Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
brave and gentle and wise
Butsekz?
___________________
"my son will be a gienues(sp?)" - Originally posted by Googooly
"many species of bear give blowjobs." - Originally posted by Sunsnail.. NOW CONFIRMED BY PHOTO EVIDENCE!
"astroboy is brave and gentle and wise." - Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
"ew! i wouldn't go anywhere near a homeless dudes butthole... not even if i was sodomizing him with a poison ivy cactus dildo" - Originally posted by lücid
"also can someone post the link to my mom's forum, thank you!" - Originally posted by miamitrance04
"dude man its not me its what the world does to me. Trust me I'm a normal person people just constantly fuck with me." Originally posted by ********
"I can see Lira getting a hard-on already. And believe me, Brazilian ass rape is the worst." - Originally posted by Meat187
May-16-2009 07:58
astroboy
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2001
Location: Melbourne
quote:
Originally posted by Slylee
prison is counterproductive. and i'm talking about like the hard core prisons that carry murderers and rapists who are doing 15-life. just fucking kill them and let's move on. 'oh it costs money to kill them, bla bla bla'. no. shoot them in the head outside in the prison yard. how much does a bullet and a gun cost?
What about cases like that of Ronald Cotton. The guy was convicted of rape and ended up actually serving 10.5 years of a life sentence based on the eyewitness testimony of his supposed victim before it turned out she was completely wrong and the real perpetrator was found. The guy lost 10 years of his life because of the faults inherent in the justice system. He ended up getting out because of luck, determination, and some level of intelligence. There are doubtless other cases where people end up serving life sentences because they aren't strong, or educated or lucky enough to fight their false conviction.
We know this is inevitable but it's the price we pay for order. People are wrongly convicted of serious crimes on a regular basis. And there is no reason to believe that all of those cases are discovered and the prisoner released. Under your system people like Ronald Cotton would be put to death. You're essentially calling for the state to knowingly kill innocent people. I don't know what kind of benefit could justify that price.
___________________
"my son will be a gienues(sp?)" - Originally posted by Googooly
"many species of bear give blowjobs." - Originally posted by Sunsnail.. NOW CONFIRMED BY PHOTO EVIDENCE!
"astroboy is brave and gentle and wise." - Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
"ew! i wouldn't go anywhere near a homeless dudes butthole... not even if i was sodomizing him with a poison ivy cactus dildo" - Originally posted by lücid
"also can someone post the link to my mom's forum, thank you!" - Originally posted by miamitrance04
"dude man its not me its what the world does to me. Trust me I'm a normal person people just constantly fuck with me." Originally posted by ********
"I can see Lira getting a hard-on already. And believe me, Brazilian ass rape is the worst." - Originally posted by Meat187
May-16-2009 08:13
Omega_M
Nostalgia
Registered: Jun 2005
Location: Ether
quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Denying someone their freedom, keeping them locked away like an animal with no chance of escape is far more of a punishment
That is what you think. The prisoners may also feel the same thing, but only in the beginning of their incarceration period. As they adjust to the new environment, they no longer mourn the loss of their freedom.
There is a very good lecture on the topic of "happiness" given by a social scientist on TED.com. The guy talks about how human beings adjust themselves to new circumstances, however unpleasant, and become happy again. You may think that prisoners or people with disabilities remain unhappy for life. But surprisingly that's not the case at all. Nor on the flip side, does a person who's won a multi- million dollar lottery remains happy for ever. I couldn't find that video, but I did find a paper that says the same thing.
When the state punishes a criminal, it purposely inflicts suffering on one of its citizens. If that act is to be justified, limits must be set on the amount and type of suffering that may be imposed. A justification therefore requires an understanding of the ways in which punishment actually inflicts suffering on those punished. How and to what extent do fines and incarceration negatively affect happiness or well-being? The answers might seem obvious, but as we have indicated in the context of civil settlement, 2 recent empirical work in behavioral psychology suggests otherwise.
This empirical work reveals that people adapt to monetary fines far better than they expect. Paying a fine initially decreases an offender’s level of happiness, but that level rebounds quickly toward its initial state. Even large fines have only minor effects on the wellbeing of those who receive them, because people adjust quite easily to their new financial circumstances. Adaptation thus reduces heavily the punitive consequence of a fine.
Prison has a more complicated effect on happiness. On the one hand, it is similar to a fine in that people adapt well to being in prison. Their happiness drops at the beginning and they expect it to remain low, but it rebounds impressively as they adjust to their new surroundings. On the other hand, virtually any period of incarceration, no matter how brief, has consequences that negatively affect prisoners’ lives in ways that resist adaptation, even after they have been released. Prisoners are often abandoned by their spouses and friends, face difficulty finding and keeping employment, and must grapple with incurable diseases contracted during their incarceration. Thus, living in prison itself becomes less oppressive with time, but the effects of having been in prison tend to linger and to diminish happiness indefinitely.
The undesirable effects of incarceration are besides the point ofcourse, if we are strictly concerned with the effects of loss of freedom.
Originally posted by twilightki : It feels like something you'd listen to at 4 in the morning, or listen to in your car while you're going in a tunnel.
May-16-2009 11:24
Slylee
love lockdown
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood, FL
quote:
Originally posted by astroboy
What about cases like that of Ronald Cotton. The guy was convicted of rape and ended up actually serving 10.5 years of a life sentence based on the eyewitness testimony of his supposed victim before it turned out she was completely wrong and the real perpetrator was found. The guy lost 10 years of his life because of the faults inherent in the justice system. He ended up getting out because of luck, determination, and some level of intelligence. There are doubtless other cases where people end up serving life sentences because they aren't strong, or educated or lucky enough to fight their false conviction.
We know this is inevitable but it's the price we pay for order. People are wrongly convicted of serious crimes on a regular basis. And there is no reason to believe that all of those cases are discovered and the prisoner released. Under your system people like Ronald Cotton would be put to death. You're essentially calling for the state to knowingly kill innocent people. I don't know what kind of benefit could justify that price.
yea well there are just as many guilty pieces of shit who get off every day too because of loopholes in the system. the system is fucked and abused/manipulated on a daily basis. it's just wrong. everything needs to be re-written to reflect modern society.
___________________
My soliloquy may be hard for some to swallow, but so is cod liver oil.
quote:
Originally posted by notelfreak
man i can't believe i tried to come off as responsible in that other thread, i am so full of shit just don't tell anyone
May-16-2009 12:34
Lunar Phase 7
Not a Flying Toy.
Registered: Dec 2004
Location: Zone 4
quote:
Originally posted by R.j.
by the way, Ladytron is such an awesome group: destroy everything you touch na na na na plaaaygirl, why are you sleeping in tomorrow's world, hey playgirl
May I also recommend this?
___________________
Nothing lasts, nothing lasts, everything is changing into something else. Nothing is wrong, nothing is wrong, everything is on track...
You know, William Blake said... uh, nothing is lost. Nothing is lost and I... I really believe that, we only move on...
May-16-2009 12:50
bananas
baby i got your money
Registered: Oct 2004
Location: Mordor
i love that song, but the video is somehow scary to me :[[
May-16-2009 12:56
Joss Weatherby
Banned
Registered: May 2008
Location: The Pacific Northwest, of course
quote:
Originally posted by Omega_M
That is what you think. The prisoners may also feel the same thing, but only in the beginning of their incarceration period. As they adjust to the new environment, they no longer mourn the loss of their freedom.
There is a very good lecture on the topic of "happiness" given by a social scientist on TED.com. The guy talks about how human beings adjust themselves to new circumstances, however unpleasant, and become happy again. You may think that prisoners or people with disabilities remain unhappy for life. But surprisingly that's not the case at all. Nor on the flip side, does a person who's won a multi- million dollar lottery remains happy for ever. I couldn't find that video, but I did find a paper that says the same thing.
The undesirable effects of incarceration are besides the point ofcourse, if we are strictly concerned with the effects of loss of freedom.
And death is any less of a punishment? That argument needs a whole other thread... Death to me is far more desirable than not being able to see my friends and family or live any sort of normal life again. I'd wish for death in that circumstance.
Who cares if they adapt to it, they have adapted to a hellish life and they are never going to be part of society again.
May-16-2009 14:29
Omega_M
Nostalgia
Registered: Jun 2005
Location: Ether
quote:
Originally posted by Joss Weatherby
Death to me is far more desirable than not being able to see my friends and family or live any sort of normal life again. I'd wish for death in that circumstance.
Who cares if they adapt to it, they have adapted to a hellish life and they are never going to be part of society again.
Why would you want to die when you can "manufacture" happiness in whatever circumstances you find yourself in ? Once in jail when seeing their family is not an option, people don't fret over it and remain unhappy forever. Their brain manufactures its own "synthetic happiness" under these circumstances and they are truly just as happy as you think you are, when you meet your family. That's better than dying and having nothing left to ever feel any happiness at all, "synthetic" or "natural". You don't have to believe me. Watch this Harvard Psychologist's fascinating account of what makes us happy.
Originally posted by twilightki : It feels like something you'd listen to at 4 in the morning, or listen to in your car while you're going in a tunnel.
May-16-2009 16:58
elFreak
Blood Diamonds and Salsa
Registered: Feb 2008
Location: With Juan Pachanga Eating Tacos. Ah Ha Si Mi Gusta.
if the only evidence available to convict is eye witness testimony, the death penalty should not be able to be applied. Time and time again eye witness accounts are proven to be unreliable at best, and many scientific studies have shown this as well.
Originally posted by Slylee
yea well there are just as many guilty pieces of shit who get off every day too because of loopholes in the system. the system is fucked and abused/manipulated on a daily basis. it's just wrong. everything needs to be re-written to reflect modern society.
people that know how to fix society's ills don't sit round in their pyjamas all day.
___________________
May-16-2009 17:19
RickyM
*
Registered: Sep 2004
Location: Northern Ireland
quote:
Originally posted by Slylee
yea well there are just as many guilty pieces of shit who get off every day too because of loopholes in the system. the system is fucked and abused/manipulated on a daily basis. it's just wrong. everything needs to be re-written to reflect modern society.
So your solution to the problem is taking people out the back and shooting them?
___________________
Signature Suspended as it was deemed offensive
May-16-2009 17:32
Slylee
love lockdown
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood, FL
quote:
Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN
people that know how to fix society's ills don't sit round in their pyjamas all day.
lol yea i know. did i say that they did?
___________________
My soliloquy may be hard for some to swallow, but so is cod liver oil.
quote:
Originally posted by notelfreak
man i can't believe i tried to come off as responsible in that other thread, i am so full of shit just don't tell anyone