You just learned differently, didn't you?
Loaded question, isn't it?
As you now realize,
More of the same...
it would unjustly kill scores of innocent people.
As you were just told, no it wouldn't.
That doesn't seem like a very good "deterrent" to me. [/COLOR="#FF0000"]And you still haven't told us how many innocent people you're willing to put to death to kill murerers promptly.[/COLOR]
Because, again, it's a loaded question.
By the way, you didn't answer my questions. Please do so:
And how long did it take for them to actually execute the criminals after sentencing? Was it within 24-48 hours? or was it several years after the fact? My premise, Barbarian, is that a SWIFT punishment is a sufficient deterrent against crime. |
Barbarian observes:
As I showed you, the lengthy appeals process saved over 20 innocent people in Texas alone.
Show us how saving innocent people from unjust execution costs lives.
This is called moving the goalposts.
I have already shown how your position which favors saving innocent lives over punishing the guilty costs lives.
Not why it seems like it should to someone. Show us how it costs lives with testable evidence.
Because the sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil. - Ecclesiastes 8:11 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ecclesiastes8:11&version=NKJV
And will you profane Me among My people for handfuls of barley and for pieces of bread, killing people who should not die, and keeping people alive who should not live, by your lying to My people who listen to lies?” - Ezekiel 13:19 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel13:19&version=NKJV
Presumption of innocence is the way America works.
And?
Look, when a person commits a crime, they are guilty the moment they do so, are they not? They're not "innocent until proven guilty in a court of law." They're guilty, regardless of what a judge rules, whether his ruling is correct or incorrect.
Whether they are convicted or not is another matter, and it is ONLY IN COURT that a person is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
There are some other nations where that's not true. I think they accept immigrants.
How about your evidence? The evidence shows that states that don't kill murderers have fewer murders than states that do.
This is a McNamara fallacy, or at the very least, special pleading.
You're ignoring the one part of my argument that makes the difference.
The time element.
How quickly does the state put to death the convicted person?
If it's anything more than 48 hours, the death penalty becomes less and less effective.
So show us that evidence.
It's not an arguable point. We have all those people wrongly condemned, who would have been killed by the state, if you had your way.
Wrong.
Again, the crimes they were wrongfully convicted of would have never happened in the first place with a swift and painful execution of murderers.
No way to deny it. Is that all right with you or not?
Saying it doesn't make it so, Barb.
So why so willing to have innocent people executed?
Yet another loaded question.
So you're saying one innocent person executed avoid letting one guilty person go free, is an acceptable arrangement?
Have you run out of arguments that quickly already, Barbarian?
What I am saying is that it is never ok to kill an innocent person, and it is never ok to let a guilty person go free.
Your problem, Barb, is that God said to put the one convicted of murder to death, which means that you have no right whatsoever to say that doing so is unjust, because God also said, "life for life."
I merely note that states that don't kill murderers have lower murder rates. That seems to be a good thing to me.
Which means that, once again, I have to point out that correlation does not equal causation.
You're ignoring (special pleading against, really) the facts that I stated a few posts ago, that 31 out of 50 states have not executed anyone in the past 10 years, and 37 in the past 5. In other words, I make the point that the reason the death penalty is not currently a strong deterrent is that it is not swiftly enacted for each criminal guilty of a capital crime.
It's what someone told you God says.
Rather, it's something recorded in Ezekiel as being said by God.
And will you profane Me among My people for handfuls of barley and for pieces of bread, killing people who should not die, and keeping people alive who should not live, by your lying to My people who listen to lies?” - Ezekiel 13:19 http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ezekiel13:19&version=NKJV
But when Jesus was put in the position of deciding on a death penalty case according to OT laws, His response was:
"Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more."
This has been discussed ad nauseum on other threads, and it never gets anywhere, because you (and those who think Jesus abolished the death penalty) never consider the passage as a whole, and what actually happened.
It's on a lot of sites, but here's the first one that came up:
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2011/06/long-term-trend-in-homicide-rates.html
You could always get the result you want by carefully limiting the years you covered. Cherry-picking isn't very useful; I could use the same data to show the opposite. But the trend is for homicides to decline over time.
I get that someone cherry picked OT laws, deleting the ones they didn't like and taking the ones they did, and then tried to apply from God's theocracy in Israel, the same thing to a government of men in this country. As Madison noted, such things have always led to corruption, evil, and horror.
We know you like avoiding questions that poke holes in your position. Answer, please:
And how long did it take for them to actually execute the criminals after sentencing? Was it within 24-48 hours? or was it several years after the fact? My premise, Barbarian, is that a SWIFT punishment is a sufficient deterrent against crime. Executing criminals years after the fact is not swift. |
At the cost of how many lives, Barb? How many people were killed by the ones who were let go because of the system that is biased towards saving the innocent over punishing the guilty? My guess is that it's more than 20. |
And another, new question:
Is there anything wrong with taking God's laws on morality and applying them to society?
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