VMI77 wrote:
I've heard that supposed cost comparison and just figured it was bogus but never bothered to find out how. So, it's an apples and oranges comparison. It doesn't cost more to keep them in prison for life; it costs more to keep them in prison and allow them to abuse the legal system. If cost is your concern, the solution is simple: curtail the abuse of the courts.
I'll state that another way: Decrease what it costs to keep people in prison.
Yep, if you do that, I can't make the cost argument. Changing the "abuse" also changes the system itself. For bad guys, I think that's a good idea. For good guys, it's a bad idea. We got a lot of one and a little of the other in prison.
VMI77 wrote:
The "it's cheaper" argument is bogus. It would be cheaper not to prosecute them at all, let them go. Keeping them alive, even in prison, puts other people at risk: prison guards and other employees and other prisoners. How much is the life of someone in for possessing marijuana worth? If there is no death penalty then every murder after the first one is a freebie.
There are two arguments there - cheaper and safer. I don't dispute that it's less safe for guards and staff to have them in prison over having them dead. I do dispute that it's more cost effective to execute them, under the current system.
VMI77 wrote:
There is a cost to doing what's right. Even if it were truly the case that it cost more for an execution, there are some crimes for which execution is the right and just penalty. Twenty years on death row filing bogus court petitions is neither right nor just.
I agree with you in terms of the concept of justice for people that are guilty. When I hear "right" that means "moral" to me, I'm not sure if it does to you. I think the moral rule is pretty clear. I'm not saying that I'm any better than anyone else, to each his/her own.
VMI77 wrote:
The acceptable number of executed innocent people is zero. As long as the planet is populated by human beings there will be no perfect system. Is an American life more valuable than a Pakistani life? Should we not drone strike terrorists because an innocent will be killed? I don't think anybody posting here believes it is acceptable to execute an innocent person by mistake, but this a theoretical position that doesn't fully translate into real life.
If the acceptable number of innocent people being killed is zero, how can you support the current system? BaldEagles point is that I can't prove that we've ever executed someone that we could prove was factually innocent, but I can prove that we've executed people based on evidence that was not real... Sure, they might have done the crime. We've certainly sent people to death row for decades that were proven to be factually innocent, so it's hard to say that the solution is to remove their ability to appeal the sentence.
In terms of drone strikes, I'm glad I don't have to make those decisions. Others have served so I haven't had to be in that position.
VMI77 wrote:
They may be technically innocent, but often have committed another crime that is as bad or worse than the one they're being tried for, and just gotten away with it.
I'm not speaking to "technically" innocent or legally innocent. I'm speaking to factually or actually innocent. Lots of bad guys get off the justice hook, that's for sure.
Tell me it's OK when you're written a speeding ticket if you weren't speeding... I mean, you probably sped at some time last week, right?
VMI77 wrote:
Secondly, the idea that life in prison is more just to an innocent person is debatable and is an individual perception. You, as an innocent person, might prefer life in prison to the death penalty, but I wouldn't. The implied presumption in claiming a life sentence to be more just is that the person has a chance at exoneration, but realistically, what are the odds such a person will be exonerated? We don't know, and can't know, but given the fact that those most likely to have been wrongly convicted are the most likely to lack the resources to challenge their conviction, I'd guess the odds are slim to none. You yourself described life in prison as a harsher penalty than death, so what are you most likely condemning the rare innocent to? And in reality, the kind of person that is really "innocent" is not likely to be the kind of person that will fare well in prison. That doesn't sound very just to me.
Putting an innocent person in prison isn't just, VM. I can't argue with you there. At least we agree that there is a rare innocent... I'm just trying to call that spade a spade - which is we inherently fry an innocent fish to get rid of the really bad fish. To me, it's a fact, not an opinion. And it's something that isn't always presented to supporters because the violence of the bad fish get all the attention. If you or anyone else thing that it's an acceptable loss statistic, although a regrettable one, I'm not going to judge that... I'm just saying it's not for me.