically restrained in order to keep them from harming others. This isn't intended as "retribution" or "punishment" but rather simply as a protective measure for the general public. How long should such people be physically restrained? For the amount of time that is necessary to protect society, based on the best available scientific data on the subject. Therefore generally short sentences (3 years) for most crimes, with a strong focus on rehabilitation and reintegration into society, so you don't create hardened criminals where that wasn't the case before. And sentences of about 10-20 years for very serious crimes (almost exclusively violent crimes), mostly on the basis that elderly people very rarely commit violent crimes, so even for murder, there is little risk to society if you release a 50-year-old from prison, and very little benefit in incarcerating him or her further. And finally indefinite sentences (or possibly involuntary commitment in an institution) for the tiny minority of people who are extremely dangerous or psychotic or otherwise cannot ever be safely released.

      This is roughly the system currently implemented in Scandinavia, and to a lesser extent in other parts of Europe.

    4. Re:The root of the argument is punishment itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because unlike other punishments you can't reverse the death penalty and you can't make amends to someone who has been wrongfully executed.

    5. Re:The root of the argument is punishment itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The theory of punishment traditionally regards punishment as having 4 functions:
      1) Deterrence: discourage would-be offenders from offending.
      2) Isolation: remove dangers to society from that society.
      3) Rehabilitation: train offenders to become productive members of society.
      4) Justice: promote the greater good over evil.

      In my opinion, number 4 is way too vague, whereas numbers 1-3 are easily measured and defined. If we consider desirable and moral punishment as fulfilling conditions 1-3, it's easy to see that the punishment doesn't have to be proportional to the offense. It only has to be what's healthiest for society.

  145. Neruos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "barbaric"

    Get off your high horse. There is nothing non-barbaric in the year 2015.

  146. Do, by all means. Make it a humane spectacle. by TheRealHocusLocus · · Score: 1

    Don't.

    Do. An aversion to the death penalty is a twisted concept because it leads to so-called 'life' sentences.

    A 'life without parole' sentence is the most horrible torture ever devised. A 'comfortable' life in prison (without institutionalized slavery, malnourishment or brutality) is a modern invention of energy-wealthy society in which a moment's mortal agony is stretched out over many pointless years. Confinement, a dreary existence far from one's desired path, a great and ultimately worthless expense to society. Any sane person placed in this condition will harbor a degree of growing resentment that cannot be channeled away. You would think the only hope they could muster is that society may change its mind someday. And for some, this needs to happen .

    Abandoning execution for the worst crimes also leads us inexorably in the direction of a 'revolutionary' new medical procedure that will render a bad person into brand new good person. They can return home to their families in varying states of sentience and independence, they know their name, they are as cuddly as ever, no vulgar scars on the forehead. There is a warranty. The procedure is so successful (and financially lucrative!) that it is naturally 'improved' and 'refined' so it can be applied to smaller gentler degree and under various brand names, to many judicial and civil markets. As told in our latest prospectus, a particularly fertile R&D effort may make 'problem teens' and 'repeat offenders' a thing of the past. To ease barriers of parental consent, a multi-faceted campaign has been launched in news and social media. Our secured trademark has been injected as a clever and cute internet meme, so even Grumpy Cat is promoting our product though he does not know it yet. Contacts in the AMA and DOJ have assured us that there is even a useable legal framework in which judges may order the procedure done, in the same way that a vaccine may be involuntarily given. We have a saying, the customer *is* the cure.

    If you are curious about this medical procedure and wish to research it further, see this essay I wrote in 2006 in which you will learn its medical name. I will not disclose the trademark-meme at this time, you will have to wait for product launch. If you think this is a good idea then get the fuck away from me and my family.

    But back to the prisons. For those guilty of heinous crimes and disposed to violence, what they're actually hoping is that the society around them collapses, the grid goes down, or some violent insurrection or hostile invasion occurs in which prisons are opened as a war tactic. Some would seek only escape and obscurity, some directed revenge at any cost. Who is to say what most would do? We cannot know. To us, a lifer prison is an undiscovered country. What would the guards do if some apocalyptic disaster ensues, that no help or food will arrive? They begin to leave, one by one to be with their families. Will the last one open the gates?

    Few would consider storing gasoline-soaked rags near an open flame in the boiler room a good idea. But when you oppose the death penalty for the most horrid monsters of our age... you bring into existence the possibility you or someone you know might meet them in person some day under conditions in which you'd rather not. This may be more likely than being hit by a tornado. I see you have a storm shelter.

    Some may see life imprisonment as a sort of societal insurance policy against injustice. File 'em all away for good, and if some new miracle of technology proves their innocence we can get 'em back and fix it, make it right. The most celebrated cases

    --
    <blink>down the rabbit hole</blink>
  147. Imprisonment to death by mdsolar · · Score: 1

    Imprisonment to death seems to work for civil courts. It used to be that armies on the march or in battle did not have the facilities to deal with mutiny less drastically so they would have to use summary execution, but these days that is probably not the case. The US executed one soldier for desertion in WWII, and that after a court martial. Still, it is the reason officers have sidearms.

    It is worth considering that corporal punishment was also a lack of facilities issue. It is cruel and unusual now because prisons are available. But use of stocks or flogging or maiming are a sign of a society too poor to afford prisons. Justice must be seen to be done, and the punishment must be deserved. When a society is poor, it has to have punishments that still seem proportionate.

  148. Just use the same method the murderer did by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Killing a killer is the natural response.
    Dumb people are too indoctrinated into believing that killing is worst than slaving and torturing a person for the rest of his life.
    Idiots truly believe they're above nature.
    And I won't even start on why we all, including the family of the victim, have to pay for shelter, clothing, food, exercise, medical care, education and entertainment for every killer, during the rest of they entire life. This is SO amazingly stupid that there's no point on even discussing it with blind anti-death brainwashed fanatics.

  149. Bring back firing squads, hangings and guillotine by HughJazz · · Score: 0

    Ways to kill people.

    firing squads
    hangings
    beheading
    water boarding (except this time drown them)
    poison that leads to agonizing slow death
    crucifixions
    stakes through the anus
    removal of entrails with a chainsaw.
    etc..

    The more gruesome the execution, the better. The problem with "clean" executions is that it makes those that self-righteously advocate execution as a form of punishment feel "civilized". There is nothing civilized about executions. its just another form of barbarism, murder and sadism but one simply sanctioned by the state. Lets stop pretending to be civilized and show ourselves as brutes that we are by making executions a bloodfest. Put on TV on Saturday morning for kids to watch. Their parents shouldn't mind. Many of them still claim it as 'justice" after all.

    If humanity manages to survive our technology, there is little doubt future generations will see our generation as still with one foot in the door of savagery for having allowing capital punishment

  150. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it says there should be 0 appeals.
    Why not just execute them as the verdict is read?

  151. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some anti-DP advocates claim that putting people in solitary confinement is torture. Some others claim that live imprisonment is torture as well.

    Pretty soon, court-ordered community service will be torture, too.

  152. duh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "As states revert to earlier methods of execution—techniques once abandoned as backward and flawed—they run the risk that the death penalty itself will be seen in the same terms"

    And the issue is?...

  153. Easy solution by shellster_dude · · Score: 0
    I'm against the death penalty for two reasons:
    1. You can't take it back if you were wrong
    2. It's too humane for monsters, when we have things like life without parole in solitary

    However, if the debate is about a "humane" way to execute someone, why not inject them with the same drugs we use to knock someone out for surgery? No one debates the effectiveness of these drugs, they work, virtually every-time, hundreds of times a day for millions of people. The only bad side-effects are nausea and death, which aren't a problem in the execution process since the person isn't going to wake up anyway. Once they are out, you can dispose of them any way you like as they won't feel it.

    1. Re:Easy solution by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

      It's a myth that drugs used for surgery work reliably. In fact, there is a wide range of responses. A significant fraction of people reach some level of consciousness during surgery.

  154. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by macsforme · · Score: 1

    People don't have to actually witness executions to in order to be deterred from committing murder because they know they could face the consequence of execution.

    Also, incompetence is not a reason to kill our prosecutors and police officers, just like negligent homicide is not generally punishable by death in general. There are numerous trial rules which make mistakes made by investigators to end up in favor of the defendant, and there is an extensive appeals process to validate that the defendant's every right was protected. Malicious prosecution and/or fabricated evidence resulting in the execution of an innocent person should be treated like any other homicide.

  155. How to kill a Human Being by Loconut1389 · · Score: 0

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    They should use nitrogen asphyxiation. You never would even know.

  156. We execute because of our innate fear for survival by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets be honest, the real reason the death pentalty exists is because we want a system in place to get rid of as many black and brown people as possible. We are no better than Nazi Germany.

  157. HowTo 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once a JURY determines death is the outcome, in our system, that is the answer. Therefore attach a couple bricks to their feet and dip them in a barrel of water. Done in under 10 minutes. No more rude than what they did. No claims of abuse in the process. Everybody knows Hydrogen Dioxide kills more people than everything else combined, anyway. It is the obvious compound to use.

  158. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by khallow · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The funny thing is that stuff like the constitutions of democracies are the closest real thing to actual social contracts. But the people who speak of social contracts tend to ignore that stuff.

  159. Better Arguments Needed by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Showing zero remorse for doing it is despicable.

    I completely agree...but isn't this what you are also doing too? Wanting to kill someone while showing zero remorse about doing so? If you are going to argue for the death penalty a far better argument is to say that it removes any possibility that the person can ever re-offend and thus protects society. The problem is that, as practiced in the US, this is very hard to argue. Those convicted are held in prison for a decade or longer and even then there are a shockingly high percentage whose convictions are quashed when carefully examined.

    If you want to argue for the death penalty then you need to restrict it to cases where the evidence is overwhelming and you need to make it rapid. Even then mistakes will be made which is why I have so much trouble with the concept. About the only time I would think that it is justified is when you have someone whom you cannot safely imprison e.g. the IRA terrorists in the 1980/90s who used their contacts with the terror organization to threaten guards' families unless they got special treatment while in prison: something which almost lead to their escape. In these cases I would argue that the need to protect society from extremely dangerous criminals might make it justifiable but I'd still have concerns.

    1. Re:Better Arguments Needed by ScentCone · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I completely agree...but isn't this what you are also doing too?

      I don't think there's a need to feel remorse for ridding society of someone about whom otherwise never give another thought, but who comes to our attention for being a satisfied murderer of innocent people. Supporting the removal of that person from existence isn't the same as wanting to kill anyone.

      If you want to argue for the death penalty then you need to restrict it to cases where the evidence is overwhelming and you need to make it rapid.

      Overwhelmingly clear guilt, yes. Rapid enough to not be dragging the victim's family back into appeal hearings for decades - which is insane. But too hasty does indeed increase the risk of errors in judgement.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    2. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Eunuchswear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You think you should kill people without remorse because they killed people without remorse.

      It's psychopaths all the way down.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    3. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Pseudonym · · Score: 2

      I don't think there's a need to feel remorse for ridding society of someone about whom otherwise never give another thought, [...]/

      Given that not giving people "another thought" is one of the reasons why people become murderers in the first place, I would think that remorse is entirely appropriate.

      Violent psychopaths are far more rare than people seem to think. Besides, affluent and educated psychopaths become CEOs and are lauded by society.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    4. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Xest · · Score: 1

      The problem is you're focussing on one or two fringe cases and letting that dictate policy rather than considering the bigger picture.

      You're effectively arguing that someone so blatantly craving for attention and power should be given the power to dictate the outcome of an entire issue with his mindgames.

      That doesn't sound an awful lot like punishment, it sounds an awful lot like you're giving this individual you're referring too power beyond his wildest dreams, power to individually bend an entire wide ranging political issue based simply on his individual actions.

      Politics should be bigger than one person, if you're using these one or two fringe cases to dictate policy then you've let them win, you've let them manipulate a system far bigger than they are. You've fallen hook, line, and sinker in giving them the very attention and power they've been craving all this time. They've been caught, they don't care if they're going to be executed or not, all they care is that people are paying attention to them, and if they can twist entire political debates with their individual words? they're in heaven.

      If punishment is what you're after and aren't interested in rehabilitation, then a better solution would be to tell them to shut up, stick them in solitary, and not let their voice be heard ever again. Now THAT would really kill them.

    5. Re:Better Arguments Needed by goarilla · · Score: 1

      You think you should kill people without remorse because they killed people without remorse.
      It's psychopaths all the way down.

      But you can learn to kill and the remorse lessens with "practice". A lot of soldiers approach psychopath.
      So Isn't the government to blame a little bit for war-traumatised soldiers coming back from their stint of Hell and going ballistic (Timothy McVeigh) ?

    6. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Besides, affluent and educated psychopaths become CEOs and are lauded by society.

      Indeed. They even get voted into positions of power, and cause huge amounts of violence in places that don't vote for them.

    7. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Your argument is a classical example of a double standard.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_standard

      Wether they are guilty or not, their execution is still murder. And by your own standards showing zero remorse for doing so is despicable.

      As you do clearly do not show any remorse, there is an important conclusion to be made.

    8. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Only retarded idiots think that it's psychopathic to remove a clear threat to one's safety, just because that threat happens to be a human being.

      Case in point: A man was released from prison early to make room. He was in for murder 1. He proceeded to hook up with his girlfriend (who was mentally retarded) and murder a couple by pouring bleach down their throats. The wife was pregnant. This happened within months, perhaps sooner, of his release.

      Due to backwards morals like yours, a true psychopath was freed to murder 2 more innocent people in a truly horrific way.

    9. Re:Better Arguments Needed by evilbessie · · Score: 1

      There is no perfect justice system, they are all flawed. Capital punishment is the ultimate in the state saying that it is right, do you trust your government that much? It also points to a larger problem where society seemingly wants to avoid the notion that criminals are people who should be treated with respect, because they are people.

      If you look at reoffending rates in countries which believe in rehabilitation of prisoners rather than just punishment you'll find lots of data which suggests that treating people like people they will for the most part become like people (it's also cheaper). Yes there are some people who have done such horrid things that they should not be free, but that is punishment enough, the state should never assert that it has the right to kill it's own citizens.

    10. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Which clearly explains why countries without the death penalty have lower murder rates than countries with the death penatly.

      Except they don't.

      The plural of anecdote (especialy made up anecdote) is not data.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    11. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think there's a need to feel remorse for ridding society of someone about whom otherwise never give another thought, but who comes to our attention for being a satisfied murderer of innocent people. Supporting the removal of that person from existence isn't the same as wanting to kill anyone.

      I don't think there's a need to feel remorse for ridding society of someone about whom otherwise never give another though, but who comes to our attention for being a satisfied disbeliever of the one true God. Supporting the removal of that person from existence isn't the same as wanting to kill anyone

    12. Re:Better Arguments Needed by tbannist · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While that story is terrible, I am a bit sceptical. Do have any evidence to show that it actually happened, and is not just an urban legend that you're repeating with no supporting evidence? I found nothing related when I did a quick search for the story. Fundamentally, it seems a bit unlikely that the system would release someone who was convicted of murder in the first degree to "make room", and double unlikely when he seems to be highly unrepentant and has not been in prison long enough for his "mentally retarded" girlfriend to move on.

      Of course, the recidivism (ex-convicts committing another crime after release) rate is highly variable between countries, for instance Canada has a recidivism rate of around 13% while the United States has a recidivism rate of around 60%. However, even in the United States the recidivism rate for people charged with murder and released is around 1.2%, the vast majority of released murder convicts never commit another crime (let alone another murder). The criminals most likely to be caught and sent to prison again are burglars, drug dealers, fences and illegal arms dealers. And they would never be subject to the death penalty, anyway. I suspect the very low murder recidivism rate for murderers is because most murderers are released long after their most violent years have passed.

      So you might frame the question, should society murder the 98.8% of murderers who will never commit another crime to stop the 1.2% who will?

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    13. Re:Better Arguments Needed by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Given that not giving people "another thought" is one of the reasons why people become murderers in the first place

      So, the fact that I have zero regard for someone who has decided to break into a house specifically to torture and rape a woman, kill her, and then burn the house down with her kids inside is really just a sign of how I've treated that person badly all along, and their crime is thus someone really my fault? Yeah, I see how you see the world. Everything is always someone else's fault.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    14. Re:Better Arguments Needed by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Wether they are guilty or not, their execution is still murder.

      Sure, as long as you choose to use the wrong definition of that word. That's got to make all of your debates simple, huh? Assigning your own meaning to words means you get to always be right. Convenient, but of course self-destructive when it comes to your credibility.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    15. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Supporting the removal of that person from existence isn't the same as wanting to kill anyone.

      Until you invent a time machine and can successfully remove people from existence without killing them, then any attempt to remove a person from existence inherently requires their death. If it's actively causing their death, it's killing them. Honestly, is it that hard to comprehend?

      I mean, you're trying to play a semantics game. But is it any better if Iran's ex-President or even Hitler spoke not of killing Jews but merely wiping them from existence? You really don't think that's tantamount to wanting to kill them?

      PS - On a technical note, Iran's ex-President spoke of wiping Israel from the map, not per se Jews (although I have little doubt he'd want to do the latter as well). To that end, there's a difference between killing a country and killing its people. As there was a desire to end the USSR and communism (a country and an idea/system), but there was not a desire to kill the people. In the end, though, the former invariably at least some of the latter along the way. So, it's still tantamount to it (and again why I point out the similarity between Iran's ex-President and Hitler).

    16. Re:Better Arguments Needed by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

      I completely agree...but isn't this what you are also doing too?

      I don't think there's a need to feel remorse for ridding society of someone about whom otherwise never give another thought, but who comes to our attention for being a satisfied murderer of innocent people. Supporting the removal of that person from existence isn't the same as wanting to kill anyone.

      Similar arguments have been used throughout history. Examples include the early years of the USSR, Andrew Jackson's reign of the US, and Hitler's reign of Germany. Sadly, history has a tendency to repeat itself.

    17. Re:Better Arguments Needed by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Nice putting words in my mouth!

      In case it wasn't clear, let me rephrase: It's an axiom of modern policing that the best time to stop a crime is before it happens, and the best way to do that is to prevent someone from ever becoming a criminal in the first place.

      Violent psychopaths are not the norm. The majority of people become criminals (and I'm referring to actual crime here, not non-violent drug offences or all the other crap that the US seems to think is worth locking people up for) because of poverty, because they grew up in a highly dysfunctional family, because they get in with the wrong crowd, and any number of other things.

      Your fault? No. Society's fault? Not exactly, but it's nonetheless true that if society gave a crap, most people who are at risk for becoming criminals could be diverted away from that early, before anyone is hurt, and at a fraction of the cost.

      But it won't happen, because making a crime never happen doesn't make headlines and doesn't justify budgets.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    18. Re: Better Arguments Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the data shows the exact opposite of your assertion. The U.S. has the highest homicide rate of any western nation and that has been the case for decades: http://uk.businessinsider.com/us-vs-western-homicide-rates-2014-11

      So your death penalty fails pretty hard as a deterrent.

    19. Re:Better Arguments Needed by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      About the only time I would think that it is justified is when you have someone whom you cannot safely imprison e.g. the IRA terrorists in the 1980/90s who used their contacts with the terror organization to threaten guards' families unless they got special treatment while in prison: something which almost lead to their escape.

      Terrorists are the last people you want to be executing. It just encourages them to have martyrs and potentially helps to justify their own violence in the eyes of the world.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    20. Re:Better Arguments Needed by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Case in point: A man was released from prison early to make room.

      Aaaand... I call bullshit.

      But even if it's a True Story, it would just show the idiocy of placing money-saving above justice (or common sense).

      Most opponents of the death penalty do not propose letting homicidal maniacs loose after a couple of weeks of pampering at a spa retreat, you know.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    21. Re:Better Arguments Needed by nmr_andrew · · Score: 1

      The second reason there's a low recidivism rate for murderers is because most of them kill somebody they already know for some real reason. Not necessarily a good reason, but often somebody stole from them, or cheated on them, or whatever. I suppose a few enjoy it and want to do it again, and this doesn't consider serial killers or other true psychopaths, but most people convicted or murder are unlikely to do it again.

    22. Re: Better Arguments Needed by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Yes, I fucked up my post. I meant to claim, ironicaly:

      Which clearly explains why countries without the death penalty have [higher] murder rates than countries with the death penatly.

      Sorry.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
  160. Mod parent up. by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Exactly this.

    If you really want to punish somebody horribly, make them live in 1 cage their whole life. Let them work on stuff; maybe they'll do something worthwhile in their cage.

  161. Re:Please stop. Just stop by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Not really. The prosecutor would then make sure to turn away any candidate who would have qualms about pulling the trigger.

  162. Re:Please stop. Just stop by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    And yet we still manage to execute wrong people, or execute people who didn't get their due process. 250 in the past three decades. It's not exactly a small number.

  163. Re:Please stop. Just stop by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

    Well, even with the "insane" appeal process, innocents still get executed. So apparently it's still not thorough enough to provide true justice.

  164. YOU overlook the bigger numbers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. FAR more innocent people are killed every year by murderers who were not executed after they committed their first murder, than innocent people who have been tried, convicted, appealed to state court and lost, appealed to fed appeals court and lost, then appealed to SOTUS and lost and then been wrongly executed

    2. For more innocent people are foreclosed-on and have their homes taken away as part of the tax collections that (partly) pay for decades of food, clothing, medicine, entertainment, etc for convicted murderers than the number of wrongly-convicted innocents who get wrongly-executed (a number so small, nobody even provably knows what it is).

    NO Society is ever going to be perfect if it has humans in it. The death penalty opponents love to focus on the claim, and fear, that some poor innocent dude is going to get railroaded into the electric chair. They have done everything they could over the decades to clog-up the legal system (and then claimed that the obstructions they erected made the death penalty too expensive) and to document all the wrongly-executed (with such bad result that they have no sympathetic names and faces to wave around). These opponents NEVER want to consider that [a] there are huge costs to NOT executing the guilty, [b] executions are WAY cheaper (a bullet or a rope noose is CHEAP) than even ONE DAY of life in prison (IF you get all the leftist lawyers out of the way)

    Failure to execute murderers is a bold neon sign highlighting the moral decay of a nation and/or culture; NOT executing murderers objectively PROVES (no matter what "spin" one tries to apply) that a society values the lives of evil killers over the lives of innocent law-abiding citizens. There is simply NO WAY to honestly claim that a few years in a heated/airconditioned cell with good food and water, healthcare (and TV) for a criminal balances the scale of justice with the entire life of an innocent. If a society puts a thug in a cell for 20 years as punishment for killing a 10 year-old, the society is asserting that every day of a thug's life is worth more than three days of an innocent citizen's life - this proposition is uncivilized, barbaric, retrograde, perverse, and evil (which explains while it arises in places where leftists rise to power)

    1. Re:YOU overlook the bigger numbers... by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

      So an innocent citizen's life is so precious that...it's okay to kill some of them in order to punish others who take innocent life? Gotcha.

    2. Re:YOU overlook the bigger numbers... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Collateral damage is part of nature. -1 for trolling.

    3. Re:YOU overlook the bigger numbers... by bigfinger76 · · Score: 1

      So pointing out a logical flaw is considered "trolling"? +1 for Interesting!

  165. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by khallow · · Score: 1

    The correct response to a disagreement with societies rules is to (A) Get them changed, or (B) emigrate elsewhere.

    There are many other solutions such as progressively destroying one or more of the parties to the disagreement until the conflict goes away. And given the relativistic amorality of the social contract in the first place, this means this third solution is just as correct as the two responses you mention.

  166. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your justice system is flawed, too.

    Just think what lovely neighbors you would have, if the following were still alive, since according to the sentencing limit laws in some European countries, these guys would have been out on parole and living in your community as early as 1971:

    Hans Frank
    Wilhelm Frick
    Alfred Jodl
    Ernst Kaltenbrunner
    Wilhelm Keitel
    Joachim von Ribbentrop
    Alfred Rosenberg
    Fritz Sauckel
    Arthur Seyss-Inquart
    Julius Streicher
    Hermann Göring

    Face it: Yes, it is wrong to kill any human being. Some people, however, have committed crimes so heinous that they no longer qualify as human beings, just because they happen to have a particular DNA sequence.

    I would think spending 50 years contemplating their murderous deeds would be much harsher punishment than execution. By your reasoning George W.H. Bush and George W. Bush, as recently examples, should have been executed as well for their murderous deeds.

  167. This is the Good Old USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They seem to have a lot of drones and hell fire missiles, why not use them.

  168. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is the failure of a criminal justice system based upon punishment and not rehabilitation. With a system based purely on rehabilitation, with specific crimes where risk of server consequence is high, no rehabilitation, no release. That becomes much more feasible where detention conditions are much more humane and the concern is protecting the public, whilst still endeavouring to achieve rehabilitation.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  169. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by gweihir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The "social contract" is a fiction created by the elite to keep the rest of us in line. It's something to which we are all supposed to accede, yet it's only enforceable one way. Rich men don't go to jail unless they harm other rich men or have in some other way broken the elite's kleptocratic rules in some way.

    Very much this. A more elaborate form is "It is God's will", thereby neatly cutting of any avenue of discussion or escape, especially if the religion in question is executing people rejecting it.

    And make no mistake: the rapidly metastasizing surveillance state is nothing more than an effort to make sure such institutions can never again exist.

    I fully agree. The surveillance-states currently being busily established and justified with lies, lies and more lies are motivated by one thing: Those in power are terribly afraid of those they are supposed to serve.

    --
    Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  170. WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few feet of rope, or a bullet, or a can of gas and a lighter, or "cement overshoes" and a body of water, or a couple of strong hands and a length of piano wire, or a plastic bag and a zip-tie, or a swift kick at the edge of a cliff, (or any other method one can dream up) are all insanely cheap and easy... hell, just do to the killer whatever cheap and easy thing he did to his victim(s)....All the other costs are for left-wing lawyer/activists.

    Sadly, as criminals who should themselved be killed prove everyday, killing people is very cheap and easy. The only thing that makes it expensive is evil-embracing activists who choose to spend more time, energy and money coddling murderers than looking after murder victims... so much for "caring" and "seeking justice"...

    "justice" does not mean "the criminal has a 50-50 chance of "getting away with it". "Justice" means the person who did the crime gets convicted and punished sufficiently that his victims and their relatives (and the society in general) do not feel the moral need to seek revenge themselves via vigilante actions (i.e. the general consensus is that the punishment was sufficient to the offense). In a proper justice system, all the guilty people are actually found guilty and punished appropriately for their crimes.

  171. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 2

    I need a creditable cite for that number. Best guess estimates I can find from anywhere that is not pushing an agenda is a measly 50 innocents and they specifically admit that is incorrect because it is just a transference of the 4% of people who on death row end up getting their sentence overturned or converted to life in prison.

    Hell, Wikipedia only lays claim that 10 specific people are thought to have been wrongly put to death with another 39 carried out in the face of evidence of innocence or serious doubt about guilt. Of course I'm not sure what they think is evidence but I do not really care. There are 52 separate jurisdictions (with two being the same but listed separately due to separate branches of authority) capable of sentencing someone to death in the US and over the last 4 decades all they can come up with is 49 people who might have been innocent and 10 that actually were. That is an extremely low rate if you ask me.

  172. Yeah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a fuckwit, Harry.

  173. Nothing to do with "blood lust" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The right-wing support for the death penalty comes from the right wing view that every life is extremely valuable (the same inclination that drives opposition to abortion). For people who view every life as immeasurably valuable, there is NO price (less than his own life) that a murderer can pay that can possibly pay the moral debt he incurred by intentionally killing an innocent person. This is NOT an inconsistency with supporting the death penalty or a "just war" (like WWII); in both cases the people that right-wingers seek to kill are those who have by their own voluntary acts accumulated moral debts that cannot be paid with anything less than their own lives.

    The people that freak me out are the ones who coddle murders and insist that NO level of wanton criminality justifies execution... while championing the cause of killing unborn innocent children for convenience, to avoid embarrasment, to help a family budget, because mommy "is not ready", etc.

    1. Re:Nothing to do with "blood lust" by sjames · · Score: 1

      If it isn't bloodlust, then a quick painless death would suffice in an execution, but it plainly does not.

      Such respect for life would surely also have guided the Rs away from war in the middle east.

      One might also expect that a deep respect for life would make even the possibility of executing an innocent unacceptable.

    2. Re:Nothing to do with "blood lust" by dave420 · · Score: 1

      But the legal system is not perfect, and so the right-wingers are calling for innocent people to die, as one can not separate the innocents from the guilty every single time. So no, they don't view every life as extremely valuable - they view having the appearance of considering lives as extremely valuable as being extremely valuable. There is a disgusting difference.

  174. Re:Swift and sure method? Double tap. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    Handgun? are you a cruel bastard? All hand gun rounds are slow and barely lethal. yes even the big silly rounds.

    To the brain? Most certainly not.

    USSR/Russia has been using 9x18 to the back of the skull for many decades, and I'm not aware of a single case of a botched execution.

  175. Ban executions by JimSadler · · Score: 0

    I'm against executions however if society insists then I think the simple answer is a twelve gauge shot gun. Simply fit a doughnut gag on the prisoner after strapping him down, insert the barrel until it nears the tonsils and pull the trigger. It is fool proof and painless. It is easy to have a stand by shotgun and ammo if one gun fails which is unlikely to ever occur. When the shell goes off the base of the brain will be bl;own out the back of the head. Blood pressure will have one extreme moment. The lungs will explode as well as the major organs in the stomach from the gas pressure. Obviously this is best done out of doors to keep clean up to a minimum. No suffering or cruelty is involved. Unlike hangings which can be very slow unless the neck snaps a shotgun in your mouth is over before you ever feel it. Even an executioner with an ax or a sword sometimes has to strike several times to get the job done. Chemical executions are not reliable at all and the gas chamber involves great pain and suffering and a lot of dread for an intelligent inmate. We can also rig up the shotgun in such a way that several guards flip a switch but only one actually fires the shotgun so that no guard will ever know he was the one who terminated the inmate's life. By using my method we can send an inmate to meet his maker for about seventy five cents.

  176. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Because public square executions in the middle ages worked so well as a deterrent.

  177. got a handy stopwatch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    How does the post-beheading "suffering" time of a murderer compare to the time the average murder vicitm spends suffering (burning to death, bleeding-out from multiple gunshot or knife wounds, or whatever)???? All this focus on the sensitivities and sufferings of MURDERERS with no concern at all (beyond the obligatory lip-service in front of a news camera) for their victims is completely SICK.

  178. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sjames · · Score: 1

    And yet, people who absolutely positively did not commit the crime in question have been executed. That is a clear sign that the checks and balances are inadequate.

  179. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by khallow · · Score: 2

    That's a very enlightening description and it covers the obvious point of calling this thing a "social contract" rather than say a "social mandate" or a "social duty". But what I think is particular interesting about the grandparent post is the perversion of "agreement" to mean merely being born or not trying hard enough to escape execution. At that point, every evil no matter how vile is condoned as long as it has the fig leaf of law allowing it.

  180. Re:Please stop. Just stop by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

    It was not the number of innocents - it's the number of wrongful executions, which is not the same thing. It can mean that e.g. evidence against them was not "beyond a reasonable doubt", or some evidence that could sway the jury the other way was withheld, or there was another suspect that had similarly strong evidence that jury didn't know of, or numerous procedural reasons - basically anything that deprived them of due process.

    It seems that I did get the numbers wrong, though - 250 is the number of people who have been exonerated through DNA evidence (not necessarily for capital crimes).

    I wouldn't call 60 people "extremely low rate", though. Even 1% of those convicted, in a matter like this, is extremely high in my opinion.

  181. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Nah, nothing is 100% in life. It's a variable worth living with. Especially since DNA can exclude people far too easily today.

  182. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by khallow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    By leaving him in prison, we avoid creating provocation that might induce the impulsive with legitimate grievances to kill Hitler. I'd hate for a sixteen year old whose grandmother died in the camps to spend some time in jail for shooting Hitler or worse. And given that there's no compelling reason of justice to cut short Hitler's sentence, I think this concern reasonable.

  183. If you are so mentally ill... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that you can go crazy and kill people, then I assert that you are also so crazy that you won't notice when we kill you. If you are NOT so crazy that we can kill you without worrying that you know what's happening to you, then you are also not crazy enough to be let off the hook for an act of murder.

  184. Barbaric by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We're right up there with China, North Korea, Russia, Saudi Arabia, something we can be real proud of. Plus, the Supreme Court says just because a person can be proven innocent, there is no reason to not execute that person if all the rules were followed and that was done in Georgia.

  185. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tlambert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Honest question, since there's a list of nazis up above: if an elderly Adolf Hitler were forced to live in prison for 50 years and released into modern life, what more harm could he do?

    I dare say he could produce an astonishingly smelly old man diaper.

    In a Machiavellian sense, he could be used, for example, as a figurehead to drum up support from the people who he was able to drum up support from before, in order to follow a political agenda. He could also be used in a campaign of renewed anti-semitism, and he could function as the Nazi equivalent of Nelson Mandela when he was jailed for his statements (which he would be, in Germany). At which point he could be a martyr. He could also be assassinated via a false flag operation in order to create a martyr. If he weren't senile, he could run for Chancellor - there's precedent for ancient men as Chancellor: Konrad Adenauer, born in 1876, was elected in 1949 at the age of 73, and served until 1969, when he was aged 87.

    I could think of many dozens of ways he could himself cause trouble, and I can think of many more dozens of ways he could be symbolically used by someone else to cause trouble. Who would have thought a presumptive nobody like Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria could have been used to touch off WW I? And Hitler would have not really been a presumptive nobody, had be been released under the conditions you imply.

  186. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the most bone headed argument. Murder being the solution to murder is the result of a man like you, with zero balls, wanting to deal out vengeance to make themselves feel mighty. You are a weak and pathetic loser who should be at the end of the needle you suck like so much cocks.

  187. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tlambert · · Score: 2

    I would think spending 50 years contemplating their murderous deeds would be much harsher punishment than execution. By your reasoning George W.H. Bush and George W. Bush, as recently examples, should have been executed as well for their murderous deeds.

    A sociopath would spend that 50 years plotting revenge upon release, and how best to play "the reformed person who had spent that 50 years contemplating their murderous deeds" to the parole board in order to get out so they could enact that revenge.

    As far as the Bush's go: you only go to prison for your deeds if you lose, and you can't lose if you can't be held accountable, and you can't be held accountable, as the leader of a country, unless you acknowledge being subject to the World Court (which the U.S. does not, for its citizens). And if you are held accountable in the U.S., you either resign and get immediately pardoned by your hand-picked successor, or you wait until the next president immediately after you pardons you, so that they, too, will not be held accountable for their actions in office. So if it had been an issue, Obama would have pardoned the last one, so that whoever is elected after him would pardon him. It's a well understood "gentleman's agreement" to "pay it forward".

  188. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    I would say it is a low rate considering. It's less than one person per year per jurisdiction. And that likely would still be true if you discounted the jurisdictions that have a moratorium on the death penalty. And I guess there are 18 states which do not even have the death penalty as an option.

    With the exception of California, Texas and Oklahoma, I would also say the use of the death penalty in sentencing is relatively low.

  189. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tlambert · · Score: 2

    That is the failure of a criminal justice system based upon punishment and not rehabilitation. With a system based purely on rehabilitation, with specific crimes where risk of server consequence is high, no rehabilitation, no release. That becomes much more feasible where detention conditions are much more humane and the concern is protecting the public, whilst still endeavouring to achieve rehabilitation.

    Recidivism rates, as of 2014, http://www.nij.gov/topics/corr...

    One year: 56.7%
    Three year: 67.8%
    Five year: 76.6%

    Percentage of adult resident population in prison: 0.97%

    Perhaps we could rehabilitate them with some reasonable expectation of being able to be reintegrated into society, by giving them blue collar factory jobs, if we hadn't shipped all those jobs offshore.

  190. Capital punishment is NOT humane! by Damouze · · Score: 0

    The driving force behind the creation and abandonment of execution methods is the constant search for a humane means of taking a human life.

    Capital punishment is not humane. There is no humane way to take a human life. That is a contradictio in terminis.

    The death penalty should be abolished worldwide as soon as possible. Aside from the fact that it is barbaric and has no place in a truly civilized society (to the extent that no nation or society can really call itself civilized, unless it has abolished the death penalty), there is always a chance, however slim, that the person being executed is innocent of the crime he was convicted for. Someone who has been put to death cannot be brought back to life if he turns out to be innocent. A person who has been sentenced to life in prison, on the other hand, can be released and rehabilitated.

    --
    And on the Eighth Day, Man created God.
  191. firing squad by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 0

    I'm fairly neutral on the question of the death penalty itself, and I think it really doesn't matter much whether we keep it or abolish it. But I think if the state executes people, it should be clear and visible to all that violence is being committed. A firing squad makes that clear, while at the same time being quite effective.

  192. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The first time Hitler tried to seize power in Germany via a coup, he was arrested and used his trial to gain publicity, and rallied a lot of people towards his cause while he was in prison.

    Which by the way, 20 people died in his coup attempt, something that would probably have made him eligible for the death penalty in the US (felony-murder doctrine) which had he been executed, it would have averted his eventual reign which itself lead to WWII.

  193. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe you need to read Rosseau. There is something called "The Social Contract", which is something of a "shrink wrap license" you agree to by being born

    We have gone over this time and time again that EULAs are unenforceable. therefore Rosseaus "social contract" is bunk.

    It's not a legal contract, it's the idea that you are beholden to the society you are in. It's just another way of saying that if you do shit other people don't like, they're going to fuck you up for doing it. Don't like it? Then either move along, or change the behavior. A Legal System is just a formal framework to define what exactly is meant by "shit people don't like being done", and exactly how they're going to fuck you up for doing it.

    And if you think it's Bunk, and Unenforceable, feel free to convince the cops and judges, and other inmates at the prison you end up a resident of.

  194. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sjames · · Score: 1

    Funny choice of words there.

  195. Re:Please stop. Just stop by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

    So-called "civilized countries" like Norway instill a large set of common values, behaviors, and goals into their citizens from birth. That's in addition to being wealthy, ethnically and culturally homogeneous, and having low inequality as a result of government policy. Now, that may appeal to Norwegians, but Americans actually generally prefer not to live like that. I certainly wouldn't.

  196. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ridiculous. You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point.

    It has nothing to do with agreeing to anything. It's a fact of life- like, lump it, leave it, or find a way to change it. Those are your options.

    There is no meeting of the minds, no clear agreement

    The minds which met, did so before you were here. The agreement is quite clear- if you get caught breaking the rules, you face the consequences... by force if necessary.

    which no human being in history ever explicitly agreed to, and any competent court would throw it out with prejudice after a cursory hearing.

    Yet it has applied to every human being in history ever, and all courts uphold it every single day. Without the idea of the "Social Contract", the courts have no purpose, and no power all, and laws have no meaning.

    Just because you don't like the idea of a de facto, binding contract doesn't mean it cannot or does not exist.

  197. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, if we caught Hitler, and executed him, he would not be considered a martyr?

  198. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, stdarg is right, and you misspelt compensation.

    Retaliation is an 'eye of an eye' - justice.

    Compensation is a fine for an eye.

  199. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You actually can opt out of income tax. It's not hard. Don't have any income, and you're good.

  200. Gravity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really is it so hard to kill someone ?. How about a cell with a 10 ton block of cement hanging above it. Add a drain below and drug free instant death via gravity.

  201. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    Don't forget the two Aussie lads due to be shot any day now in Indonesia because Indonesia thinks possession of certain substances is worthy of death.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  202. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1

    You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point.

    Try using that argument to opt out of the "income tax" portion of the social contract.

    Well, it didn't work out well for some of my ancestors when they tried to opt out of the "you're a slave" part of the one-sided "contract" they were born into.

    On the other hand, some people realize that answering moral questions with appeals to who can inflict the most harm is stupid.

  203. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's easy - just move to the Cayman Islands. There's no income tax there at all.
    Income tax isn't necessary.
    You could finance public expenditures with a wealth tax, a consumption tax, or a poll tax.
    Why do we tax income so often and not the other sources remains a topic for the interested reader.

  204. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And that 0.97% could have been less, as seen in the rest of the world. But just keep calling the rest crazy...
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate

  205. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Barsteward · · Score: 1

    one innocent put to death is too many

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  206. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Barsteward · · Score: 1

    "More innocent people are killed by repeat killers than innocents are by the State." that does not justify the State killing any innocent people due to flaws in the justice system and the people who carry out that justice

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  207. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by lars_stefan_axelsson · · Score: 1

    If you don't do it in public, then don't execute people. Without being a real deterrent it serves no purpose and is more merciful than keeping them in a cage (but for fuck's sake, stop giving them TVs and other shit that makes the time go fast).

    Executions have never really worked as a deterrent, and they don't in the US today. The most thorough research where pairs of counties all over the US were compared, a slight (non significant) brutalising effect were all that could be shown. (I.e. the death penalty tends if anything to lead to worse crime, not less.)

    But sure, those were where executions weren't public. In the bad old days in England when pick-pockets were hanged for their crimes, who were busy working the audience of the hangings? Pick-pockets...

    For those of us for which deterrence works, prison and social condemnation has already maxed out our unwillingness to commit crime. For the rest, the chair is as abstract, and useless a deterrent, a punishment as a long prison sentence.

    --
    Stefan Axelsson
  208. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perfect is the enemy of good.

  209. Re:Swift and sure method? Double tap. by Chas · · Score: 1

    Uhm. No. A pair of decently large handgun bullets to the brain snuff you like a candle. There's no need to blow the head off completely.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  210. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Mantrid42 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, what we really need in America is more inequality.

  211. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    you forgot to mention something about india:

    India retains capital punishment for a number of serious offences.[1] The Indian Supreme Court has allowed the death penalty to be carried out in only 4 instances since 1995.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C...

    this i think is the best attitude of any country. out of over a billion people, they've only given capital punishment to 4 in the last 20 years. that's the way it should be. india has the best attitude

    capital punishment should be abolished for 99.99% of crimes. but it should never be taken completely off the table

    there does indeed in this world exist crimes of such heinous atrocity, that it is impossible to call yourself a human being with a morality and a conscience and not insist on the death penalty

    again, do not get me wrong: we are only talking about the worst of the worst of the worst. so for example this man:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T...

    absolutely deserved death

    and i cannot understand any human being who does not agree with that decision. to weigh and consider his crime and suggest he does not deserve death is simply beyond my comprehension. this man too absolutely deserves only death and no less:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...

    why is this creature still alive, it is not a human being. it has lost the ability to call itself that by defiling basic morality to such a repugnant extreme. why is this thing still alive? so it can whine about video game privileges? this thing must die

    i cannot comprehend any argument compatible with any logically coherent morality that suggests the bag of shit called breivik deserves to continue to draw breath. norway: you are defiling simple morality and basic reasoning in allowing this filth a heartbeat

    again, please note: we are here on the very edge of atrocity. the crimes that shock the conscience at the furthest extreme. the worst of the worst of the worst. they alone deserve death from the state

    to me, this means under 5 people out of the entire world every decade

    so india has the closest approach to perfect on capital punishment in this world

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  212. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    That's easy - just move to the Cayman Islands. There's no income tax there at all.

    Are you, or the person you are replying to, an American.

    'Cos if you are be aware that that is not true.

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  213. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by zAPPzAPP · · Score: 1

    We have tried the public execution thing.
    We even put the bodies of the executed on the walls of cities, or next to the roads leading into the city.
    Did not seem to have that much of an effect. There was never a shortage of delinquents to execute. It's like they did not expect to be caught or something.

  214. Re: Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, now I really want to know, how could it not have?

  215. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

    Yeah, because Rudolf Hess was totally set free in 1971.

    --
    sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  216. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by barc0001 · · Score: 1

    I live in Canada, and the problem with parole being on the table for all crimes no matter what is you occasionally get a sick sideshow when someone like Clifford Robert Olsen would go up for parole (thankfully he died in prison). For those unfamiliar with that waste of flesh, he raped and killed 11 kids. Anyway, when his hearings would come up, some of the family members of his victims would inevitably show up for various reasons, and Olsen would use his time taunt them.

    I think there are some lines that if crossed, you don't get parole. Like raping and killing more than 0 kids.

  217. Re:There are so many simpler and more humane metho by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CO2 is *not* a pleasant way to go. The body reacts to the excess.

    If the CO2 has displaced all the oxygen, the person falls unconscious from lack of O2 at the time the elevated CO2 levels would be detected by the body.

    This is why people still die in CO2-related accidents...

  218. Click by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start > Run >
    type people

    oh hang on...

    Click the round circle in the bottom left corner.. ah crap... ok

    Right click the window looking thing > select run from the menu
    type people
    press enter

  219. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    The social contract is not enforceable by the legal courts, it is a law of the jungle and is therefore enforced as such. No-one comes into this world with guarantees, if you don't like it then do your own thing and see how far that gets you.

  220. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    Jungle law doesn't have lawyers, only survivors and corpses.

  221. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    Worth pointing out at this time that a "life sentence" does not mean for the rest of your life in some jurisdictions. For example, the longest "life sentence" ever issued in New Zealand is 30 years.

  222. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    That some utilize execution in improper circumstances does not negate the fact that execution is proper in others. Executing someone because they're homosexual is wrong. Executing someone who sets children on fire is appropriate; not for any reason of vengeance, but rather to ensure they cannot bring harm to anyone else ever again.

    I would extend that to all murderers. Anyone who intentionally extinguishes human life without hesitation or remorse is so fundamentally broken that they should be permanently removed from society. Prison guards are people too and shouldn't have to be exposed to those kinds of threats. It's simply solved, humanely put an end to those who murder. (and before you try and go there, please do look up the definition of the word "murder". The words "execution" and "murder" are not synonymous)

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  223. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    Perhaps a better example would be Napoleon, since he actually made a comeback after exile, and marched on Paris once again?

  224. 21st century? by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    People in the 21st century don't execute other people, only in China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and the USA.

    Why not ask Iran, after all it's a pen-pal of congress.

  225. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

    Yet both sorts of deaths are wrongful deaths caused by agents acting on behalf of the State. At least one sort is very easy to prevent. Whether the other sort causes more deaths, is less easily preventable, or both, has no bearing on this fact.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  226. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    How many? Could you please list confirmed innocent people who have been executed?

    It's generally understood that no justice system is perfect. My guess is that for every person you can find who's been executed, then later found to have been innocent, I can find someone who died after decades in prison and was later found to have been innocent. Seems neither is particularly appealing and we should do all we can to avoid them. That doesn't mean letting everyone out of prison to ensure we don't ever punish innocent persons.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  227. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    Could you please explain the difference between someone dying in an state execution chamber and someone dying in their prison cell of organ failure ("old age")?

    Seems like neither is desirable and each has the same effect. While we should certainly do all we can to ensure no innocent people are sentenced to anything, that doesn't extend to letting everyone out of prison because there might be somebody innocent locked up with all the guilty people.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  228. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    We should be applying the lessons learned from the Innocence Project to better our justice system, not giving up on the idea that guilty people are being found, tried, convicted, and properly sentenced.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  229. Re: Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stupid american. We Europeans are smarter and more sophisticated: we would gladly let 100 million innocents die rather than execute one guilty person.

  230. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    To say nothing of the logistical headaches of range qualifications during jury selection.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  231. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by goarilla · · Score: 1

    No confidence in the rehabilitative powers of the prison system :D ?
    To be fair these people would never get out, even in Europe.
    There are clauses that keep people a ward of the state after their prison time.
    These are designed for these sort of people, although they sometimes get used for political prisoners.

  232. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by goarilla · · Score: 1

    I agree that (B) is becoming a lot more difficult, as available space fills up, and as nation-states impose moral strictures on other nation states; in that case, there is the suboptimal option (C) hide your differences from the larger society until such time as you can exercise one of the other two options, or until you die, or are caught.

    Nobody wants to be a foreigner.

  233. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by temcat · · Score: 1

    If you cannot successfully use some argument in a state court, it doesn't mean that the argument is invalid. If accepting some argument, however valid, can have disastrous consequences for the government, the latter just creates a framework where it can pretend that that argument is invalid.

    (I'm not saying that there cannot be other, better arguments for income tax. It's just that the "social contract" is utter bullshit.)

  234. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by phmarr · · Score: 1

    You/we could say exactly the same about many other people in history. Maybe even one or more of your ancestors, which means that you would not be there, telling whoâ(TM)s in right to live.
    Just blow up your point to extremum: kill everybody on earth, and I guess there will be no more wars. Would you pay that price? Why should others do?

  235. Troll, but I'll bite... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're not precious snowflakes, they're utterly, completely, expendable

                      Let me know how that works out for you when your daughter is falsely accused of a capitol crime.

  236. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

    The following countries have life sentences, but have mandatory consideration for parole after some set period:

    So? So does the UK now after we were told we actually agreed to when we joing the EU. And my god the papers made a fuss over that one. But, do you know what it actually means? In practice bugger all.

    So convicted mass murder comes up for consideration of parole after 50 years. And after due consideration of the fact that he murdered 25 people and ate their corpses they'll find after a good 3 or four seconds of considering that in fact no, parole would be a terrible idea.

    The consideration thing means the case must be looked at. It does not in any way control the conclusion.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  237. What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps you Slashtards should try reading about what happened to the VICTIMS of these scum, then maybe you'll understand why most of us want the death penalty maintained.

    Of course, a more scientific solution is to split the country into two parts (notice I didn't say 'halves'), and all those who are against the death penalty can live in one part, with no death penalty, and the rest of us (the majority) can live in the other part, WITH the death penalty.

    Guess which part of the country ALL of the murderers and criminals will move to? Yep, YOUR part.

  238. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    Please stop allowing serious and violent criminals to live and reoffend in the name of justice. Just stop.

  239. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not if we secretly execute him, say he's gone into hiding. Then release increasing bizarre messages that look like he wrote. Finally, say he's died while doing some weird sex-act involving a dachshund.

  240. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .."something that would probably have made him eligible for the death penalty in the US (felony-murder doctrine) which had he been executed, it would have averted his eventual reign which itself lead to WWII."....

    Ah. So Hitler wouldn't have lead the Germans into WW2.

    Following your alternate path of history, I suggest that, in that case:

    1 - Hess or Himmler would have led the National Socialist Party. Himmler was a brutal sadist who would have made Hitler look like a tea party - it was Himmler who ran the extermination camps. But both of these were more likely to listen to their generals, and would probably have postponed WW2 until they had sophisticated weaponry like a nuclear bomb and a ballistic missile to deliver it. In this alternate history, the Nazis eradicate opposition in both Europe and America, and we end up running under a Nazi dictatorship. Or,

    2 - The Nazi party folds with the loss of Hitler, and there is nothing to stop the KPD (the German Communist Party) taking over. Ernst Thälmann allies Communist Germany with Stalin, these two Great Powers, acting in concert, take over Europe. The German technicians provide sophisticated weaponry like a nuclear bomb and an intercontinental ballistic missile to deliver it. In this alternate history, the Communists eradicate opposition in both Europe and America, and we end up running under a Communist dictatorship.

    It is noteworthy that the British developed a plot to have Hitler shot by special forces during WW2, but put it on ice when it became obvious that Hitler's strategic direction was flawed, would lose him the war, and he was of more use to the Allies alive...

  241. Same as Victim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You shall be executed in the same manner as your victim. The ONLY fair method available to us, which can claim moral superiority over all others.

    Anything less and the position of the state is the killers life and comfort are a greater priority than the life and comfort of his victim.

    It also speaks to the money-grubbing, greedy nature of anti death penalty advocates. If I steal $100, my punishment (at the VERY least) should be to pay you back $100, in addition to some extra penalty. But if I steal your life, then I won't need to pay you back the same amount. All I have to pay you back is some years of my time. I won't need a job, I won't ever worry about homelessness. As a certified murderer I enjoy much respect among prisoners. When I'm bored I can lay in my bunk reliving the fantasy of how I spent those 8 hours torturing and killing you.

    So eye-for-an-eye justice is a top priority if I steal your money, but something less if I steal your life. Which is more valuable?

    What a twisted view of the anti death penalty advocates. They truly value things over human life and it shows in their application of justice.

  242. This is settled science by aepervius · · Score: 1

    I am against death penalty, but there is quite a few death where you do not feel yourself dying. Asphyxia thru helium, or nitrogen for example. Gee.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  243. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    The same Norway that allowed Anders Brevik to murder 69 people? Um you can keep that system of justice thanks...

  244. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by athmanb · · Score: 1

    You're putting too much value on single people. Hitler as a person didn't cause WW2, and certainly wouldn't be able to repeat it in 1980. Franz Ferdinand didn't really cause WW1 either. Both of them were only a single symptom of their times and if they hadn't existed a similar course of history would have taken place.

    Hitler could only start WW2 in the 1930s because he had a willing base of angry Germans with a mix of justified and unjustified grievances. He was the "first past the post" politician to harness those frustrations but if he hadn't existed some other populist would have, if not a Nazi then a Communist. 50 years later the situation was entirely different, the people content, and nobody could've gotten a majority support for political upheaval. We know this because the RAF certainly tried to.

  245. If its so hard, your heart's not really in it... by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    If US society is so squeamish over the exact method of execution, it sounds to me that they're not really committed to the idea and probably shouldn't be doing it.

    Arizona, for example, abandoned hangings after a noose accidentally decapitated a condemned woman in 1930.

    Really? I thought the object of hanging was to break the victim's neck instead of strangling them, in which case this sounds like a resounding success - or did the baying crowds want to think that the victim had "just gone to sleep"?

    I'm not a doctor, but I believe that pointing something called a "gun" at the subject and pulling the trigger a few times does the trick, is typically less unpleasant than many natural/accidental deaths and is already widely accepted as a method of dealing with foreign teenage conscripts who's governments threaten the stability of the oil market. Alternatively, every properly-run abattoir in the rest has a variety of efficient methods for killing large mammals with the minimum of suffering. If that's not acceptable then it suggests to me that you're not really 100% at ease with this whole "death penalty" thing and probably shouldn't be doing it.

    Any society that wants the death penalty needs to be satisfied that "the end justifies the means" and understand that (a) there is no nice, guaranteed painless, dignified way to execute someone that won't go wrong from time to time and (b) you'll end up executing innocents occasionally. If you're not OK with that, don't do it.

    Personally, if I were (rightly or wrongly) condemned to life imprisonment I'd like the coward's option - but not the USA version where, it seems, you rot in prison for a decade or two anyway and only then get dispatched by the sort of bizarre, theatrical method that a movie super-villain might dream up.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  246. This should be a poll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I get my significant other's murder sentenced to death, I want it to die by
    - electrocution
    - thrown out of a plance / from high building
    - being fed to lions / sharks / ...
    - burned alive
    - ...

  247. Bury them alive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and if they manage to dig themselves out, then they are free to go.

  248. America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's time to catch up to the rest of the civilised world and stop killing people. No more executions, it's brutal and what you would expect in the middle east, not in your country.

  249. Remorse - BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They only have remorse because they got caught. As soon as you let them go, they will be at it again, because they will be hungry and unable to find an honest paying job.

  250. Re:Please stop. Just stop by trout007 · · Score: 1

    What is almost never mentioned is that true justice would require restoring the victim as fully as possible. Common law came up with some equivalent costs of various crimes but that would be left to a jury to decide. If the focus was on the victim things would improve drastically especially because all victimless crimes would no longer include a prison.

    In addition prisons should be privatized but not in the way they are today.
    The prisoners should choose which prison they go to and use the money they earn working in that prison to pay for their incarceration as well as restoring the victim.

    --
    I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
  251. Nuclear explosion by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

    Just nuke them. It has a lot of advantages:

    - You can get rid of old nuclear warheads that don't operate to spec anymore. As long as they still have enough power to vaporize a group of people sitting right next to them they're fine.
    - It should be fairly painless, given that the prisoners' brains quickly transition to a gaseous state.
    - It's inherently flashy so everyone looking for bloody retribution can see it being served from one state over.
    - It's inherently suitable for group executions, which makes it very efficient in dealing with America's large number of criminals.
    - It makes you consider whether you really want that prisoner dead. If you're not willing to nuke some part of your state you probably don't want the person's death that much.

    Plus, it doesn't make you look much sillier than complaining about how nobody wants to sell you equipment for killing your own citizens.

    --
    USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  252. you don't by Torvac · · Score: 1

    civilized nations don't kill people. life long imprisonment if you must.

  253. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Britz · · Score: 1

    You comment is ironic, right? People could have been easily executed for treason in the Weimar Republic in Germany. Hitler would have been gone, would it not have been for a lot of intervention on his behalf by people in the justice system and politicians. Justice is flawed. It was even worse back then.

    During the time Hitler was not executed, lynchings were still frequent in the US.

    George W Bush gave the order to kill people and torture people. Obama did the same. Even though the US has the death penalty. Some people can't be touched. Politics. That's how it works.

  254. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    Face it: [...] Some people, however, have committed crimes so heinous that they no longer qualify as human beings

    You say "face it:" as if the opinion you've outlined above is an objective fact, but it's not. At all.

    Face it: many people would disagree with you entirely.

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  255. The search for a proper veil for barbarism by TheCarp · · Score: 1

    Quite frankly, the ONLY death penalty I support, is for politicians who make laws which violate human rights. Only large scale crime deserves an example be made for history....the poor people its normally used to execute don't deserve such treatment, even the worst monsters have hurt what....a handful or two. They are petty and mean nothing to history.... no reason to take away their right to appeal.

    In short, the only people deserving of such executions are the people who would have others perform them.

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
  256. The prisoner will be unarmed so we're halfway by Cafe+Alpha · · Score: 1

    there, but what if he isn't black?

  257. and then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WW2 was inevitable from the time the Treaty of Versailles was signed to end WW1, with or without Hitler. If we're going to play the alternate history game, I would argue that by executing Hitler at that point, you just turn him into a martyr for his cause and some other brown-shirt becomes leader of the Nazi movement. Hitler was overconfident to the point of insanity, leading to some boneheaded military decisions his generals hated (like breaking the truce and attacking the Soviets before finishing off the UK) that led to Germany's eventual defeat. Another leader might not have done that and the Nazis would have conquered all of Europe, perhaps eventually the whole world.

    Congratulations, by executing Hitler you didn't prevent WW2, you just ensured that the Nazis won.

  258. This is about hypocritical morals by DThorne · · Score: 1

    Animals by the thousands are being killed every hour to keep the meat machine going (I eat meat), so this shouldn't be a problem. What you need to do to guarantee a simple, virtually foolproof method of execution is a variation on a single bullet to the head. Russians have been doing that for years - no suffering or lingering, just ending the life by a shredding of the centre of everything that allows what we consider a person to be aware. The end. Hanging is a leftover from older methods of torture, the electric chair was a political decision, same as the gas chamber. Those two are positively absurd as machines to end human life - one is some sort of horror show to see how much torturing you can do via overloading the nervous system and frying the body, the other a variation on suffocation - generally considered to be one of the worst ways to go. The firing squad is a formalized lottery to protect the "blame" for the death by multiplying the possibility of failure and hoping the numbers crunch out right. The guillotine is a technology update on a reasonably sound principle which worked for years as a quick termination but sadly still has some notable failures. All of these are about methods of trying to make the notion of the state killing an individual somehow more "humane" or acceptable. Hypocrisy.
    Do I personally think the state should be killing people as policy? Nope. Just pointing out the obvious. One bullet to the brain will kill a person instantly.

  259. hypoxia by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    You just ramp up the nitrogen in the air while reducing the oxygen.

    Air force does it with pilots to teach them how to deal with blacking out.

    You don't even know it is happening. There's no choking reflex because that works by detecting CO2. Stick someone's head in a bag full of CO2 and they'll gag. stick their head in a bag full of nitrogen and they'll not even realize it.

    The navy pilots that they do this to giggle, lose mental functions, then pass out.

    It is a very humane way to kill someone. No pain.

    It doesn't mutilate the corpse.

    It is 100 percent effective.

    It requires no special training.

    It requires no special parts or chemicals.

    It is very inexpensive.

    If I were running the capital punishments in a country, this is how I'd do them.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  260. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyone assumes that if hitler died wwii would have been avoided. I'm willing to bet, juast as these people do, that someone way worse may have come to power and been successful. Both points are conjecture that can't be verified.

  261. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Relevant: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-31812177

  262. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reductio ad Hitlerum much?
    On the other hand, there is a very very slim chance a felon on death row in the US of A right now, IF capital punishment did not exist, might turn his life around in the future, get a degree in theoretical physics and lay the groundwork for interstellar travel. Now what?

    There is no way of knowing the potential consequences of capital punishment of lack thereof for society.
    Lawful punishment is only a slight deterrent for criminals, it does not matter how severe punishment is made.
    Capital punishment is, on average, far more expensive to implement than to accommodate a prisoner for life.
    There is no humane way to take a human life.

    Imprisonment should confront criminals with the opportunity to better their life, to be able to participate in society again one day. Taking up that opportunity is their call. Taking that opportunity and their life in the same action is institutionalized murder and is a testament to the backwardness of the society which chooses to implement it.

    Just the ramblings of some AC.

  263. The only reason I would never live in the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Massively assymetrical, money infused, revenge-based justice system.. Add to that the death penalty :/

  264. Anesthesia by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Why not administer anesthesia before electrocuting/gassing the prisoner?

    After all, they do this with lethal injection (at least they did in my state).

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
    1. Re:Anesthesia by gatkinso · · Score: 1

      PS not that I think execution is a very good idea: it sure doesn't seem to deter much crime (and apparently the legal process is more expensive than merely letting them sit in jail free cable tv and all).

      --
      I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  265. People look at it wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Death in prison is the easy way out so let them rot.

  266. Let's start with you by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    You don't seem "precious." I am sure you are not totally innocent.

  267. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Charcharodon · · Score: 1
    The problem is deterrence only works as an immediate, concrete threat. Most of your criminal types are borderline retarded in their ability to think abstractly. (Thank You Public School system!!). If you can't think abstractly you lack the ability to play the "what if" game and apply that to your decision making process.

    "What if I walk into McDonalds with a gun and rob it?"
    "What if I have unprotected sex with this $10 prostitute?"
    "What if we pass this bill to see what is in the bill?"

    We have the death penalty in Florida, it's called "Stand Your Ground", and it works quite well because it doesn't require an abstract thought on the part of the criminal. The deterrent is not in some far away place 5-10 years after the crime was committed. The gun is right there, right now pointed in their face, a block from their dad's house.

    The ones with even the smallest spark of intelligence (aka self preservation) back off. The rabid ones get put down on the spot.

  268. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by nukenerd · · Score: 1
    Mod parent up.

    In a Machiavellian sense, he (some policital criminal) could be used, for example, as a figurehead to drum up support from the people who he was able to drum up support from before, in order to follow a political agenda ....... I could think of many dozens of ways he could himself cause trouble, and I can think of many more dozens of ways he could be symbolically used by someone else to cause trouble.

    We saw that with IRA prisoners in the UK. Even in prison they continued to make waves, make news (such as hunger strikes), and even continue to administrate campaigns via the communications of visitors which the civil rights people insist on being allowed. OTOH, once someone is executed, the news media (and they are what matters) soon lose interest as long as there is no mystery about it - which is why assasination keeps someone "alive" in the public mind more than execution does.

    Whichever side you are on (and this applies to "both" sides") these are just facts, in a Machiavellian sense.

  269. Cite your source? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    > The USA is the only G7 country that still executes people and they don't care if it's a woman, a juvenile, or someone with autism.

    Why should a woman not be receive the same justice as man?

    When was a juvenile sentenced to execution?

    When was someone with autism sentenced to execution?

  270. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > umm, the income tax is actually found in the constitution, not any "social contract"

    You do realise that abiding by the constitution is itself a social contract that you implicitly agreed to by being born right? Try arguing that "I never agreed to abide by the constitution" in a court and see what happens.

    Also, don't give me shit about "you can leave if you don't like it". No you can't. People try this all the time, for example by creating communities in the middle of nowhere to live by their own rules. The authorities will come after them if they break any law of the land, even if they keep to themselves, live by consent and don't use any of the resources of the external society.

    > Better yet. where is this social contract so i can have my lawyer take a look at it and see if it stands up

    Layers and courts discuss the implicit social contract all the time. They do it when they take into account the background traditions and social norms of a given environment.

  271. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I imagine all this would do is that Cops would refuse to testify in murder cases, and prosecutors would refuse to take them.

    Seriously, imagine for a second that there was a risk of you being executed for a mistake at your job. There can't be many people crazy enough to take that on.

  272. Re:Please stop. Just stop by rmdingler · · Score: 1

    one innocent put to death is too many

    "If it could save just one child", "Spare one innocent", or "Every life is meaningful"...

    At some point, on a World with seven billion souls, it really just becomes a point of where exactly you prioritize the human lives. For whatever reason, lives taken unfairly in Western nations in the pursuit of justice are the epitome of travesty... yet it is important that we recognize crime and punishment must be dealt with the only way we humans can do anything: imperfectly.

    Meanwhile, back in Western Africa, the ebola plague just took its 10,000th victim.

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

  273. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strawman? This isn't a discussion on religion, it's a discussion on heinous criminals.

  274. The best form of execution is by alfredo · · Score: 1

    Death by Incarceration. Zapping, shooting, poisoning, hanging, or stoning cuts short their suffering. If you want to punish them, permanent "time out" alone in a cage should do the job. If by chance the person was wrongly convicted. there is still a chance to prove their case. The death penalty makes any mistake or official wrongdoing worse.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
  275. Social Contract and Emergent Behavior by Guppy · · Score: 1

    Here's an alternative interpretation of what the "social contract" is -- civilized society is an example of Emergent Behavior.

    It's not a legal rule, where paradoxes of consent or capacity are questions that must be answered. It is simply the rule-set from which the emergent behavior of human society arises, like some cellular automata system. What behavior comes out of the system -- be it a civil society or Lord of the Flies -- is a judgement-free result that depends on the proportion of adherents, versus dysfunctional units and cheaters.

    1. Re:Social Contract and Emergent Behavior by khallow · · Score: 1

      It also has an different label, "emergent behavior". "Social contract" has a special connotation, namely that it is a mutual agreement between society and the people who make up that society.

  276. Can't find a humane way to execute people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a crock. It's trivial to humanely kill someone. Just load them up with morphine or some other opiate. Simple, reliable, painless.

    The problem is, people don't really want a humane execution. They want VENGEANCE!

  277. Drones by findoutmoretoday · · Score: 1

    Drones?

  278. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by aliquis · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument is that there's no actual true definition for what's proper and improper. Religious people may think there is but they are wrong.

    Just because you set children on fire once doesn't have to mean you'll do it again.

    Say it were your own children or parent. How is that a danger to someone else?

    Maybe the "hesitation" is a good rule. It's what keep it from happening in many cases I guess. And as such we have many who have thought the idea but is hesitating because it's tabu / not really accepted. And on the other hand some may have stepped over the border for what you consider good reasons.

    Like say for me here in Sweden. We don't have capital punishment. You consider it proper to kill murders. So say someone had murdered. That set things out for someone to "properly" murder that person. Except it's not allowed by the law. Should that too require the hesitation part BTW? I mean. It was "proper murder"? ..

    Read your last part, in the above I mean to kill by will in general. But yeah, I know there's a difference in "mord" and "dråp" here.

    There was something more I wanted to say before I read that part. I think it was about differences.

  279. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

    QED! well played bro.

  280. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by aliquis · · Score: 1

    Strawman? This isn't a discussion on religion, it's a discussion on heinous criminals.

    As if the conviction of what is right and wrong doesn't come from philosophy / ideology / local culture and the idea of murder being such a heavy crime even in the US may be because of the Bible (not saying it would be the only reason and people couldn't figure it out themselves. But there are various animals who battle it out to death if necessary and humans do it too as long as their commanders have said it's alright ..)

    War = Killing is fine. Even just random person who haven't done anything yet.
    Non-war = Oh how horrible!

  281. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

    income tax is bunk anyway. according to Rousseau I'm a natural citizen and no nation has sovreignity over me so I decline to accept the imposition of a foreign nation's tax scheme.

  282. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "There are 52 separate jurisdictions (with two being the same but listed separately due to separate branches of authority) capable of sentencing someone to death in the US and over the last 4 decades all they can come up with is 49 people who might have been innocent and 10 that actually were. That is an extremely low rate if you ask me."

    You selfish fuck.

    Wait until it's you being incorrectly put to death.

    Or your loved ones or friends? ...century of the self fuck heads like you have ruined everything.

  283. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by goarilla · · Score: 1

    why is this creature still alive, it is not a human being. it has lost the ability to call itself that by defiling basic morality to such a repugnant extreme. why is this thing still alive? so it can whine about video game privileges? this thing must die

    In war we all defile morality to repugnant extremes.
    Stop dehumanizing this man by calling him *it*. It's practices like that that help enable enormous atrocities (see Hutu - Tutsi genocides).

    again, please note: we are here on the very edge of atrocity. the crimes that shock the conscience at the furthest extreme. the worst of the worst of the worst. they alone deserve death from the state

    The atrocity scale edges' move according to the 'zeitgeist'. There is no real hard end.

    so india has the closest approach to perfect on capital punishment in this world.

    Yeah India. With their multilayered racist caste system. They know all about justice.

  284. What happened to the good ol' days? by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    The quaint old custom of drawing and quartering provided entertainment for the whole family. And heads on pikes provided such vivid decorating options.

  285. particle beam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Particle beam to the head or entire body..No fuss no muss.

  286. Tough issue .. by michaelamerz · · Score: 1

    I am against capital punishment - sort of. Once in a while some horrific crime happens and my opinion waivers. How can a normal human being kill another human being in a such a cruel way without feeling compassion with his victim? I would use potentially deadly force if somebody would threaten my family and I wouldn't lose sleep about it, should the aggressor perish. The use of potentially lethal force to prevent a potentially brutal crime is one thing - administering death to somebody years after the fact is a completely different thing. I killed a lot of animals (on a ranch) , pigs, cows, deer, rabbits, chicken .. I always tried to make it as stress- and painless as possible but I always felt a bit sad. I know people who rip the legs of bull frogs without killing them first and those folks had no remorse or compassion for the animal. This makes me wonder: Maybe compassion is a genetic trait? Is it possible, that some peoples brains are "wired" in a way that they just don't care about other peoples (or animals) pain, fear and suffering? Is it moral to kill offenders because their brain is filtering what most of us would consider to be 'normal feelings' ? Or is capital punishment justified exactly because of that? I read a lot of opinions in this thread about other countries not being as violent as the US. That's just not true. Psychopaths and brutal criminals do their thing everywhere - it doesn't mater, whether or not they have capital punishment. I guess it all boils down to a simple question: Do we want to legally kill people because of their inability to experience remorse or compassion? This is truly a tough issue....

  287. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, sure ... and if his dad hadn't banged is mom, he wouldn't have been born and it would have averted his eventual reign which itself lead to WWII.

    Should we all stop reproducing as a species to avoid the Hitler of the XXIst century ?

    +5 interesting, seriously ???

  288. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by khallow · · Score: 1

    It's not a legal contract, it's the idea that you are beholden to the society you are in.

    Now I'm going on a limb here, but I think Rosseau wasn't being a complete dumbshit by choosing the term, "social contract". He could have chosen, for example, "The Social Duty" or "The Social Obligation" as the title of his book. But he didn't.

    And that means all the trappings of a legal contract including mutual, uncoerced consent to the contract, to the content of the contract, and to any adjustments made; fair dispute resolution; and all parties understanding the contract, its content and implications.

    This attitude that society can pile shit on you without your explicit consent and your only choices are to comply, flee, or face the consequences is complete bullshit. Consider the tragic example of Polish Jews during the Second World War. They didn't have a say in their country being conquered by the Nazis or getting sent to the death camps. But according to you, you're beholden to the society you're in - even if you fought hard to keep that society from being that way and can't flee because they stuck you in a death camp. It is obscene.

    Rosseau also had a thing for liberty which seems to be completely absent from modern advocacy of the "social contract". For example, the point of restraining natural rights, such as freedom to do anything you want (including harming or killing other people), was to enable civil rights, such as ownership of property or travel without fear of being robbed. It wasn't to create a society that can do to you arbitrary whims of the moment.

  289. Abandoned missile silos by gatkinso · · Score: 1

    Lower the them down there with a bed, access to water and a drain hole. Put a glass cover on it. Every 24 hours toss down food. They only come up when they are dead.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  290. Cheap solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A .45 caliber hollow-point round is less than $0.25. It's quick and painless if placed in the correct spot. Might be "messy" to clean up, but if people weren't such panty-waists about the mechanics of these things, we'd save everyone a lot of time and money and the subject a lot of stress, pain and complication.

  291. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Which of course would have left the door wide open for Stalin.
      Has no one here ever played Red Alert?

  292. Too bad those same people by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    feel that human life is irrelevant if it is from a child that has already been born. Especially if they are guilty of the sin of being born of a different skin color.

  293. Nitrous oxide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once heard about two teenagers that stole a nitrous oxide tank from a dentist and suffocated to death in a closed car. If it was pleasant enough that they didn't notice they were suffocating I thought it might be an option for doctor-assisted suicide.

    I guess it will work for execution, too.

  294. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Ridiculous. You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point. There is no meeting of the minds, no clear agreement. If this so-called "social contract" existed, it would be a contract of adhesion which no human being in history ever explicitly agreed to, and any competent court would throw it out with prejudice after a cursory hearing.

    You can look at the social contract as citizenship in the country to which you were born. Of course, that makes it a negative option contract, and you can therefore opt-out by formally renouncing your citizenship. However, by keeping your citizenship (and the rights and responsibilities inherent in that citizenship), you are implicitly choosing to be bound by the social contract. In most countries, you are not bound to the rules of the contract at birth, but rather have a graduated system where at certain ages you become more bound by the rules and more entitled to the privileges of adulthood.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  295. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Does it matter how many? One is already too many, for you killed an innocent man. Essentially that should qualify the governor in question for his own frying chair for he killed someone (by proxy) who had done nothing to deserve this.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  296. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    look at you: concerned because i dehumanize a mass murderer?

    you do not possess coherent morality

    you respect and tolerate all. until someone disrespects and lacks tolerance. then you give back exactly the same

    to tolerate intolerance is only to invite the destruction of your belief system

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  297. Revenge by jandersen · · Score: 1

    The driving force behind the creation and abandonment of execution methods is the constant search for a humane means of taking a human life. Arizona, for example, abandoned hangings after a noose accidentally decapitated a condemned woman in 1930.

    Not really; what your example here shows is that it is about the perceptions. It's not about being humane, but about appearing to be humane. A ripped of head is shocking, gross and possibly upsetting, but I doubt the victim could have told the difference.

    And execution is not about punishment, but revenge. Death as punishment is not going to make the victim a better person, obviously, and if the only purpose of executing people was to eliminate a dangerous individual, then society would have chosen a method that was cheap and effectivean associated with minimal fuss. Instead we have opted for methods that clearly involve cruelty, but superficially look 'civilized'; the ultimate in that respect has to be injection, which looks a bit like the kind of genuine, final kindness we show to our suffering pets. The likely reality, however, is that the victim is trapped, unable to move, fully conscious and goes through several minutes of excruciating pain. Whatever one will call it, humane it isn't - human, perhaps, since we humans have an amazing capacity for inventing new cruelties to inflict on each other. The driving force has never been anything other than a lust for revenge and ritual sacrifice; one has to wonder to which god.

  298. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Lol.. Do you think saying "fuck" adds depth of meaning to your words?

    I have better odds of making rich by hitting the lottery than I do of being incorrectly put to death by capitol punishment. There were 699,000 or so murders since 1976 when the death penalty numbers can be tracked. There has been 1379 executions in that time span which means less than two tenths of one percent where executed. Furthermore, there are 3035 death row inmates, if we add the already executed of 1379, it comes to a little over six tenths of one percent of all murders over a 4 decade period of time results in a death penalty. Assuming a 318 million population level and an average murder rate per year, I had a little over five thousands of one percent chance of even being charged with one of those murders. Of course that number is flawed because the population is not static but I'm much more likely to be murdered by someone than to be executed for a murder I did not commit.

    It's too insignificant to be overly concerned about it as far as I can tell.

  299. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by goarilla · · Score: 1

    look at you: concerned because i dehumanize a mass murderer?

    Yes because he is still a human.

    you do not possess coherent morality

    I never claimed I did. And I very much doubt you possess it as well.

    you respect and tolerate all. until someone disrespects and lacks tolerance. then you give back exactly the same

    O tell me oh wise one, where did I stop tolerating you ?

    to tolerate intolerance is only to invite the destruction of your belief system

    Cute very cute. Now give me one in Latin.

  300. Here's the problem by fyngyrz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm with you -- certain heinous crimes deserve the death penalty. However:

    In many cases, we cannot be certain that the individual who has been judged guilty, actually is. We know from the various exoneration projects, where convicted death row inmates have been proven innocent with more advanced forensic techniques (DNA, etc.) that the system regularly makes horrific errors, sentencing the innocent to death. Even just a cursory understanding of how our justice system works will make any reasonable person aware that it is error-prone. And we must not put people who are not actually guilty to death. Ever.

    Consequently, this is my position: Until or unless technology allows us to unequivocally, zero-possible-doubt, 100% certain determine actual guilt of the actual crime they are being tried for, we cannot afford to engage in killing as punishment without becoming the very worst kind of criminals ourselves.

    So as things stand right now, I am solidly against any use of the death penalty.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Here's the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is letting the innocent rot in jail for 60+ years until they die from (un)natural causes is any better for that person, or does it just make society feel morally superior? Or, are you really suggesting that "And we must not put people who are not actually guilty in jail. Ever."...?

      The sad reality is that every day people die from mistakes, sometimes those mistakes are their own and sometimes they are the mistakes of others.

    2. Re:Here's the problem by rocca · · Score: 1

      Is letting the innocent rot in jail for 60+ years until they die from (un)natural causes is any better for that person, or does it just make society feel morally superior? Or, are you really suggesting that "And we must not put people who are not actually guilty in jail. Ever."...?

      The sad reality is that every day people die from mistakes, sometimes those mistakes are their own and sometimes they are the mistakes of others.

      dupe: Forgot to login first.

    3. Re:Here's the problem by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's kinda how I see it. I'm not against the death penalty; I'm against making irreparable mistakes. And if it were rare?? ... but it's not; wrongful convictions hover around 30%.

      However, I don't see prison as the answer either. In my view, there are four valid punishments:

      Death
      Reparation
      Exile
      Forgiveness

      Tho barring Antarctica and perhaps the moon, we've kinda run out of places to exile people.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    4. Re:Here's the problem by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Is letting the innocent rot in jail for 60+ years until they die from (un)natural causes is any better for that person

      It certainly is if the person is innocent, because it allows them at least some chance to achieve relief, perhaps even redress, for the wrong society has done them.

      As for the guilty, doesn't worry me a bit. As long as they don't get out, society has been equally improved.

      The sad reality is that every day people die from mistakes, sometimes those mistakes are their own and sometimes they are the mistakes of others.

      This is like trying to say that because some people die in traffic accidents, it's ok if your kid drowned in the neighbor's pool with no fence. The one has NOTHING to do with the other.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    5. Re:Here's the problem by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Is letting the innocent rot in jail for 60+ years until they die from (un)natural causes is any better for that person

      It certainly is if the person is innocent, because it allows them at least some chance to achieve relief, perhaps even redress, for the wrong society has done them.

      As for the guilty, doesn't worry me a bit. As long as they don't get out, society has been equally improved.

      The sad reality is that every day people die from mistakes, sometimes those mistakes are their own and sometimes they are the mistakes of others.

      This is like trying to say that because some people die in traffic accidents, it's ok if your kid drowned in the neighbor's pool with no fence. The one has NOTHING to do with the other.

      dupe: parent forgot to log in

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    6. Re:Here's the problem by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      From the POV of the prisoner, prison is exile. For most, it is even permanent -- because when they get out, society no longer offers them the ability to move on with their lives on anything even remotely resembling that of other citizens. Instead, they are relegated to a permanent lower class, with records that prevent employment, destroy credit, affect passports, 2nd amendment rights, IIRC voting rights in some places, even where and how they can live. IMHO, this is because Americans are perfectly comfortable with unending retribution and thrive on useless, vicious gossip.

      Still, it might be interesting to see a large urban area, otherwise close to useless, as in "Escape from New York" be turned into a "drop 'em off and forget about 'em" walled exile region. Fly in food and airdrop it. Otherwise, survival of the fittest, etc. Or even one of the least populated states -- Wyoming comes to mind -- but this is like the death penalty, because it is extremely harsh, and would be damned difficult to "undo." So for that, again, I'd just as soon we wait until we can assure actual guilt, as opposed to "we say you're guilty."

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    7. Re:Here's the problem by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Or, are you really suggesting that "And we must not put people who are not actually guilty in jail. Ever."...?

      Missed that, sorry. Of course it is a terrible, terrible thing to jail or otherwise punish someone who is innocent. But jail does differ from the death penalty in one critical way: You can let them back out. You can't revive a dead person. That's game over.

      Having said that, yes, when tech gets that far, assuming it does, we should never again jail or even accuse an innocent. It's absolutely horrible that we do. If we can ask "did you do it?" and get back a reality-based "no", then all that citizen need do is go on with their life. No arrest, no record, no nothing.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    8. Re:Here's the problem by rocca · · Score: 1

      It certainly is if

      You've removed my pivotal question in your quote and replied to something much less meaningful. I'm happy to have an interesting discussion if you want to continue, because I think it's an interesting subject and not because I have an agenda to push (because frankly nothing we say here is going to impact existing policy either way) but that conversation is going to be much less interesting if we're answering half-questions.

      You made a bold statement that said (and I'm paraphrasing) that because an innocent person could be put to death that no people should be put to death. I'm not agreeing nor disagreeing with that statement, but I'm asking if it's really any different than saying that because an innocent person could spend their entire life in deplorable jail conditions that no person should be put in jail? The burden of proof is higher in a capital case so how does one justify innocent people spending life in prison while at the same time condemning execution?

      I'm not 100% convinced that letting an innocent person sit in jail for 60 years is any different, and many would argue is worse, than dying. If that is true then what makes us think that incarceration is morally superior to execution? Irreparable mistakes will be made either way.

      As for the guilty, doesn't worry me a bit. As long as they don't get out, society has been equally improved.

      Has it really been "equally improved"? Or would the $1.5 million dollars ($30k/year for 50 years) it costs to incarcerate that person for life have a greater social benefit spent in reducing future crime such early childhood education, community outreach programs and mental heath? Further for those that are released after murder, rape, etc, after x years and re-enter the society as their "debt paid" and then re-offend, what is the cost to that, both financially as well as impact to social improvement?

      A quick (and horrifying from current social acceptance) math exercise shows that executing the 159,000 people serving life sentences (in US prisons as of 2012) would provide roughly $5 billion dollars a year (or a quarter of a trillion dollars over the period of time those people are serving their sentences) that could be directed to social welfare. If there is one thing we do not have a shortage of on this planet, it's people.

      This is like trying to say that because some people die in traffic accidents, it's ok if your kid drowned in the neighbor's pool with no fence. The one has NOTHING to do with the other.

      The point I was trying to make was that with any policy there is going to be mistakes, whether those mistakes are in execution, or whether the mistake is in non-execution - those mistakes are going to cause innocent people to die either way.

    9. Re:Here's the problem by Reziac · · Score: 1

      My notion of exile is closer to Botany Bay than Escape From New York. Exile shouldn't be prison by another name; rather, a chance to start fresh, maybe in a harsh place but where one can build for the better and not be that second class citizen who is always compared to the non-felons and has NO chance to get past that. But we no longer have available that unclaimed land with the potential to be made into something more, and where 'escape' isn't an issue (cuz you don't want 'em 'going over the wall' either; indeed, ideally they should not want to do so).

      I don't think most Americans are any more comfortable with unending punishment than the rest of the world (in my observation, it's more the reverse), but we have a more prominent media machine that thrives on emphasizing the extremes, and a political process that tends to reflect extremes more than norms.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  301. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Being born conveys only liberties, not responsibilities. Being a member of a community conveys both. It is up to a person to choose the latter, and it is up to a child's guardians to convey the benefits and consequences of such a contract. And it is up to every person to negotiate the social fluidity of all of these.

    One point worth making, however, which I think you overlook: while it is true that being born into a society does not in itself convey responsibilities, you can't expect to be allowed to remain part of any group or society, unless you are willing to obey it rules. It's like tax: you don't have to, but if you don't, then get the hell out of our society, stop using roads, schools etc you don't contribute to. Why should we accept somebody as part of us, if they are only freeloading?

  302. Nitrogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next?

  303. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    Stalin himself (or rather, the Communist Party) probably wouldn't have gained power if the Germans hadn't invaded.

    Something Hitler learned was that you need an enemy in order to rally your population to war, giving you power in the process. The enemy Hitler created was the Jews. Russia however had a real enemy, the Germans. Before Germany invaded Russia, Russia's army was rather pathetic.

    Even after WWII, Russia had most of its population convinced that Fascism was still the biggest threat, and they also had them convinced that the west was trying to continue Fascism (keep in mind that Fascism IS a western concept, born in Italy and was very popular throughout most of Europe in several governments for quite a while even after WWII.) In fact the "official" reason Russia used for creating the Berlin wall was to keep Fascist influence out (though the real reason was because they needed to keep people from leaving the soviet bloc because it was a serious drain on their population of skilled workers who wanted to go to capitalist countries where they knew they could live better.)

  304. Or, you know.... by rochrist · · Score: 1

    we could join the rest of the civilized world and stop killing people.

  305. Two-In-One solution: Seized Heroin Usage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I am troubled by the number of cases where individuals are wrongly convicted (at least here in the US) of offenses resulting in them being on death row, I do not have a problem (once that is fixed) with executions. Let the method of execution match the crime. So: Put the idiot shoe/underwear bombers on an autonomously controlled airplane, and give them a dead-man switch, and limited fuel. Fly them out over the ocean; if they let the switch go, kaboom. If they run out of fuel and manage to survive, consider them freed from their conviction.

    For these folk, a 'humane' execution is silly. Their actions were inhumane && attempts at mass murder. Crush them like bugs.

    However, if governments wish to provide "humane" methods of execution, they merely need to induce mega-overdoses on heroin, using seized heroin. From my (limited) understanding, opiate overdoses induce both ecstasy and also cause the body to significantly shut down. Inject a kilo of heroin solution.

  306. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

    Well if European justice worked like US justice even had at this time, they not only would have arrested Hitler, but they would have put the whole Nazi party under check for being a terrorist organization and probably arrested most of their ringleaders for conspiracy and had it forcibly disbanded.

    Which if you want a precedent for this, look at the first KKK which was hunted down by the federal government and was completely obliterated by 1882. (The current KKK is a different organization.) The first KKK would routinely try to influence elections and had popular support in many areas, just like the Nazi party. It took martial law in many areas to get rid of them.

  307. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    Does it matter how many? One is already too many, for you killed an innocent man.

    One is too many to have die in a prison cell after years or decades of rotting there. The effect is still the same; an innocent man dies at the hands of the state. Based on this, we should release all prisoners because we can't ever be 100% certain any one of them is guilty, yes?

    (if this ever happens, I'll be on an airplane beforehand going somewhere far away while the rest of you sort out the consequences)

    Essentially that should qualify the governor in question for his own frying chair for he killed someone (by proxy) who had done nothing to deserve this.

    That's absurd. The very, very worst case you could make against a governor would be conspiracy to commit involuntary manslaughter, which isn't even defined as a crime anywhere that I'm aware. You could possibly make a case for involuntary manslaughter against the police, prosecutor, and jury, but that's also asinine at best. Further, I don't know of anyone who would support the death penalty for involuntary manslaughter. Finally, the premise itself is absurd. Outside of fraud or negligence, there's no reasonable case to be made at all. Now if the prosecutor withheld critical evidence, I would fully support going after them with the full force of the law. Same for the police and anyone else involved.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  308. What's wrong with an old fashion guillotine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think they're over thinking this big time.
    I'm sure we can come up with a very efficient 2015 guillotine..

    How are bovines slaughtered? Isnt it supposed to be in the most humane way? There you go, you have a few options.

    I may sound cold but we're talking about criminals that did the most heinous crimes here.

  309. Best method by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Send the to Obama's VA hospitals.

  310. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

    The problem with your argument is that there's no actual true definition for what's proper and improper. Religious people may think there is but they are wrong.

    I think the proper use of capital punishment should be defined as certain massive crimes (like murder, defined by the society as a whole) where we simply have drawn the line as the crime being too terrible (in essence, where we - as a society - have decided that those who do it are inherently beyond redemption) and those cases where rehabilitation (within a system - and we don't have this today in the US - where rehabilitation is available and generally effective) is impossible.

    Just because you set children on fire once doesn't have to mean you'll do it again.

    Oh that's alright, anyone who's that broken should be first in line for execution. They don't need to set children on fire twice to convince me of that.

    Say it were your own children or parent. How is that a danger to someone else?

    Perhaps there is some circumstance in which lighting children on fire wouldn't automatically qualify someone for execution, but I don't care to explore all the different circumstances we'd have to in order to find such a case. Suffice it to say that - as a general rule - things like murder and setting children on fire ought to be automatic.

    Like say for me here in Sweden. We don't have capital punishment. You consider it proper to kill murders. So say someone had murdered. That set things out for someone to "properly" murder that person. Except it's not allowed by the law. Should that too require the hesitation part BTW? I mean. It was "proper murder"? ..

    Read your last part, in the above I mean to kill by will in general. But yeah, I know there's a difference in "mord" and "dråp" here.

    There was something more I wanted to say before I read that part. I think it was about differences.

    I'm not sure I understand what you're saying here. I consider it a proper use of the state's authority to execute convicted criminals when they execute a convicted murderer. When I'm talking about this, I don't mean an angry father who walks in on his child's molester and beats him to death, nor do I mean someone who falls asleep at the wheel and strikes and kills a pedestrian. I mean someone who knowingly, consciously, willfully makes an effort to maliciously kill another human being without some major mitigating circumstances present. What else are we to do with such a person? A person who robs a liquor store is making a poor choice and hopefully can be rehabilitated such that they won't make similarly poor choices in the future. Someone who has no difficulty taking human life is fundamentally broken in a way we can't comprehend and should simply be removed from society. Prisons are still a part of society inasmuch as members of our society live and worth there.

    --
    -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  311. the answer is at the vet. by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

    Last year after a horrible accident I put good friend. It was painless, peaceful and almost instant. It was in a vet’s office. My dog was hit and dying and in great pain. The vet described the process as ‘the same chemicals used for anesthesia before surgery, just more of it”. I was with him and held him as he simply layed his head on my arm and went to sleep within 3 seconds of receiving a single injection. If we can quickly and humanely put pets to sleep, we can darn well use the same process on people except for the lawyers.

  312. easy by DrXym · · Score: 1

    If a state is going to execute people then a firing squad is quite able to perform the task reliably and quickly. Hell, it doesn't even need a firing squad - guns can be preaimed and fired remotely with sufficient redundancy to ensure the outcome.

  313. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    Also, don't give me shit about "you can leave if you don't like it". No you can't.

    Really??? tell that to all the illegal immigrants who make it to america that they couldnt leave....

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  314. Re: Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will cut you some slack as to the language, but I wanted to flag something. As a soldier, I have killed people in a planned, deliberate way, without any hesitation or remorse. Given an appropriate set of circumstances, I would do it again.

    I also believe I am a functioning and contributing member of society , and the fact that I have murdered people does not intrinsically make me deserving of the death penalty.

    The fact that the people I killed was done in a state sanctioned framework, does not mean the people are any less dead, than if I was a deranged meth head, Tim McVeigh, or a serial killer.

    I get that for some of you, that means I am worthy of the death penalty. Currently the society I live in does not agree with that conclusion, but if you feel strongly about it, I'd caution you against attempting to exercise the courage of those convictions.

    The differences in societal response are not that murder occurred , it is far more about the context , intent , and probability of those leading to repeat behavior that are deciding factors.

    Personally I feel most murderers can be rehabilitated, but some can not. I do support the death penalty, but I would constrain it to people who kill repeatedly, outside a state sanctioned framework (essentially individual or collective self defence) are mass murderers, serial killers etc. The drugged out teenager who kills in a robbery, maybe not so much

  315. Give them a 1/5 of vodka, and then, the guillotine by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    simple.

  316. Re: Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do something about it, pussy.

  317. dignitas and pentobarbital by paul+mafinga · · Score: 1

    Switzerland's Dignitas puts a human down with pentobarbital for about $ 6K. Pentobarbital isn't terribly difficult to make and it's been around since the late 1920's. The federally mandated, human rated stuff is from Denmark and is sold under the trade name Nembutal. The democratic left has been successful at disrupting the supply line. Apparently Dignitas has had their supply disrupted a couple of times and they switched to helium. A small gas chamber with an inert gas like helium, argon, or nitrogen would probably be the best way to put a really sick human down. It's easy to talk about cage and feed for life, but if a human is so sick that they are spending 24/7 trying to kill other people or inmates, it's probably best to put them down. That's how vets treat other vicious animals.

  318. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by swillden · · Score: 1

    umm, the income tax is actually found in the constitution, not any "social contract" Better yet. where is this social contract so i can have my lawyer take a look at it and see if it stands up

    A big chunk of it is written down in the constitutions.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  319. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe you need to write Rousseau.

  320. Re: Your justice system is flawed, too. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    No. You would just lock people in cages with other animals instead. It achieves much the same end. YOU would likely think that it achieves the same end if it were done to you.

    So ultimately you're no more "enlightened" for opting for a long period of torment over a swift exectuion.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  321. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    The difference between someone being killed wrongly and someone spending a long time in jail wrongly is probably that if you find out within his lifetime that it's been wrong, you can at least compensate him. It's not really going to repay him for a life behind bars, but at least you can give him the satisfaction that, in the end, he was acquitted. Once someone's dead, he remains in that state without any recourse.

    Also it's way less likely that a dead person would stand up and try to fight the injustice done to him.

    And yes, I do believe that 10 guilty man running free is better than one innocent man being strung up. But I guess I'm becoming a minority.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  322. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Man+Eating+Duck · · Score: 1

    The problem is that there is another very negative element too: Collective vengence. The social desire to see those who offend society made to suffer. Worse, this can be counterproductive to the rehabilitation role: Programs aimed at educating prisoners are widely seen as 'soft on crime,' while there is widespread support for any policy that increases the difficulty released prisoners face in finding housing and employment.

    As a Norwegian, that seems insane to me. We have some of the nicest prisons in the world, and inmates are given the opportunity to get an education. We also have one of the lowest recidivism rates in the world at around 20%. The authorities have a stated goal to reduce recidivism by providing opportunities for reform in prison. This includes hard criminals like perpetrators of gang-related killings, robbers who have shown willingness to kill police officers in shoot-outs, and drug related crimes, which are among the worst when it comes to recidivism. Although some employers and neighbourhoods frowns on ex-convicts, they generally have lots of opportunities to reinstate themselves in society. You're less likely to be considered for a trusted position, but it even happens that former convicts get one of those with the employers full knowledge of their past (depending on the nature of their crimes and the position).

    The punishment constitutes loss of freedom and communication rights - nothing more. The conditions in prisons are good (Halden Prison and Bastøy Prison are some of the "best", but the penal philosophy is the same for all of them), because they're not supposed to make you suffer physically or psychiologically. The political right wing (which even many US Democrats would probably still call liberal bleeding-heart commies) occasionally bleats about reforms to make punishment harsher, but nobody is really serious about it, since the existing system just works too well at turning criminals into productive members of society.

    Of course there are a few wackos, like Anders Behring Breivik, for which the regular system doesn't work well. For the likes of him we have 'indefinite detention', our strongest punishment, which is something like life _with_ the possibility of parole. It is still very probable that he'll spend his entire life in prison since an absolute requirement for release is that he's deemed safe by psychologists and other professionals, which doesn't seem likely to happen based on his currently reported statements and behaviour.

    --
    Are you a grammar Nazi? I'm trying to improve my English; please correct my errors! :)
  323. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The news of his release would very likely spark riots, at the very least. There is a very real possibility that these (and other effects) would result in loss of life as well as extensive property damage. How many people, exactly, are you prepared to see killed or impoverished, to satisfy whatever rule you have that says he should be released?

  324. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, corruption is.

  325. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by rtb61 · · Score: 1

    Well, yeah, the US is busily privatising the US prison system and of course recidivism is their number one major profit centre. In point of fact wasting money on rehabilitation is not only a wasted cost but actively disrupts a core profit centre, so it is against the interests of investors. Kind of tough luck that those investors will become the target of the crimes that they expect prison management to 'PROMOTE'. America, STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  326. 1% IMPRISONED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Death penalty aside for a sec. Then think about the fact that your ass backwards country imprisons almost 1% of its entire population. Do you think they should all be there? Every one of them? If so then 1 out of every 100 americans is a hardcore criminal. That stat should blow your mind! Now back to the death penalty. How many innocents have been slayed by your racist, fucked up "legal system".

  327. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And sick vigilantes kill people with impunity as a result of these laws.

    Fuck you.

  328. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by omfgnosis · · Score: 1

    I'm not prepared for anything, that's why I'm asking an honest question. Thanks for answering in the form of hostility.

  329. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > keeping people locked up until they are no longer a danger ... how long is that, exactly? How does locking people up make them less of a danger?

  330. Decapitation is the best solution by righteousness · · Score: 1

    If I'm faced with the death penalty, I would choose decapitation. It's the quickest and most painless method possible.

    --
    Don't fornicate. Seriously, just don't do it.
    1. Re:Decapitation is the best solution by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      Preferably using a dynamite necklace.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  331. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    you do not possess coherent morality

    I never claimed I did.

    discussion over then. thank you for volunteering your irrelevancy to the topic. but maybe next time you shouldn't speak up at all if you don't have a leg to stand on

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  332. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    because their justice system isn't about revenge

    Well, exactly! Where's the money in that?

    Seriously though, you have the issue dead-to-rights here. If we want rehabilitation, there are known methods we could employ to make a considerable improvement to the recidivism statistics. Other countries have achieved results worth looking into.

    That suggests revenge is of much more importance to society than an actual resolution to the problem.

    We're taught that people who do 'bad things' are 'bad people'. There are precious few of us who develop into adults capable of questioning this. In time a little introspection can resolve this blurry question into a clear focus on the real issue: 'why do people do bad things?' Another angle suggests that 'people are not their behaviours'.

    People behave the way they do through learned behaviour. Violent people are enacting learned behaviours that they perceive grant them a little short-term power for a medium-to-long-term loss that doesn't matter because it's not happening right now. Persistent short-term thinking is a hallmark of a being in 'survival mode'. They'll never prosper in this state, nor will they interact well with others.

    We must see this for the inherently-correctable behavioural issue that it is, because the consequences otherwise are a steadily-inflating prison population and an ever-widening gap between the attitudes of the average citizen, the police enforcing the law and the judiciary meting out an acceptable form of justice.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  333. Re:Please stop. Just stop by dave420 · · Score: 1

    That would make sense if the judicial process was without flaw. As we know that trials and hearings are often misconducted, you are essentially saying "fuck it - we're too lazy - just kill them after we've pretended to respect the notion of due process".

  334. Re:Please stop. Just stop by dave420 · · Score: 1

    Nice unfounded, stab-in-the-dark racism. You were right with wealth, but ethnicity and culture have nothing to do with this problem. Your ignorance, on the other hand, certainly isn't helping.

  335. Re:Please stop. Just stop by dave420 · · Score: 1

    The failings catching him had nothing to do with the justice system. The only way you could possibly be right is if you think Norway has some sort of pre-crime division. So, to sum up: Either you are correct, or Norway doesn't have a pre-crime division. Hmm... I wonder which is accurate. On the other hand, your post did serve a purpose - it shows how people's gut reactions often lead them to believe abject nonsense. When the gut reactions are dealing with whether people live or die, you can hopefully see how short-sighted your logical laziness is, and how it ultimately would lead to many deaths.

    You should take a look at Norway's crime statistics compared to those in the US.

  336. Re:Please stop. Just stop by dave420 · · Score: 1

    The latter costs less, and lets the accused fight to clear their name while they have breath in their body. The former assumes people never make mistakes, which is clearly not true, and will ensure innocent people are killed on purpose.

  337. Re:Please stop. Just stop by dave420 · · Score: 1

    The lessons are "humans simply can't do this well; every country with an active death penalty is attempting to stop innocent people from being killed by killing innocent people". Also I like how you just slipped "properly" in there at the end, as if everyone agrees. The innocence project has already shown us that the "proper" punishment is incarceration, as that keeps everyone just as safe, costs less, and can be corrected at a later date, should new evidence come to light.

  338. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Low rate? Only if you're not one of them. So when do you volunteer to join their ranks?

  339. The only right way, drown them in SF6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sulphur hexaflouride is an odorless, colorless gas which is much heavier than air. Pour some into a tank with the person inside (the top can be open) and your victim quietly gently goes into permanent sleep. The chemical is used in industries where it has silently killed many in just this way.

    If you want to execute humanely, this is your technique.

  340. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    You should take a look at Norway's crime statistics compared to those in the US.

    Oh I'm quite familiar, as are most people who laugh at how ridiculously third world the US is when compared to every other OECD nation. But that is less about euthanasia and more about everything else that is wrong the the US (the list is long)

  341. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by sociocapitalist · · Score: 1

    The first time Hitler tried to seize power in Germany via a coup, he was arrested and used his trial to gain publicity, and rallied a lot of people towards his cause while he was in prison.

    Which by the way, 20 people died in his coup attempt, something that would probably have made him eligible for the death penalty in the US (felony-murder doctrine) which had he been executed, it would have averted his eventual reign which itself lead to WWII.

    And how many people dangerous to Those In Power would have been framed and killed by now as well?

    It's too convenient a tool to get rid of political enemies.

    --
    blindly antisocialist = antisocial
  342. Impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In cases where guilt is 100% proven beyond all shadow of a doubt

    Impossible.

    (I do agree with your premise.)

  343. Personal responsibility cannot be abolished! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Execution should be in kind. Firearm homicidors -> musketry, thugge -> gallows, beheaders -> guillotine, poisoners -> poison, arsonists -> autodafe. This is not "unusual" becase the perpetrator had already done it to the victim. It is not cruel, since the perpetrator wouldn't have done it to the victim in the first place, if the procedure had been cruel. The victim's family need to be able to witness the execution. Homicidors who dehonest the victim (rape, dismembering, dissolving, feeding to animals, cannibalism, etc.) must be denied burial and need to be sent through the crematorium chimney for dispersal at location unknown.

    Insanity defence must be prohibited as a form of superstition. The immunity of family members to testify against each other must be abolished, in order to block the organisation and operation of crime families, also known as the mafia, the dreaded underminer and demolisher of wholesome countries.

    Off-springs of executed criminals need to be castrated to eventually extinguish the homicidal genes from the human DNA pool. Violent criminals and gross thiefs shall lose the hand. Races and nations that are inherently criminal-inclined (gipsy, blacks, italianate) need to be expelled from civilization and not be allowed to leach on the white man's burden! Abuse of alcohol and mind-modification substances shall be strictly regulated and extinguished as much as possible, in order not to facilitate degradation of higher mental functionality that allows humans to turn into animals.

  344. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You might as well add the EU as a whole; the European Court of Justice (ECJ) appears to reject "Life without parole". There's some legal wrangling going on whether clemency/pardon procedures can count as an alternative to parole, but it seems that "life" no longer means "until death" in Europe. The reason of course is "human rights".

    Personally I consider this a dangerous precedent. Human rights are quite fundamental. If prison sentences violate human rights, it doesn't matter much whether they're 20 or 200 years - it would be a violation per se. Thus a ban on "life without parole" would need to ban 200 years sentences and thus also 20 year sentences. Therefore I don't think we should decide that prison violates human rights.

    At the very least, we should ban parole for the 95% life expectancy of the victims. Kill a 25 year old, no parole for 60 years.

  345. 100 pounds of semtex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Surround the condemned with a few hundred pounds of semtex and detonate it. Instant death. Anesthetize them if you're worried about them feeling anything. Or use an M1A1 firing squad. 5 tanks simultaneously firing their main canon at the condemned. Again, instant death and no need for a burial as there will be no remains. The spectacle of a drugged-up limp criminal being dragged out, strapped to pole, and the vaporized with cannon fire or plastic explosive would make for great TV viewing.

  346. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it would have averted his eventual reign which itself lead to WWII.

    It would have averted his reign, I agree. However, the social climate in Germany was such that somebody else would have taken power that may or may not have been just as bad. Some kind of conflict was comming, with or without Mr. Adolf.
    World War II's roots lie a lot deeper than just one dictator.

    That argument is used too much to defend the death sentance, but I hope civilization has evolved since then.

  347. Why not just compress the carotid arteries? by Wootery · · Score: 1

    It's very easy to cause unconsciousness and, eventually, death, by compressing the carotid arteries. This is essentially painless.

    It can be applied manually with a rear naked choke (don't mind the name - it's a strangle not a choke, as it prevents blood-flow but doesn't block the wind-pipe).

    I doubt it would take a huge feat of engineering to achieve that.

    My preferred solution would be to stop executing people, mind. That would solve the problem neatly.

  348. Only 1 guaranteed way by Muad'Dave · · Score: 1

    The only guaranteed way to execute someone in a purely binary "either you're alive and in no pain or you're instantly dead" is to have them wear a C4-lined helmet. Even if only 1 of the many detonators goes off, all of the explosives will go. The shockwave is faster than nerve speed, so they couldn't feel pain.

    --
    Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
  349. Re:Please stop. Just stop by NostalgiaForInfinity · · Score: 1

    but ethnicity and culture have nothing to do with this problem

    Ethnic and cultural homogeneity have everything to do with this problem, since crime and recidivism rates are highly linked to culture, and culture itself is highly linked to having a minority status.

    (Since you appear to be too stupid to understand this, let me spell it out: it's not membership in any specific "race" or ethnicity that is related to crime and recidivism, it is the status of being a minority inside a majority culture.)

  350. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Maritz · · Score: 1

    Of course I'm not sure what they think is evidence but I do not really care.

    No, that's abundantly clear.

    That is an extremely low rate if you ask me.

    Your cherry picked figures aside, I wonder about how many innocent people executed would constitute an unacceptable rate to you.

    --
    I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
  351. Drone on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use Obama's method:

    No judge, jury or right to counsel. Just use a drone and a missile

  352. What a question by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1
    Because civilized people don't execute criminals.

    Biblical revenge and other bullshit aside, I would like to suggest that if killing people is so awesome and wonderful and just, that in capital cases, if the wrong person is executed, the District attorney and jury who presided over the case, be executed. After all, he or she was responsible for killing an innocent person.

    And if that attorney is not around, then whoever is doing that job after them.

    Now suddenly, you are going to see people be a lot more careful about handing out death.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
  353. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    I believe you need to read Rosseau. There is something called "The Social Contract", which is something of a "shrink wrap license" you agree to by being born

    We have gone over this time and time again that EULAs are unenforceable. therefore Rosseaus "social contract" is bunk.

    Not really. You or I can't just opt out of whatever laws (or even customs) we feel like. We all have varying rights and responsibilities depending on where we live. Short of finding a self supporting desert island and only talking to the seagulls, you don't really have a choice.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  354. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    umm, the income tax is actually found in the constitution, not any "social contract" Better yet. where is this social contract so i can have my lawyer take a look at it and see if it stands up

    It's a metaphor, it would be like going to a stock exchange and trying to touch the Invisible Hand.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  355. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    The funny thing is that stuff like the constitutions of democracies are the closest real thing to actual social contracts. But the people who speak of social contracts tend to ignore that stuff.

    And people who ignore ideas like the social contact tend to believe that things like the Constitution are eternal verities, rather than partial codifications of already existing behaviour, designed primarily to formalise the power structure of that society..

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  356. Drones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US has plenty of practice killing people with drones. They claim a very high success rate.
    They are US made, so securing US jobs.

  357. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    The "social contract" is a fiction created by the elite to keep the rest of us in line.

    I always understood it to be a fiction or metaphor used by those who opposed the elite. Rousseau might have been wrong about many things, but he certainly believed in liberty, equality and fraternity.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  358. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    The "social contract" is an expression that one must suspend some "natural rights" (i.e. the freedom to "do whatever you want") in order to obtain the benefits of living in a society (i.e. to protect rights that need social defense).

    And this is precisely what so many of the rugged individualists on slashdot can't stand, and why they have been poo-pooing the Social Contract so vigorously. In the libertarian/Randian/Thatcherite view of many people here there is literally no such thing as society.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  359. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The term social contract originates with Rousseau. And it's clear that you're born into it. It doesn't make any sense to opt into it, because you're benefitting from the contract from the day you're born. And opt-in causes all sorts of obvious free rider problems.

    However, you're always free to leave the country. And therein is the element of choice. Were a country to ban emigration, then it necessarily wouldn't be providing a Rousseau-style social contract.

  360. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by slidester · · Score: 1

    Where are these income tax paying babies and children?

  361. why not sedative overdoses? by peter303 · · Score: 1

    It seems to happen to celebrities on a regular basis, especially if they've lost count of doses. And it should be painless too, knocking you out before killing you.
    The faulty "three step method" uses a sedative in the first does and then two more toxic chemicals after that.

  362. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It prevents a killer from killing again. Not all of them get life sentences. Someone who is willing to premeditate a murder of an innocent person does not need to be on this planet with the rest of us.

  363. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You conveniently overlook the truth that this stat is grossly exaggerated. Not all murderers get the death sentence. And if solitary is worse than death, then why would you want to do that to an innocent person who was wrongly convicted? You contradict yourself.

  364. Thunderdome! by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    Two men enter, one man leaves! Added entertainment bonus.

    Seriously, look to what other countries have done. I bullet, and a bill to the family. Of course that puts you in the China and Iraq (Hussian) category.

    Realistically morality aside, the only real reason a society might have capitol punishment, is a cost saving measure and to prevent victims from paying for incarceration. However in reality, in modern society with any sort of legal process, the cost to do so is many fold for that of just locking someone up forever.

    So just stop the practice really.

    There are still issues however. Recently in Canada a guy was released from mandated mental care which caused a stir. Some people argue that being found not criminally responsible due to mental condition deserves a second chance. Perhaps in some cases. Part of me however would argue that if you kill someone and decapitate them, in full view of everyone, that no you shouldn't have a second chance. You don't come back from that. You exit society forever.

  365. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    It is hate speech to point out that many/most receiving government handouts are also working under the table for cash.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  366. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    All societies have 'free rider' problems.

    At some point the cost of free riders is less then the costs of eliminating them.

    I for one feel no moral obligation to report all my income. I'm compelled to report my income by laws. No paper trail, no income. This is just good and natural.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  367. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Some would consider him a Martyr; some do.

    But that is no reason not to kill someone who needs killing. It is reason to kill those who consider him a Martyr also.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  368. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

    What have you been smoking? Social contract theory is a philosophy; it's an idea. It was not perpetrated by some Illuminati conspiracy theory to keep people in check. Even within your own argument, you bash social contract theory in one paragraph, then praise its merits in the next based on the implementing class.

    If you want to argue over the merits of an ethical philosophy, have some idea of what you are talking about: http://www.philosophybasics.co...

    If you want to complain about the overbearing police state the US has become, that's ok to. But don't string big words together if you don't know what they mean.

    --
    Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  369. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You don't need to give the government power to execute to solve that.

    Just eliminate 'protective custody' in prison. Tell the prisoners, 'Just don't kill the fucker, Do anything, but don't kill him'. When they do kill him by accident, slap their wrists.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  370. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Hess had dirt on the English royal family.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  371. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by david_thornley · · Score: 1

    There doesn't need to be a conscious acceptance of the "social contract" to be subject to it. By living in this country, you're subject to our laws. It's not what I'd consider a contract, but it does appear to be a necessary part of living as a society.

    --
    "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
  372. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Face it: Yes, it is wrong to kill any human being. Some people, however, have committed crimes so heinous that they no longer qualify as human beings, just because they happen to have a particular DNA sequence.

    .. and some people decide that's because they don't believe in the same god, don't accept the same society rules, are homosexuals, ..

    You're tying yourself up with semantics. Of course they are still a human being if they have human DNA and are, in fact, human. So you need to either change your mind about not killing any humans, join up with the anti-execution crowd, or find a better argument than "their crimes make them non-human". Basically, you need to use logic correctly when making an argument.

  373. Re:Please stop. Just stop by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    Your cherry picked figures aside,

    I wonder about how many innocent people executed would constitute an unacceptable rate to you.

    Well, right now, it seems we sentence to death a little over six tenths of one percent of the convicts compared to the number of people murdered. In other words, of the number of people murdered, we only prosecute and sentence to death roughly 0.6% in comparison. Come talk to me when that number reaches 1 percent or better.

  374. Re:Make it a real deterent or stop. Penalize Mista by Charcharodon · · Score: 1

    You sad, sad little troll. Do you even know what a vigilante is? A citizen defending themselves from a criminal is not a vigilante.

  375. This is not that hard. by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    1) Is it right to do this? Of course, I can show you Baltimore City - doesn't have DP and Baltimore County - does have DP. That political line is like magic with crime. No doubt about it, it is a deterrent. The rest of the world that did away with the DP need to admit they are wrong. No shame in admitting you're wrong as long as you truly believed you were right all along.
    2) How to do it - They have got to be kidding. There are so many ways that I know of I can hardly count them all. Some very very cruel, some they wouldn't even know. So let's visit some:
        A) Hang 'em, hang 'em high! This is the way it SHOULD be done. On a national holiday. Sell tickets. Let people see morality and how horrible it is. Not in some back room where nobody sees it. We'll get a lot more respect for one another. Maybe we as a society won't be so eager to kill each other via wars. A lot to ask I know, we seem to really like to kill each other.
        B) Shoot 'em via firing squad. I'm against this one because that's a soldiers death. They shouldn't have that honor.
        C) Shoot 'em in the back of the head in their cell - acceptable. They'll never see it coming.
        D) Gas - take your pick. Chloroform, Ether, heck even a computer duster can be used. More toxic ones can be nasty. Chloro used to be used for patients.
        E) Drowning - Easy to implement. Steel tube, grate on top, flood it. Drowns like a rat. So many ways for this one.
        F) poison - any farm has this stuff.

          And so on. I'm sure there are prisons with people that have all kinds of good ideas on how to kill someone.

  376. HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I were to contemplate suicide I would choose carbon monoxide (CO) assuming I could get access to a cylinder of the stuff.
    Many people currently die annually from this, for instance when huddled around a natural gas heater if there is inadequate ventilation to the outside air.
    I see no point in inflicting unnecessary pain on anyone and really given a choice I'd vote against the death penalty but while it exists would not carbon monoxide be a peaceful way to die ?

  377. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by quantaman · · Score: 1

    There is something called "The Social Contract", which is something of a "shrink wrap license" you agree to by being born into a society, that by doing so, you agree to abide by that societies rules.

    Ridiculous. You can't agree to anything just by being born; you aren't even sentient at that point. There is no meeting of the minds, no clear agreement. If this so-called "social contract" existed, it would be a contract of adhesion which no human being in history ever explicitly agreed to, and any competent court would throw it out with prejudice after a cursory hearing.

    What about the laws of physics? Can I opt out of those as well?

    If you're posting on slashdot you're probably from a wealthy nation, which means you have the ability to emigrate. You have the ability to either work to change the social contract of the nation you live in or move to another nation where the contract is more agreeable. But unless you have some political/cultural arrangement I'm not aware of I'm not sure there is such thing as a society where you don't have to agree to anything you don't want to.

    --
    I stole this Sig
  378. no state should have the right to murder people by cas2000 · · Score: 1

    it's just too dangerous a power for them to have.

    but since the death penalty does exist in some places, IMO the only reasonable way to do it is:

    1. the victim or a close member of the victim's family MUST be the ones to do the killing. no exceptions, except for one and only one circumstance (if the victim has no living family, then the prosecutor MUST be the state's killer) - if they can't stomach doing it, then it shouldn't be done.

    The method should be as gruesome yet painless as possible - knockout drugs followed by manual beheading, perhaps...but there should be no euphemistic way of disguising the fact that a state-sanctioned *murder* is being committed.

    2. if it is later discovered that they executed an innocent person, then they and everyone else directly involved in the execution (prosecutor, prison guards, etc) MUST be charged with murder and also subject to the death penalty.

    3. prosecutors MUST be charged with attempted murder if (while the death row prisoner is still living) it is found that they ignored or suppressed evidence that proves innocence or provides enough reasonable doubt for a jury to acquit.

  379. 200 mg of Amlodipine by NewYork · · Score: 1

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes...
    http://timesofindia.indiatimes...

    PS: I'm against capital punishment of any kind.

  380. Psychopaths do not fear prosecution/punishment; by NewYork · · Score: 1

    Psychopaths do not fear prosecution/punishment;
    http://www.sciencedaily.com/re...

    How to fix it?

  381. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    I'm not talking about the theory of a social contract. I'm talking about the way it's being used in Western societies.

    Whatever the philosophy behind it, there has been such a perversion of the social contract (and misuse of classical ethical philosophy) that it has lost its meaning in regard to the relationship of the people who produce to the people who own.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  382. why not use drugs we know kill quietly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like ohhhh idk all the ones that just shut things down liiike morphine?

  383. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

    There are many classical ethical philosophies, which you clearly don't understand. Social contract isn't then end all be all of theories. If you warp one philosophy you tend to end up actually using another or a blend of several. Our current state is a mix of egoism, social contract and utilitarianism, all poorly implemented.

    Blame the theory all you want, but it's only a fool who blames his tools.

    --
    Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  384. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    There are many classical ethical philosophies

    Fair enough. I'm talking specifically about the dialectic between deontology and consequentialism, which are the underpinnings of what most of us understand as "classical ethical philosophy". Both are predicated on a view of ethics based on somebody else deciding what's wrong and what's right. And both are artifacts of a system that has put all the power (including the power to decide ethics) in the hands of a few and sought to keep it there.

    It's all academic window-dressing meant to make the elite feel better about their amoralism.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  385. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

    This is a huge oversimplification of many concepts stemming from your predisposed views of the world.

    Foremost, amoralism is systemic to the human condition. Rich people, poor people average people, all have the capacity for moral and immoral acts.

    Secondly, ethics is always based on what someone else deems as right and wrong. Ethics is the code of conduct between one person and everyone else. Even if you decided what was right and wrong, the rest of the world would be subject to the right and wrong decided by someone else. It is a group effort.

    Lastly, classical ethics for the most part was created by the rich and powerful. But that is because they were the educated, not because they were trying to take over the world. The uneducated, even today, don't sit around thinking about the fundamentals of ethical theory.

    --
    Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  386. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    Lastly, classical ethics for the most part was created by the rich and powerful. But that is because they were the educated

    I want you to think about that statement, long and hard, until you've achieved enlightenment.

    I'll wait here.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  387. Re:Your justice system is flawed, too. by Shortguy881 · · Score: 1

    You are assigning causation where there is only correlation. That is a common logical fallacy. I am saying there is a correlation between being educated, being wealthy and discussing ethical theory. You are saying because someone is wealthy and well educated, they created ethical theory to maintain wealth.

    You are inferring causation where there is none, and it seems to be based on your predisposition to dislike people with money.

    --
    Brilliance without wisdom, power without conscience. Ours is a world of nuclear giants and ethical infants.
  388. But if you must by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just take off & nuke them from orbit - it's the only way to be sure.

  389. Stop killing people by MoarSauce123 · · Score: 1

    That applies to both criminals as well as states and federal. The death penalty is not a deterrent, it is not reversible, plenty of wrongly accused people were killed, and if electrocuting, poisoning, or gassing someone is not a "cruel and unusual punishment" as is prohibited by the Constitution then what is? It is long overdue for the US to join the modern cultures and do away with barbaric punishments.

  390. Re:Please stop. Just stop by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    "If a someone released from prison murders again then it's the State that failed to rehabilitate."

    And the victim is every bit as dead.