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A friend recently wondered how many here support capital punishment but was afraid to ask. What do you think is the strongest arguments for and against it? @Armour of God, @Taken, @Debp, @Button, @Aunty Jane, @Reggie Belafonte, @Lizbeth
Just last weekend, I told my daughter that by the time someone becomes an adult, they hardly ever change their mind on any moral issue. And when they do, it's often because of a S.E.E. - a significant emotional event. This is a topic I wrote about before in the context something I changed my mind on.
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PRO'S:
CONS
CONCLUSION
From a numerical average perspective, obviously there are more arguments in favor. However, if one does a weighted average analysis, it can tilt the result to be opposed, which is what happened with me. Can devout Christians such as us agree to disagree on this important moral issue? Thoughts?
Just last weekend, I told my daughter that by the time someone becomes an adult, they hardly ever change their mind on any moral issue. And when they do, it's often because of a S.E.E. - a significant emotional event. This is a topic I wrote about before in the context something I changed my mind on.
As an Adult, On What Moral Issue Have You Changed Your Mind?
This thread got me thinking https://www.christianityboard.com/threads/do-you-believe-in-biological-evolution.73976/ As an Adult, On What Moral Issue Have You Changed Your Mind? For all the debating in our society, this question reveals the futility in it, for the most part. For me, I can think...
PRO'S:
1. JUSTICE. Leviticus 24:17-22 (REV)
17“‘And if a man takes the life of any human being, he must be put to death, yes, death.
18He who takes the life of an animal is to make restitution for it, life for life.d
19If anyone injures his fellow Israelite, as he has done, so it is to be done to him:
20fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth. As he has injured someone, so is it to be done to him.
21He who kills an animal is to make restitution, but he who kills a human is to be put to death.
22You are to have one kind of law for the sojourner as well as the native-born; because I am Yahweh your God.’”
Evidence on the deterrent effect of capital punishment is important for many states that are currently reconsidering their position on the issue. We examine the deterrent hypothesis by using county-level, postmoratorium panel data and a system of simultaneous equations. The procedure we employ overcomes common aggregation problems, eliminates the bias arising from unobserved heterogeneity, and provides evidence relevant for current conditions. Our results suggest that capital punishment has a strong deterrent effect; each execution results, on average, in eighteen fewer murders—with a margin of error of plus or minus ten. Tests show that results are not driven by tougher sentencing laws and are robust to many alternative specifications.
This is highly debated and most groups deny there is evidence of a deterrent affect although many anecdotally believe it is a deterrent.
3. FINANCIAL-DEFEATING THE PRISON INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX
Sadly, in America the prison system has grown into a multi-billion dollar industry. America imprisons a larger % of its citizens than any country on Earth. Who does this benefit? Certainly not society.
The cost of execution, the cost of a bullet, electricity, chemicals or scaffolding is far less than 50 years in prison. The American system of appeals taking decades makes a mockery of the Constitutional guarantee of a speedy trial. This corruption of the trial and appeals process is often used falsely to claim it is not cheaper to execute someone. Of course capital punishment is cheaper by over 99.9%.
4. HISTORY
Leviticus goes back to nearly 2,000 BC. The death penalty has always been a part of human civilization. It's only new age, modern sensibility that it, like slavery, is considered barbaric and offends modern, delicate sensibilities. That is not the consensus of history.
CONS
1. PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHTS
Government, being an extension of the people, cannot have rights the people don't have. And people do not have the right to kill someone where there is not a self-defense scenario. In other words, once a person is captured and arrested, killing by the State is murder.
2. NO REMEDY FOR ERROR
First formulated in a 1769 doctrine that says, “it is better that 10 guilty persons escape, than that 1 innocent suffer.” In the event that a person was wrongly imprisoned, society can compensate him financially so he might best enjoy his remaining years. With capital punishment, there is no remedy to compensate a person for error in our fallible justice system.
CONCLUSION
From a numerical average perspective, obviously there are more arguments in favor. However, if one does a weighted average analysis, it can tilt the result to be opposed, which is what happened with me. Can devout Christians such as us agree to disagree on this important moral issue? Thoughts?
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