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Do you support the death penalty?

Last time I looked a majority of Brits support the death penalty. Which personally I've always found quite disturbing considering all the problems with it.

But 5 mins on any subreddit and you have people frothing at the mouth to hang every criminal.

Which if even more disturbing.

So what do you think?

40 comments
  • What moral authority does society have to say that killing is wrong, if it does it itself? Justice needs to have higher standards than the people it's passing judgement on.

  • Nope. I don't think we should be giving the state the power to execute people. Plus obviously there's always the chance that they're innocent.

    I always find it kind of strange where in the US there's a big anti-government mentality but they're happy for the government to execute people.

    • A slight majority of American support it. I, for one, do not. The margin of error is terrible and the govt is all too willing to cover up its mistakes.

  • Definitely not. There are the obvious issues with miscarriages of justice but also I think that an eye for an eye justice is archaic.

  • It’s too greater a power to hand to an imperfect state. The justice system can never be reliable enough to ensure someone is wrongfully executed.

    That said, loosing decades of life to a wrongful life sentence can’t be undone either. So I would say opposition to it the death penalty goes hand in hand with support for reforming and improving the justice system

  • I do not support the death penalty. In all cases, either death is going too far, or death is too good. Also, while you can let someone out of prison and compensate them for false imprisonment, you can't exactly resurrect people who turn out to be innocent.

    In fact, I would say that the whole judicial system could be improved so criminals are rehabilitated, rather than punished.

    Of course, I also believe there is an exception to every rule (including this rule), so there's probably an acceptable set of unusual circumstances in which classical imprisonment or even death are the best options; though I do not know what these would be.

  • No. I don't believe the state should have the power to end someone's life. That's my fundamental position. I would also argue that if it did, this is open to abuses of power, corruption, and miscarriages of justice that can never be fixed.

    Are there people I wish were dead, and who I think deserve to be killed? Sometimes. But that's not a pleasant thought, and I certainly don't think that my emotions should be carried into action, because it doesn't get humanity anywhere in the long run.

  • No. Quite aside from the certainty the state will accidentally execute innocent people and that the media would push for it for completely inappropriate situations, the job of the state is be to protect it's citizens (hence the army and police being separate) so it is morally indefensible for the state to ever kill any of its citizens

  • I don't support the death penalty in any case.

    My problem with the UK in general is that many people do not have any faith or any real understanding in our justice system. They view prison as a "punishment", and ignore the point of it also being a place for rehabilitation. I think that most Brits look at the US justice system and think "yeah, I'd love a bit of that", all while they shower praise on places like Timpsons for giving jobs to ex-prisoners looking to get their life back on track.

    Back to murder, when you view prison as only punishment you look at murder as "the ultimate punishment", which is essentially no different to the crime the person committed. The crime was an extreme reaction, so you pair it with an equal extreme reaction? It's also the easy way out, where in reality someone that has committed a truly despicable crime should face a long time under surveillance to separate them from society. In the UK, you don't just "get released" like in the US, you stay on registers, you have to check in weekly, and you are closely monitored - with one slip-up throwing your ass back into jail.

    I put much of it down to ignorance from the public, and the fact that generally the British public are probably more right-wing than people believe.

  • If the state is licensed to execute for crime, then it makes swings in government much more scary.
    Say the next election were won by a party that decided to make my sexual orientation completely illegal, with the harshest penalties.
    Without capital punishment, I go to prison, and I can hope that a new government reverses course.
    With capital punishment, the infrastructure is already in place, and I swing from the gallows with machine-like efficiency.

    I guess my point is that some people support the death penalty, without considering that it could be applied to situations they would not agree with it being used for. And that the only way to avoid creeping grey areas is abolition.

40 comments