wayfriend wrote:Truly, having a "bar" for the death penalty just means that situations are "adjusted" to be above or below the bar as one's bias dictates. The number of people on death row who were exonerated before execution, and the reasons why they were exonerated, provide some deeply disturbing and compelling stories about the use of the death penalty.
For this reason, I say we are probably all better off not having a death penalty. Not because no one deserves it, but because no one can be trusted with it.
I lean towards this position more and more.
And I think - as usual - that this smaller issue is part and parcel with the larger issues of our militarized police, the legal deference to law enforcement and government (from qualified immunity to asset forfeiture), a politicized legal system that equates success with how many people are imprisoned and for how long, the for-profit prison system, the inability of people who have been released from prison to find work, and the fact that there's no mental health system, meaning that the legal/prison system is used to deal with people who should be institutionalized, not imprisoned.
Which, of course, opens up the discussion to Big Pharma, who was instrumental in turning mental healthcare from treatment-based care into "moar pills".
The catholic church is the largest pro-pedophillia group in the world, and every member of it is guilty of supporting the rape of children, the ensuing protection of the rapists, and the continuing suffering of the victims.