FEOS wrote:
No. In that aspect, the justice system failed them. Our system is supposed to be founded on the principle that it is better to set 100 guilty free than to imprison a single innocent. Unfortunately, the practice doesn't live up to the principle.
And that realization alone should be excuse enough to to reserve the death sentence to the most heinous of crimes where there is no shadow of doubt (serial killers, mass murder, etc). The very astute observation that the justice system is not perfect nor self-correcting is evidence enough in my eyes to in the very least change the sentencing guidelines for death penalty.
KnowMeByTrailOfDead wrote:
I agree with Iron Chef - work the bastards and let them live as long as the like. Privatize prisons so that they are profitable and no longer a bane on society and you will see more support for eliminating the death penalty. If they had a primary task of manufacturing basic goods we could off set the imports we receive from China. It isn't like we have to pay minimum wage. They work to earn their room and board. If they don't work they don't eat, just like any other person in the work force. If I stopped working, I would loose everything including my next meal. Just think how the balance of the economy would shift if all our prisons were self sustaining and were able to minimize out dependence on our communist friends.
I am not categorically opposed to working the prison population. However, the whole Lord of The Flies or Gulag style work program will never get my vote of approval.
Privatizing prisons is an incredibly close-minded approach to dealing with crime and punishment. I do not think it is conducive to a civilized society to have a sector of economy dedicated to profiting on punishment and crime. Look at California, where the Prison Guard Lobby is the most influential PAC in California - not only are more prisons being built, but tougher sentencing guidelines are routinely introduced on behalf of those lobbies, and more and more state money is funnelled to the private sector of corrections.
I do believe the idea of a self-sufficient prison system or at least a less of a burden on taxpayer money is an interesting and very workable solution. The correctional system is much like the health care system in the U.S. - a lot of associated costs that really have no business being there.