Take It In Blood
Banned
Pope is more rational and progressive than GOD himself
It’s not that I don’t believe you, but in the long run wouldn’t it save more money. Instead of keeping a serial rapist alive for 50 years wouldn’t killing him be easier. Why is it so expensive to kill people? Serious question.
And if killing criminals was cheaper than jail time, would you find it to be a viable option?
While those complex debates rage on, some like to point fingers at perhaps the most simple reason to support the death penalty: It's cheaper to kill an inmate than to keep an inmate alive.
That may not, however, be true. "It's 10 times more expensive to kill them than to keep them alive,"says Donald McCartin, known as The Hanging Judge of Orange County. McCartin knows a little bit about executions: he has sent nine men to death row.
McCartin isn't talking about the comparisons between the cost of the actual execution and the cost of keeping an inmate in prison: those aren't apples to apples comparisons.
It's true that the actual execution costs taxpayers fairly little: while most states remain mum on the cost of lethal injections because of privacy concerns from pharmaceutical companies, it's estimated that the drugs run about $100 (the Texas Department of Criminal Justice put the cost of their drug cocktails at $83 in 2011). However, the outside costs associated with the death penalty are disproportionately higher.
To begin with, capital cases (those where the death penalty is a potential punishment) are more expensive and take much more time to resolve than non-capital cases. According to a study by the Kansas Judicial Council (downloads as a pdf), defending a death penalty case costs about four times as much as defending a case where the death penalty is not considered. In terms of costs, a report of the Washington State Bar Association found that death penalty cases are estimated to generate roughly $470,000 in additional costs to the prosecution and defense versus a similar case without the death penalty; that doesn't take into account the cost of court personnel. Even when a trial wasn't necessary (because of a guilty plea), those cases where the death penalty was sought still cost about twice as much as those where death was not sought. Citing Richard C. Dieter of the non-partisan Death Penalty Information Center, Fox News has reported that studies have "uniformly and conservatively shown that a death-penalty trial costs $1 million more than one in which prosecutors seek life without parole."
And let's not forget about appeals: in Idaho, the State Appellate Public Defenders office spent about 44 times more time on a typical death penalty appeal than on a life sentence appeal (downloads as a pdf): almost 8,000 hours per capital defendant compared to about 180 hours per non-death penalty defendant. New York state projected that the death penalty costs the state $1.8 million per case just through trial and initial appeal.
It costs more to house death penalty prisoners, as well. In Kansas, housing prisoners on death row costs more than twice as much per year ($49,380) as for prisoners in the general population ($24,690). In California, incarceration costs for death penalty prisoners totaled more than $1 billion from 1978 to 2011 (total costs outside of incarceration were another $3 billion). By the numbers, the annual cost of the death penalty in the state of California is $137 million compared to the cost of lifetime incarceration of $11.5 million.
It's pretty obvious in the story of the woman caught in adultery who was going to be stoned, where Jesus says, "He who is without sin, cast the first stone." John chapter 8Show me in the Bible where its wrong it's wrong in all cases? Oh wait the Bible isn't as important then his opinion. Nevermind
The church formally apologized for that and noted that it was wrong decades ago. Though obviously you can't take back someone you've killed. Which is one of the major points about how wrong it is.What about aok those people the church has executed over the years? Do they get pardons ?![]()
Most Catholics didn't vote for Trump, and Christians have often led the fight to abolish the death penalty. The big issue is the strain of White evangelical Christian that has been captured by the Republican movement over the last 40 or so years.Trump>The pope are far as most Christians/Catholics are concerned
Personally always struck me as odd how much Christians love the death penalty, but I guess that's neither here nor there.
If they are really that dangerous, then lock them up for life. The number of people who have been locked up in a federal supermax, escaped, and then killed again is far smaller than the number of innocent people who have been executed for crimes they didn't commit.What about terrorists, war criminals, serial killers, rapists/molesters and criminal masterminds? I understand the death penalty is not always fair especially to blacks and poor people. But if we refine the system, I believe some people shouldn’t be allowed to live, so we can ensure the safety of others.
Yup.Lock them up and throw away the key.
It's actually cheaper than the death penalty anyway. And like you said, the way it's applied is massively unfair anyway.
The story of the woman caught in adultery actually proves it's not wrong in all cases. Why would they come to Jesus to ask shouldthey stone her? That would be murder? There messed up because 1) Where was the nigguh who was banging her at? 2) how they know she was getting banged out? Some feel that one of them one banging her. So they was hypocrites and it was laws on how stoning was to be done (i.e. witnesses). So the Pope view is unbiblicalIt's pretty obvious in the story of the woman caught in adultery who was going to be stoned, where Jesus says, "He who is without sin, cast the first stone." John chapter 8
Or when Jesus says, "Do not judge, do not condemn." Repeatedly.
Or in the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus says we are to love and forgive even our enemies, and that the old way was "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," but Jesus is bringing a new way.
This guy puts them all together here: The Biblical Argument Against the Death Penalty
The church formally apologized for that and noted that it was wrong decades ago. Though obviously you can't take back someone you've killed. Which is one of the major points about how wrong it is.
Most Catholics didn't vote for Trump, and Christians have often led the fight to abolish the death penalty. The big issue is the strain of White evangelical Christian that has been captured by the Republican movement over the last 40 or so years.
If they are really that dangerous, then lock them up for life. The number of people who have been locked up in a federal supermax, escaped, and then killed again is far smaller than the number of innocent people who have been executed for crimes they didn't commit.
If we want to show killing is wrong, then we actually have to show that with our actions. Not just "killing is wrong unless I believe it is justified," because most of those terrorists and serial killers and gangbangers thought they were justified when they killed too.
Yup.
You have to literally make up a theory out of thin air in order to justify that interpretation.The story of the woman caught in adultery actually proves it's not wrong in all cases. Why would they come to Jesus to ask should they stone her? That would be murder? There messed up because 1) Where was the nigguh who was banging her at? 2) how they know she was getting banged out? Some feel that one of them one banging her. So they was hypocrites and it was laws on how stoning was to be done (i.e. witnesses). So the Pope view is unbiblical
Don't feed the trollsLock them up and throw away the key.
It's actually cheaper than the death penalty anyway. And like you said, the way it's applied is massively unfair anyway.
Pope is more rational and progressive than GOD himself
thou shalt not kill sixth ammendment. its pretty direct about that. now you can probably find other religious laws in the old testament where a death penalty is appropriate punishment. but the most recent covenants and teachings of jesus imply that something like the sixth ammendment for a human to try to follow rather than rely on than contradicting covenants.Show me in the Bible where its wrong it's wrong in all cases? Oh wait the Bible isn't as important then his opinion. Nevermind
a lot of the people on death row are never executed because their legal team appeals or the execution is never scheduled. the costs of keeping someone on death row are higher than other prisoners.It’s not that I don’t believe you, but in the long run wouldn’t it save more money. Instead of keeping a serial rapist alive for 50 years wouldn’t killing him be easier. Why is it so expensive to kill people? Serious question.
And if killing criminals was cheaper than jail time, would you find it to be a viable option?
The two don't contradict. Even in this country (although I don't agree with the way we do it) we recognize the difference between killing an innocent person vs. someone being guilty of a crime like Dylan Roof and being sentenced to death. Sothe 6th amendment isn't some trump card which outlaws the taking of life in all cases. Pope is wrong.thou shalt not kill sixth ammendment. its pretty direct about that. now you can probably find other religious laws in the old testament where a death penalty is appropriate punishment. but the most recent covenants and teachings of jesus imply that something like the sixth ammendment for a human to try to follow rather than rely on than contradicting covenants.
a lot of the people on death row are never executed because their legal team appeals or the execution is never scheduled. the costs of keeping someone on death row are higher than other prisoners.
theres no specification in the sixth amendment though. it doesn't say thou shalt not kill the innocent. it refers to all human beings.The two don't contradict. Even in this country (although I don't agree with the way we do it) we recognize the difference between killing an innocent person vs. someone being guilty of a crime like Dylan Roof and being sentenced to death. Sothe 6th amendment isn't some trump card which outlaws the taking of life in all cases. Pope is wrong.
You have to literally make up a theory out of thin air in order to justify that interpretation.
Jesus never asks, "Where is the other guy?" Jesus never asks, "How do you know she is guilty?" He doesn't imply anything about your interpretation at all.
Jesus instead states, "Whichever of you is without sin should cast the first stone."
He is stating that only the sinless have standing to condemn others to death for their sin. That's perfectly in line with his repeated edict, "Do not condemn, or you will be condemned."
Seriously, read the link by this breh, it explains it all: Would you throw the first stone?
I've heard your interpretation before. But it doesn't make any logical sense. It would make the whole passage meaningless, a pointless aside that proves nothing. If the only reason he frees the girl is because the pharisees were corrupt, then what does that teach us? Nothing. Would the lesson be that all prisoners should be freed in corrupt systems? What's your lesson in your interpretation?
It's just an excuse made by people in power who don't want to face the truth about how radical Jesus's teachings are.
Judge not, that you be not judged. 2 For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you. 3 Why do you see the speck that is in your brother's eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye? 4 Or how can you say to your brother, ‘Let me take the speck out of your eye,’ when there is the log in your own eye? 5 You hypocrite, first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother's eye.
thou shalt not kill sixth ammendment. its pretty direct about that. now you can probably find other religious laws in the old testament where a death penalty is appropriate punishment. but the most recent covenants and teachings of jesus imply that something like the sixth ammendment for a human to try to follow rather than rely on than contradicting covenants.
a lot of the people on death row are never executed because their legal team appeals or the execution is never scheduled. the costs of keeping someone on death row are higher than other prisoners.
What a redundant post.What about terrorists, war criminals, serial killers, rapists/molesters and criminal masterminds? I understand the death penalty is not always fair especially to blacks and poor people. But if we refine the system, I believe some people shouldn’t be allowed to live, so we can ensure the safety of others.