Zonie63
Posts: 2826
Joined: 4/25/2011 From: The Old Pueblo Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: DesideriScuri What was the debt to society this guy was going to pay? Was his debt to live out the rest of his natural life on the dime of society? If there was labor to be extracted from those inmates, that's one thing, but what was there truly to be gained? Is it truly justice for society to support this guy for the rest of his life (which they did, I point out in a darkly humorous way)? I understand perfectly what you're saying. As taxpayers, we don't want to pay to support these scumbags; I get that. He's dead now, and the taxpayers won't have to support him. But the thing is, society didn't order his execution. He wasn't given the death penalty, so in the eyes of the law and society, he was expected to serve out his sentence. That's what was decided in court. He chose his demise, as a way of saying "fuck you" to society and to his victims. (I suppose I might feel differently if another inmate killed him, as what happened with Dahmer.) quote:
I'm pretty sure it happened in Ohio. I think they found him and resuscitated him a couple days before he was set to be put to death. It pushed back his execution for like 2 weeks while he recovered from the attempted suicide. I get the reasoning, but it seems paradoxical to save a man from suicide and nurse him back to health so he can be put to death. That's a head-scratcher, for sure. There are some paradoxes about how the system works, I agree. quote:
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I can understand it from a practical point of view. We're all better off that the scum is dead, so I get that part of it. (My darker side sometimes wonders if prisons shouldn't just hand out cyanide free to any inmate who wants to off themselves.) There will be a cyanide allergy developed, though. Then, we won't be able to hand out cyanide to inmates who want to kill themselves because they might have an allergic reaction as they died. Well, it wasn't really a serious suggestion. I'm not really such the bloodthirsty monster that JeffBC seems to think I am, but I believe in justice. But if it's really okay with everyone here that prison inmates be allowed to commit suicide whenever they wish (because it would save society money), I wouldn't necessarily put much energy into opposing it, although it would still seem wrong to me.
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