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Harry Roberts released
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thegreatapeFree Member
I oppose mandatory life means life for cop killing. What if a police man attacks me for no reason I lawfully defend myself but then go a shade too far and get an unnecessary blow in that kills him , what if a cops wife victim of years of spousal abuse snaps and kills him when off duty
Neither of those examples would fit the reasoning anyway – it’s the murder of police officers who are acting in the course of their duties that is the aggravation.
yunkiFree MemberI’ve met enough crims over the years that don’t view Police Officers as human..
The thinking being that the brain of the Police Officer is wired up differently, and so they’re considered to be an inferior species..
So you could argue perhaps, that in some ways his crime deserved a lesser sentence perhaps more in line with unlawfully killing an animalseosamh77Free Memberthe trolley problem is kinda irrelevant no? the killing has already been done with a murderer. so it’s not an either or scenario.
seosamh77Free Membermogrim – Member
The difference here is that there is no certainty with the death penalty that any action will lead to any outcome other than people will die.
There is the certainty that a dead person won’t kill anyone ever again.If everyone is dead, no one will kill again. that’s silly logic.
mogrimFull MemberIf everyone is dead, no one will kill again. that’s silly logic.
<insert Judge Death picture here />
nickcFull Memberagain lack of critical thinking, Trolley problem is not applicable here.
Trolley problem is about unintended consequences of two bad choices; kill one or kill 5, and it says nothing about the problem faced by what to do with people that murder, it’s not the same dilemma. Here the problem is one of punishment not choice, the bad choice has already been made, adding the extra death, the moral absolutists say: you are merely compounding the original error with no advantage or resolution other than revenge. which is morally unjustifiable.
innit
crankboyFree MemberThanks mogrim the trolley problem is really interesting but the Death Penalty issue is much less factually clear cut and so fits better to resolution by moral absolutes there is no cogent evidence that the death penalty achieves anything by way of crime reduction it certainly has no deterrent effect , the truth is very few convicted killers go on to do it again even without the death penalty. The death penalty may in fact cause crime, offender commits capital crime may as well go on a spree as they can only hang me once or may as well use lethal force to evade justice for same reason (The Dead Man Walking idea.) The Death Penalty also puts additional pressure on a jury who may well acquit when they would otherwise convict.
crankboyFree MemberThe greatape that is great but still opens an infinite can of worms can I get off if my copper victim made the slightest procedural mistake ? I commit robbery an on duty police man sees me I shoot at him miss, an off duty policeman on his way home rushes to help I kill him .
mogrimFull Memberthe trolley problem is kinda irrelevant no?
again lack of critical thinking, Trolley problem is not applicable here.
Apologies (for once): I thought most people would understand I meant the family of problems, not the single specific case of 1 man vs. 5.
https://philosophynow.org/issues/86/How_To_Get_Off_Our_Trolleys
seosamh77Free MemberYour link is behind a paywall.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trolley_problem#The_fat_man
These 5 scenarios? still don’t see their relevance…
incidently, I’d leave train on it’s original course, if the five dumb **** are on a rail line and haven’t allocated one as lookout, then that’s their problem! 😆 The lone guy you can maybe understand might not see the train as that’s a health and safety nightmare right there, and it’s unfair to send him to his death based on his companies negligence! 😆
dbcooperFree MemberThere is the certainty that a dead person won’t kill anyone ever again.
As long as you are certain they did kill in the first place.
mogrimFull MemberYour link is behind a paywall.
Is it? Weird, so it is. And I’ve just been reading it… Odd.
Anyway, the relevant bit:
Imagine applying our trolley logic to the case of the death penalty. Imagine further that a new study showed that, without question, the death penalty really does cut down the number of murders committed in any given year. Surely, under such (admittedly hypothetical) circumstances, the lever diverting the trolley would be rapidly replaced by the lever operating the executioner’s trapdoor. In fact, the replacement is made easier when we consider that the ‘sacrificed’ individual is likely to be a cold-blooded murderer. The wrinkle here is the word ‘likely’, because, from a purely utilitarian perspective, the occasional execution of an innocent makes no difference to the morality of the death penalty – the net benefit justifies the sacrifice.
At this point some readers might be feeling a little uneasy because they can feel that no slope is slipperier than the one we’re now on. So let’s say that it turns out that executing the family of a murderer is even more likely to produce a net reduction in pain and suffering – perhaps the deterrence effect is so strong that we only need to wipe out one family per year to guarantee a violence-free life for the rest of us.
Or, imagine a further series of trolley-like situations. Firstly, a terrorist group hijacks an airliner and demands that David Cameron be handed over to them for ‘revolutionary justice’. If we do not comply with their demands, they will blow up the airliner and all on board. We might construct a utilitarian argument for not giving in to the terrorists on the grounds that doing so will encourage further outrages of the same kind; but is this the only moral reason not to drag Mr Cameron to his death? Most of us would think not.
… and I’m pretty sure what binners’ opinion will be about the last bit 🙂
nickcFull Membermogrim the trolley dillima and all it’s variants are not the same dilemma.
The trolley problem is an ethical decision, the least bad option of two. In it some unintended harm will come to innocent victims.
The death penalty is not the same dilemma, the harm has already happened, there has been a death, the dilemma is what to do with the person that did the harm that will satisfy the competing needs of justice to be seen to be done from the perspective of the victims family, society in general to be kept from harm, and a suitable punishment handed down to the perpetrator.
Where is that lot does the trolley problem fit in?
seosamh77Free MemberProblem with that is the assumptions are bollocks! 😆 so irrelevant to any serious discussion.
nickcFull MemberImagine further that a new study showed that, without question, the death penalty really does cut down the number of murders
see also: for physicists:
First; let us imagine that cows are spherical: and for economists:
First let us suppose we have a can opener.
dbcooperFree MemberBut this is just a pointless thoguh experiement. Here is another one:
Imagine for a minute that it is incontrivertially proved that believing in chocaolate coated flying fairies will save lives, is it better to nbelieve in god or not?
well the answer is that it is better to belive in the chocolate denizens, but the facts are that it is bollocks. Similarly there is no evidence that the death penalty saves any lives. So just becasue some silly thought experiment proves something has no actual bearing on real life.
EDIT – beaten to it by the critical thinkers..
mogrimFull MemberThe death penalty is not the same dilemma, the harm has already happened, there has been a death, the dilemma is what to do with the person that did the harm that will satisfy the competing needs of justice to be seen to be done from the perspective of the victims family, society in general to be kept from harm, and a suitable punishment handed down to the perpetrator.
Where is that lot does the trolley problem fit in?
Basically deciding whether someone should die to prevent a greater future harm to society.
scandal42Free MemberJust to be clear,
Will you be getting a shorter jail term if you wait and do the copper when they are at home having their dinner?
dbcooperFree Member“wrongly” deciding whether someone should die “based on the innacurate damaging and unproven assumption that killing them will” prevent a greater future harm to society.
FTFY the quoted italics are mine.
seosamh77Free Membermogrim – Member
Basically deciding whether someone should die to prevent a greater future harm to society.For relevance you need to prove that the death would save future harm. That is crucial.
nickcFull MemberBasically deciding whether someone should die to prevent a greater future harm to society
pre-cognitive crime thought? 😯
You not seriously trying to argue that “he may do something really nasty in the future, so let’s take no chances and do him in now?” are you?
That’s not what, thankfully, even something as revolting as the death penalty was intended for.
seosamh77Free Membernickc – Member
Basically deciding whether someone should die to prevent a greater future harm to societypre-cognitive crime thought?
That’s not what, thankfully, even something as revolting as the death penalty was intended for
Just have a look at Iraq for evidence of how lovely the world would be if we started pre-emptive punishment! 😆
mudsharkFree MemberIf it’s wrong to put to death a murderer is it also wrong to lock up a kidnapper?
LiferFree MemberAh, an eye for an eye eh mudshark? Of course not, it’s patently ridiculous.
If attacks on police are prosecuted more heavily, should attacks by police also be prosecuted more heavily?
mudsharkFree MemberOr fine thieves? Do the reason not to kill murderers is not because killing people is wrong.
Maybe this is why we used to send bad people to Australia in the 1800s, saved this sort of paradox.
mudsharkFree MemberNo, an argument given here is that we mustn’t kill people as a punishment as we say killing people is wrong. There are other, correct, reasons for this.
LiferFree MemberKilling people is wrong, so if you kill someone you are punished.
If killing people is wrong, and the punishment is killing, then the punishment is also wrong. Especially as the state is supposed to set an example, and we’re supposed to be civilised.
Plus the whole ‘mistakes are made’ thing.
But all that’s been covered, so what is your point?
mudsharkFree MemberIf locking people up is wrong then punishing people by locking them up is also wrong. Just logic that is all.
mogrimFull MemberIf killing people is wrong, and the punishment is killing, then the punishment is also wrong. Especially as the state is supposed to set an example, and we’re supposed to be civilised.
That’s an awful lot of supposition 🙂
And I think we all agreed that killing innocent people is wrong, whether killing guilty people is wrong is a different kettle of fish. The fact that in a lot of cases it’s impossible to be 100% certain of guilt is a very powerful reason to be against the death penalty.
If locking people up is wrong then punishing people by locking them up is also wrong. Just logic that is all.
You’re missing the word “innocent” from that… as I’m sure you’re well aware 🙂
grumFree MemberIt always amazes me in these scenarios that we have whole systems of dedicated and skilled professionals in place to assess this kind of thing, but people seem to think they know better based on a quick skim through an article in the Daily Mail.
binnersFull MemberIt shouldn’t surprise you really grum. If you look at something like drugs policy over the years, its exactly the same. Every expert asserts that the whole approach to the law, enforcement etc needs to be completely reappraised and reformed, as it is completely ineffectual.
But no government will even contemplate a realistic, effective approach to it in case the Daily Mail has a hissy fit! And we can’t have that now, can we?
jamj1974Full MemberIf you murder a police
manofficer it should mean LIFE imprisonmentSame goes for police officers who unlawfully kill[/i] civilians IMHO. Several high-profile cases in recent years where the police have exercised bad judgement in the situation and afterwards where a civilian has lost their life due to police action. I would also mandate a life sentance on any police officer or member of the establishment who is complicit in covering up police involvement in the death of a member of the public.
gobuchulFree MemberSame goes for police officers who unlawfully kill civilians IMHO.
Seriously?
So an armed police officer makes a mistake, in a very stressful situation and you would lock him up for life?
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