Dzhokhar Tsarnaev Sentenced To Death

TBoneJack

Well-Known Member
Doesn't matter.

Two wrongs don't make a right.
That's true.

But killing this admitted and convicted terrorist-murderer-torturer isn't wrong. Not in this particular case.

There's an exception for everything. And while I'd agree with you that 97% of death penalties in the US are wrong, this one is right.
 
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UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
Oh, that guy.

Nothing will change history. What he did is done. Nothing that will be done to him is going to deter others from doing the same type of thing in the future. Kill him. Lock him away for life. Let him go. None of it really matters.
nihilists!? i mean, say what you want about the tenets of national socialism, at least it's an ethos.
 

NewtoMJ

Well-Known Member
well, we already know how minds work..you are not complete until..females, 25 and males 30.

http://science.howstuffworks.com/life/inside-the-mind/human-brain/teenage-brain1.htm

the thing that would ultimately stop you from committing a heinous act..your reasoning ability.

that's why death for someone so young, is sad.
Except your ability to understand right from wrong is established much earlier, unless you have lived under circumstances of abuse. The ability to weigh risk from reward is a non factor when a person is unable to be reconditioned to understand right from wrong, and there are quite a few experts who believe in the right environment, reconditioning is impossible. Dr. James Farrow, associate professor of medicine and pediatrics at University of Washington School of Medicine, director of the Division of Adolescent Medicine at the UW Medical Center, and director of Nathan Hale High School's Teen Health Center; Dr. Jim Owens, medical director for the Department of Juvenile Rehabilitation; and Dr. William Womack, child psychiatrist at Children's Hospital and consultant at Echo Glen Children's center. To name a few.
 

NewtoMJ

Well-Known Member
it's amazing to see so many self described "constitutional conservatives" shitting all over the 8th.
Is killing someone more cruel than keeping them confined, though? Granted, confining them for a period, or setting an execution date year's out is a little.
 

NewtoMJ

Well-Known Member
yes, because innocent people die, which is the cruelest fate of all.
True, and I think that is a big fault of the courts, over-zealous prosecutors, deceitful police and a system that is stacked against you if a good enough lawyer is simply not in your budget. There are even times when DNA evidence has proven people innocent, but because they still had a fair trial for the time period, their cases remain untouched. That being said, not every person is innocent, and I think the ones who are deemed unable to be helped should be granted the release from being treated like a dog.
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
True, and I think that is a big fault of the courts, over-zealous prosecutors, deceitful police and a system that is stacked against you if a good enough lawyer is simply not in your budget. There are even times when DNA evidence has proven people innocent, but because they still had a fair trial for the time period, their cases remain untouched. That being said, not every person is innocent, and I think the ones who are deemed unable to be helped should be granted the release from being treated like a dog.
and how many innocent people are you willing to see die for that vision?
 

NewtoMJ

Well-Known Member
and how many innocent people are you willing to see die for that vision?
All. Of. Them. Muhahaha!
No, none of them, because I believe we need an overhaul of the system to be sure no innocent lives are wrongly taken. That said, what do you think of the Tsarnaev ruling? Is the penalty of execution warranted, or is it still over the top?
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
All. Of. Them. Muhahaha!
No, none of them, because I believe we need an overhaul of the system to be sure no innocent lives are wrongly taken. That said, what do you think of the Tsarnaev ruling? Is the penalty of execution warranted, or is it still over the top?
removing the element from society is enough.
 

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
What makes you so tough?

I accept death as part of life. I don't consider myself "tough", just not so overly sensitive. People die, deal with it. Once they are dead they don't care anymore. The only people who are bothered by death are the living. We're all going to die. The sooner one can accept that the sooner they can stop being such crybabies.
 

NewtoMJ

Well-Known Member
I accept death as part of life. I don't consider myself "tough", just not so overly sensitive. People die, deal with it. Once they are dead they don't care anymore. The only people who are bothered by death are the living. We're all going to die. The sooner one can accept that the sooner they can stop being such crybabies.
What does that have to do with capital punishment?
 

Balzac89

Undercover Mod
I'd rater see him get life w/o parole. Because of his status he would likely be segregated and serve life isolated and alone.
 

sheskunk

Well-Known Member
What is gained by killing another person?

Kill 'im, don't kill 'im. What difference does any of it make?
 
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