I was just being silly
I was just being silly
The United States, Mexico and Guatemala, if you're wondering.


LIES!!!!!Full stop. We agree. The "right" to own a gun comes from the state and can be taken away by the state. There's nothing "natural" about it.
Really? That's the entirety of the logic? We punished because we declared it a crime?
Honestly, I consider it to be a right-wing trait where people serve Justice merely because Justice deserves to be served
It is remarkable that what obviously started out as:Let's talk about how the historical genesis of the idea that a natural right to firearms exists is literally the aftermath of slave uprisings.
No silly gooseyReally? That's the entirety of the logic? We punished because we declared it a crime?
but I didn't think you wanted a dissertation on the different theories/purposes of criminal justice. Anyway @Lexicus already listed most of them so its been covered.It is remarkable that what obviously started out as:
"Hey! Militias were pretty useful in that war we just fought... that's a pretty good excuse to put it in our rulebook that militias are good and everyone should be able to keep weapons around in case we need to raise one again... for uhhhh security purposes"...
has been morphed into the outright sanctification of a particular hobby/fetish.
Or... "Hmmm do the police and/or National Guard essentially act as the 'well regulated milita'?" But that part of the Amendment just gets handwaived because... reasons...Anyone reading the amendment critically should immediately think to themselves, "but what if a Militia is no longer necessary for the security of a free State?"
I just realized something. Jordan Peterson is an Agent of the Crab-People!Let me explain how it works with lobsters...
Anyone reading the amendment critically should immediately think to themselves, "but what if a Militia is no longer necessary for the security of a free State?" 2A humpers spin it that individual freedom depends on the individual's right to bear arms, but the amendment itself explicitly says that it is collective armed resistance that is necessary, and not for individual liberty, but for the security of the State.
A state that continually adds legislation against victimless crimes and takes away means to oppose it does seem to threaten the security of a *free* state.
No silly gooseybut I didn't think you wanted a dissertation on the different theories/purposes of criminal justice. Anyway @Lexicus already listed most of them so its been covered.
The point is the death penalty is not "self-defense", its punishment.
He added Rehabilitation and then you added deterrence shortly thereafter. And then I laid out the case that the death penalty could be framed in terms of a deterrent effect.
Some people definitely think that the value of a death penalty is its punishment benefit. I don't really have much sympathy for that viewpoint.
I already laid that out for El Mac in this post:Except that there is absolutely no evidence that severity of punishment as a variable has any impact at all on crime. Criminals do not contemplate the consequences of getting caught, and are almost universally unaware of the sentencing options for the crimes they commit until after they have been caught. So "deterrent effect" is a dead end. Arguing the death penalty over LWOP as a deterrent hinges on the impossibly rare "killer serving life without parole manages to escape and kill again." Yes, in that case the death penalty can be argued to have been a more effective deterrent factor had it been applied, but that happens...once every few decades?
There are multiple holes, but for just a couple examples... deterrence in the form of mandatory minimum sentences can only work when people are actually aware of the penalty. Most folks don't even find out what the potential sentence is until after they've already been arrested/charged. So deterrence is a farce as it relates to those folks.
Another problem, is that deterrence only works on people who think they will be caught. If they don't think they are going to get caught then the penalties are irrelevant. Most people wouldn't commit crimes in the first place if they thought there was a good chance they'd be caught. Ever notice how everyone drives the speed limit when there is a visible police car on the road? If the state wanted to protect public safety by deterring people from speeding, they would have highly visible squad cards on the highway... but since they're most interested in collecting fines, the police hide in ambush instead.
With respect to discouraging recidivism, deterrence only works if the released convict has other attractive, viable options. If they have little choice but to return to crime and/or no assistance in changing their ways, or even if a return to crime is the path of least resistance, then the prospect of being convicted again isn't an effective deterrent.
Again, those are just a few holes in the deterrence theory of criminal punishment.
. Anyway you're right of course... the conversation tends to go:We have a means to address this already, they're called "elections."
If you're talking about a State that no longer holds or honors elections, than the constitution is no longer relevant.
We're going in circles. Again, as @Timsup2nothin points out, the death penalty as a deterrent fails for some of the same reasons that mandatory minimums fail as a deterrent.He added Rehabilitation and then you added deterrence shortly thereafter. And then I laid out the case that the death penalty could be framed in terms of a deterrent effect.
Some people definitely think that the value of a death penalty is its punishment benefit. I don't really have much sympathy for that viewpoint.