Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Punishment to fit the crime
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I agree I do not want to pay for them to live!!! If I thought a single penny i earnt paid for them to eat or have an ounce of comfort id (if I could), stop paying tax.
My thoughts really are with the family, as a parent I can only imagine how they must feel.
How do these monsters meet up? If there was capital punishment for raping toddlers maybe they would have thought twice about it. I think a congratulations on catching the culprits so quickly is in order. I hope the police are treating em badly.
Goodsoulette
You hope the police are treating them badly? Are we assuming that they've been tried and convicted yet?
I totally feel for the family involved. If it were my child, I'd want them to suffer for a long time. Really, really suffer - mentally and physically. But this is why we have the laws and judicial processes that we do have.
It's to stop people like me...like us descending to the level of barbarians.
By the way, being locked away is fun and most prisoners do not enjoy what we would call luxuries.
Just to clarify something...I don't think that child rapists can be cured. The problem is, we have to distinguish between different categories of crime - should we have the same punishments for sexual abuse, rape and child rape/murder?
You could argue that someone who commits serious sexual abuse against a minor should (say) serve ten to fifteen years in prison. I'd go along with that...but what happens when they come out?
Should all child sex offenders be put away for the rest of their lives? You could argue that this is the only way we can truly protect kids...to have no distinction between categories of child sex crimes.
as a bleeding heart liberal,
can we please remember, jjust a bit, before you all shout me down, that someone is not guilty because they have been charged.
and while you are thinking the Great Thought - the Police have been in the past, and will be in the future wrong at various times......
we might reflect that capital punishment has not been used for non capital crimes since 1861
What angers me more than anything else - is that whoever committed the crime were quite happy to ruin this family for the rest of their lives.
That's what really bothers me. Remember those kids who decided that for a laugh, they'd kick a gay bloke to death?
For me, it's the same thing...people who have no regard for fellow human beings.
I have mixed emotions on the subject and could argue both ways... except for the numerous prisoners released here within the recent past found to be innocent by virtue of DNA testing. In some cases they had been on death row for several years and had the appeal process not been lengthy, they would have been executed yet innocent. I haven't figured out a way to overcome that possibility...
Hang them and hang them high, however that's not going to happen, ursula62 is correct in that the purpose of prison is to rehabilitate rather than to punish. Eventualy these scum will be freed back into society (thank you European Paerliament for the human rights act) and will be able to carry out their vile act on other children. At least if they are dead then they cant hurt anyone again, (an argument I used in my capital punishment right or wrong thread).
Lets hear all the wishy/ washy bleeding heart social workers wring their hands and cry out in anguish about how they (the rapists and potential child killers) should be pitied, cared for and protected at the tax payers expence.
cliffsdoll - I wasn't saying what I think. I was stating the purpose of modern prisons. It's a fact that prison is not regarded as a punishment. The punishment is the removal of freedom, not the time spent in the prison itself. It makes sense to have happy contented prisoners as they are less likely to riot or make trouble for those employed to mind them.
I have family members that work in the prison service and they regularly come home with tales of what they call the "high life" in prisons - OK people are locked up, sometimes for 23 out of 24 hours a day, which could appear a punishment in itself. But they are given endless leisure opportunities, e.g. OU courses at the tax payers' expense whereas my family members regularly work such crippling shift hours that they cannot possibly take an OU course, even if they earned enough to pay for them. Apparently Myra Hindley had taken 7 OU degrees during her life imprisonment.