Erm, we seem to have moved on a little, but I kinda wanna comment on the death penalty thing, so I hope you dont mind if I go back to that.
The Death Penalty poses a problem for me, in that I believe that if someone cannot show respect for human life, do they truly deserve to live? Murderers show no respect for their victims' right to life, so do they deserve to have their right to live respected by the rest of the world? Then we have the question over whether or not it is right for the human race to "play God"? Because someone has made it their place to pass judgement on someone's right to live their life, does it mean that we should then decide whether they have the right to live? I think they're valid questions. Of course, there's also the two things where an innocent person is put to death for crimes they didn't commit, and/or the death penalty isn;t a deterrent to those who are pre-disposed to commit crimes of a magnitude at which some places decide that death should be the punishment.
We've just finished dealing with the trials of Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr in the UK. If you don't know what this is about, Huntley was accused of murdering two children, Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells. Carr was accused of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice, and two counts of assisting an offender. On the back of overwhelming evidence, Huntley was found guilty just this week of the 2 murders, which took place in August 2002. Carr was cleared of both counts of assisting an offender, but found guilty of conspiring to pervert the course of justice.
Huntley had admitted to having killed the girls in the course of his trial, but said that he "didn't mean to." How you can accidently kill two perfectly healthy 10 year old girls is beyond me, and clearly also beyond the jury.
My point is, in cases where there is no doubt that someone is guilty, and they show no remorse for their crime, is the death penalty right? Huntley's mother certainly thinks so, as she was interviewed by a newspaper, and said something along the lines of although she loves her son and always will, when someone commits a crime like this, they deserve to hang. She also said that she knew he was guilty when she saw the pictures of him the night that he was arrested.
Do some crimes, and some people, deserve the death penalty? The answer may well be yes, but we need to enforce it on a much more careful way. We need to be sure that a person is guilty of what they have been accused. We need to ensure that in one case someone gets the death penalty, and in another which is the same case, someone "gets off" with life-imprisonment, because they have made a deal with the police that if they confess or whatever, they won't be given the death penalty. And we also need to consider whether for some people, the death penalty is really a harsher verdict than life-imprisoment. Ian Brady certainly believes that death is better than imprisonment, and if anyone deserves the death penalty, it's him.
I'll try to add a few links to articles about the Soham murders if anyone wants to read the information and make their own decision about what sort of a punishment is deserved, and also about Ian Brady.
This is all just my rambling opinion, so feel free to ignore it.
Links -
Huntley Guilty of Soham Murders Brady wins right to public tribunal *****************************************************************
"Baby have you got to go away? Don't think I can take the pain. Won't you stay another day...?"~ East 17, sad but true
Edited by: amberbensontotallyrules4eva at: 12/20/03 7:39 pm