• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1110 months ago

    That is your definition of justice. I personally believe that a murder in response to a murder just makes two murders. I don’t see justice in that.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      210 months ago

      No, I’m talking about absolute justice. Your version is just a degree from letting them off Scott free. If the deterrent for death isn’t death then why punish them at all?

      I don’t think people with your reasoning realize that you’re giving the murder what they want. Literally no one wants to die but ppl can do life in prison and laugh about all the people they killed and even profit or be glorified.

      That’s your idea of justice in this case and it’s a slap on the face to families who have lost loved ones.
      As far as I’m concerned you should look at it like every killer that gets out and kills again is on the shoulders of people like you.

      • 1ostA5tro6yne
        link
        fedilink
        7
        edit-2
        10 months ago

        imagine living in TYoOL Two Thousand Twenty Four and still thinking the Code of Hammurabi is the epitome of justice, and that convicts are literal inhuman monsters 100% of the time that exist only to kill and terrorize and crime on people. The system can and does fuck up so the question becomes are all the innocent prisoners executed in Texas every year worth satisfying your absolutely bronze-age sense of justice, or do you think you can join the adults in the room in valuing human life even when it’s complicated?

        PS numerous studies have showed the death penalty is not a deterrent, so like there aren’t even facts in your corner, just infantile fee-fees and baby-brained fearmongering.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        510 months ago

        My friend, if death is the punishment for a single murder, what’s stopping them from killing 2 people? 3? 4? 10?

        When you dole out a “this is the worst we can do to you” punishment, there’s no reason to stop. This concept actually increases the chances of crime, because “fuck it, I’m gonna die anyway.”

        It’s also extremely short sighted. For every ~9 inmates found guilty and sentenced to death, 1 is exonerated. And that isn’t even mentioning the number of people who have been executed who were proven innocent after the fact.

        How about we just make the chances of killing an innocent person 0% by no longer executing people?