Doug M.
Member
Opioid overdose. I bet there are prisoners with fentanyl in that prison right now.
I always thought that the "Cruel and unusual punishment" thing was intended to prohibit medieval torture and execution practices such as stretching on the rack, drawing and quartering, pouring molten lead down your throat, roasting in the hollow iron bull, intentional starvation, burning at the stake, etc. Now it has been perverted to include any kind of life-taking method, no matter how humane. So what is kindly and usual punishment?
Self-execution might be the answer. Put the prisoner in a cell along with all the drugs and paraphernalia of whatever kind he prefers and let him have at it until he ODs. Death by Coke.The old "no deterrent" argument. It's not a deterrent, it is punishment and an assurance that he will not do it again.
I don’t think any sentence is a deterrent. Bad people are going to do bad things regardless of consequences. How bout we for once just look at it as PUNISHMENT!!! Some people (monsters) are simply not fit to walk among us. I cringe when I hear people talking about reforming an inmate. Just punish them!
Bring back the firing squad. Quick, cheap, and fast. 10 Garands and 1 with a blank.
I don’t think any sentence is a deterrent. Bad people are going to do bad things regardless of consequences. How bout we for once just look at it as PUNISHMENT!!! Some people (monsters) are simply not fit to walk among us. I cringe when I hear people talking about reforming an inmate. Just punish them!
The old "no deterrent" argument. It's not a deterrent, it is punishment and an assurance that he will not do it again.
Anyone ever see the Stacy Keach movie "The Traveling Executioner"? Apparently based at least partly on fact about an executioner who traveled around several southern states in the early 20th Century doing executions using a truck-mounted electric chair and generator.
There is a fascinating biography about Albert Pierrepoint, the famous British executioner of the early-mid 20th Century, before the British abolished capital punishment. He was one of a very few official British executioners, and probably the busiest. I do not remember the title, but after you start reading it, I guarantee you will not be able to put it down. When he was not out doing hangings (lots of those), he ran a London pub. His father and uncle had also been official British executioners and he apprenticed under
them.
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This is the book: Amazon.com
What is it about life in prison without parole that doesn't sound like punishment? I did not discuss reform. And, life in prison without parole would tend to indicate the "monsters" will not be walking among us.
I respect your views but please don't distort mine.
Bryan
The Army hangman was a Sergeant Woods. His specialty was a short drop hanging, resulting in strangulation deaths of his victims. Later when assigned to another posting with an engineering detachment he was accidentally electrocuted. I thought that was poetic justice.When I was a Grad student at the University of London's Queen Mary College, I would occasionally go over to his pub for a drink. Quite laid back for his part-time job. He also had another PT job as a "Hangman" when he was brought over to Germany in 1946 to complete the execution of a number of Nazi war criminals after the "self-taught" US Army hangman was "removed" due to incompetence. Dave_n
It does...And so does execution...Of the two, execution is a more effective deterrent against further commission of crime...Again, do you believe life in prison without parole does not constitute punishment?
What is it about life in prison without parole that doesn't sound like punishment?
Said it before; capital punishment is a general waste of taxpayer money as it is almost universally more expensive than life in prison without parole. And life sentences have the advantage of being reversible if the conviction proves to be in error.
There is a plethora of evidence that the threat of capital punishment does not serve as a sufficient deterrent for capital criminal activity.
As with most "rules" the interpretation proves to be the interesting part. Bryan
And life sentences have the advantage of being reversible if the conviction proves to be in error.