The Death Penalty should be applied equally to all ages

commonsense

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Let's be clear here.

The system we have currently is NOT the system I am advocating.

I am not defending the modern prison state. I am opposing it.
OK, fair enough.
The punishments God authorized are restitution, corporal punishment, and death, depending on the crime. Pointing to America’s bloated incarceration rate does not refute my position. It refutes the prison-heavy, bureaucratic, sentimental mess we have now.
Correct me if I'm wrong (haha), so you want to follow the bible for punishments called for for various crimes. You are calling for death for murder, adultery, incest, blasphemy, sabbath violations, striking parents etc. Seems a little harsh. And corporal punishment would entail what? Public lashing? Flogging? I don't think you're going to get a lot of public support for such measures though. Would you be willing to water down biblical pronouncements... you know, go along to get along?
They are also socially destructive. They mix lesser offenders with hardened criminals, degrade them, harden them, and then dump them back into society worse than before. In many cases they function less like justice and more like state-run breeding grounds for further criminality.
That's true.
My point is that refusing to punish grave evil appropriately teaches the wrong lesson, sets a bad precedent, and corrodes society over time.

A just system reduces crime so effectively that such cases become extraordinarily rare to begin with. The goal is not that children would often need punishment, but that the social order produced by equal justice would make such cases almost unheard of.
It's quite interesting, the tension between the different scripture writers, some who emphasized the justice and retribution of God, versus those who emphasized the merciful nature of God.
You can find a verse in the Bible to support almost any point of view.
 

JudgeRightly

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OK, fair enough.

Correct me if I'm wrong (haha), so you want to follow the bible for punishments called for for various crimes.

Essentially, yes, with important caveats.

Unlike Arthur, however, I’m happy to actually explain those caveats rather than just wave around ‘common sense,’ emotion, and current custom as though that settles anything.

You are calling for death for murder, adultery, incest, blasphemy, sabbath violations, striking parents etc. Seems a little harsh.

Some of those yes, others no.

Let's back up a moment, so we have a better frame of reference, because otherwise you’re just throwing a pile of laws together with no distinctions.

The Mosaic law is not a random pile of commands. It contains moral principles, civil case laws, and symbolic or covenantal ordinances tied specifically to Israel.

I am not arguing that every penalty found under Moses is mechanically transferred wholesale into modern civil law with no distinctions.

The question is which civil principles reflect enduring justice for human society as such.

For that, the core civil standards are things like murder, adultery, theft, false witness, and covetousness as a window into motive. Those are foundational to any civilized society because they protect life, marriage, property, truth, and social order.

By contrast, things like blasphemy and sabbath violations belong to a different category, because they were tied to Israel’s covenantal status in a way that is not identical to ordinary civil administration now.

At bottom, the law is not arbitrary. It is the golden rule expressed juridically. It tells you not only what you may not do to others, but what justice requires when someone has done those things.

So to answer your question, things like murder, rape, incest, adultery, would indeed result in the death penalty, and in the case of adultery, for both participants.

And corporal punishment would entail what? Public lashing? Flogging?

Yes, actual corporal punishment.

The biblical standard is proportionate justice: eye for eye, hand for hand, life for life.

It's not cruelty, but a restraint on cruelty. It keeps punishment proportionate to the offense instead of letting the state either indulge in excess or dissolve justice into sentimentality.

So yes, flogging would apply to many crimes, such as assault. Scripture builds in restraint. Even the forty-lash maximum shows that biblical corporal punishment was not open-ended brutality, but justice bounded by restraint, literally by God's merciful command.

So if, in the commission of a crime, you caused an innocent person to lose an eye, the punishment would correspond to that injury directly. The point is measured justice, not sadism.

I don't think you're going to get a lot of public support for such measures though. Would you be willing to water down biblical pronouncements... you know, go along to get along?

That is just an appeal to popularity.

Whether a law is fashionable has no bearing on whether it is just.

And no, I would not water down divine justice to make it more palatable to a crowd. “Go along to get along” is precisely how societies lose the moral courage to punish evil at all.

That's true.

And that point alone should already tell you that the prison-heavy system you appealed to earlier is not a serious refutation of my position.

It's quite interesting, the tension between the different scripture writers, some who emphasized the justice and retribution of God, versus those who emphasized the merciful nature of God.

There is no contradiction there.

God is not a one-dimensional Being.

He is loving and merciful, and He is also just and wrathful toward the unrepentant wicked.

The tension is not in God nor in His word, but in man’s tendency to redefine mercy as indulgence and justice as cruelty.

Mercy does not mean pretending evil is less evil than it is. And justice does not mean the absence of compassion. In Scripture, both belong to God’s holiness.

You can find a verse in the Bible to support almost any point of view.

Well, you can rip verses out of context and twist them to support almost any point of view, sure.

That does not mean the Bible supports all those views. It simply says more about what people are willing to do with Scripture than about what Scripture actually teaches.

Scripture gives a man the rope he needs either to pull himself out by truth or to hang himself by twisting it.

The real question is not what people can make isolated verses sound like, but what the Bible actually teaches when read rightly.
 

Arthur Brain

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No. I got it only after several pages of evasion, and even now you are still hiding behind the same caveat rather than defend it.



Calling it “common sense” does not prove it is either common or sensible. It is just another label doing the work of an argument.



Then start arguing rationally instead of appealing to sneers, revulsion, and crowd reaction.



This is exactly the sort of non sequitur I have been talking about.

A five-year-old not competing with adults at the Olympics does not tell you where moral or legal accountability begins. Physical development and criminal accountability are not identical categories, and pretending they are is just another dodge.



Again, appealing to what “the West” currently does is not an argument. Men make laws, and men are perfectly capable of making bad, inconsistent, cowardly, or sentimental laws.



No, the abstraction is in your standard.

“Sufficient development” is vague, movable, and undefined. That is why you keep repeating it instead of defining it.



You keep saying “science” as though that settles a moral and legal question. It does not. Pointing to development does not tell you where accountability begins, what degree of understanding is sufficient, or why your preferred threshold is anything but arbitrary.



You are pleading for an exception. That is exactly what you are doing.

You already admitted the general rule: letting the guilty escape punishment sets a bad precedent.

Now all you have left is insisting that your preferred exempt class somehow does not create the very problem you already admitted exists.



Thank you for proving my point.
If different countries draw different lines, then your supposedly scientific threshold is not actually giving you one clear moral standard at all. It is a sliding social convention, dressed up after the fact with scientific language.



Back to the same bad analogy. Running a sprint and bearing criminal guilt are not the same issue.



Again, irrelevant. You are comparing athletic capacity to moral accountability as though they were interchangeable. They are not.



No, your “legitimate point” has been to keep counting downward until people flinch.

That's emotional escalation, not reasoning.

A five-year-old is an extreme but still plausible hard case. Your move is to flee from that hard case into younger and younger absurdities because you still do not want to defend your exception on principle.



Because crowds react emotionally to hard cases.

That tells us something about crowds. It does not settle the truth of the principle.

And this little pile-on from Commonsense does not help either:



No, it is not hard to nail down at all. The answer has been stated plainly. You and Arthur just do not like what it implies.

Vlad has already answered you directly:



And then even more plainly:



That is not “slippery” at all. It is direct.

What is actually happening here is that the answer has been given, and you just do not like it. So instead of engaging it, you keep counting downward... five, four, three... hoping that if you push the age low enough, revulsion will do the work that argument has failed to do.

You're just manipulating, not responding reasonably.



No. You conceded the rule and attached your preferred exception to it. That is still a concession of the rule.



It did give me pause for thought. That is why I kept pressing the principle while you kept appealing to revulsion.



And once again, no one is arguing that infants should be executed. That's just your absurd caricature.



The rape gang scandal in Britain is public knowledge, not a social media myth. Your refusal to engage it does not make it disappear.



Right, because repeating “sufficient development,” “common sense,” and “science” is easier than actually defending the exception.



Thank you for admitting it is ridiculous.

You keep escaping into ridiculous examples because the hard case actually on the table is harder for you to evade.



You can underline it, bold it, italicize it, or put it in all caps. It still will not turn your exception into a principle.



And here again you retreat to infants, because you still do not want to deal with the actual principle under dispute.

You are the one insisting on an age-based exception. So yes, the burden is on you to show where Scripture makes age the determining principle in the administration of justice for capital crimes.

All I have to do to prove my universal principle of "put murderers, rapists, etc., to death" is quote the verses that say as much.

You, on the other hand, have to show from Scripture why we should not do what God commands in a whole class of cases you want exempted.

Instead, you keep appealing to revulsion, current law, and neuroscience buzzwords, because you still have not produced a biblical principle for your exception.



You stated that letting the guilty escape punishment sets a bad precedent. That is the rule. Denying that you stated it does not change the fact that you did.



Yes, we all saw earlier. That is where you conceded the rule and then have spent the rest of the thread trying to avoid the implications.



Love is the comittment to the good of someone. Punishing criminals is good not just for the victim, but for the criminal as well.

So invoking love does not help your case. Love is not sentimental indulgence, and it is not the shielding of grave evil from consequences. You keep speaking as though love and justice pull in opposite directions, but they do not.

Refusing to punish grave evil is not love in any serious sense. It's just moral softness masquerading as virtue.



No, emotion is not the antithesis of reason. But in your case it keeps displacing it.

A hard case provokes revulsion in you, and instead of disciplining that reaction with principle, you keep treating the reaction itself as though it were the argument.



My premise is that punishing criminals appropriately keeps crime to a minimum across society.

Are you suggesting that that isn't a good effect?



Because they do bolster it. Hard cases test principles.



No. The solution, which you seem incapable of making the connection to, is to punish crime appropriately so that crime is deterred so effectively that such edge cases, such as children raping other children or even younger children try to kill adults, become virtually nonexistent, and if they do occur, they are vanishingly rare, to the point of being unheard of.

Under a just system, the point is not that children would often need to be punished. It's that they would almost never be in a position to commit such crimes in the first place.

Yeah, I'm not wading through this whole bunch of self impressed verbiage piece by piece this time thanks. I'll pick up on a few bits and remind myself that even that much is a waste of time.

What crowd am I supposedly appealing to on here nowadays JR?! anna and commonsense? I'm not making any argument for 'waves from the peanut' gallery, this place was once a thriving and bustling forum to be a part of until the clowns took over and now it's not even a faint shadow of what it once was.

The "caveat" and context is obvious and you don't have to be a professor of neuroscience, heck, you don't need to have even studied it particularly, to understand that in much the same way that a child of five is underdeveloped physically, the same goes for mental development, it's bloody obvious...

You prattle on about me reducing the age as if that could ever help your position in the first place. It's not me with an untenable position to start with...

Oh, and the stuff with rape gangs marauding and Biblical support for your thread premise? Well, provide the evidence for the former so it's not hyperbole and with the latter, live up to that insufferably pompous username of yours, do the math and then figure out why there isn't any.

Or, smugly self congratulate yourself on being a mod who would have been kicked off these boards years ago for advocating the stuff that you do nowadays with impunity (much like ICE funnily enough)

I miss this place when there was self admitted conservative bias but not bat crap crazy city as it's unfortunately become...
 

JudgeRightly

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Yeah, I'm not wading through this whole bunch of self impressed verbiage piece by piece this time thanks. I'll pick up on a few bits and remind myself that even that much is a waste of time.

That's a convenient way of saying you can't answer it.

The "caveat" and context is obvious

Then it should be easy for you to defend it.

But you still have not.

You keep repeating the caveat as though repetition turns it into a principle. It doesn't.

and you don't have to be a professor of neuroscience, heck, you don't need to have even studied it particularly, to understand that in much the same way that a child of five is underdeveloped physically, the same goes for mental development, it's bloody obvious...

No one disputes that children are less developed than adults.

What you still refuse to show is how incomplete development gives you a clear, objective, and non-arbitrary basis for exempting an entire class of offenders from the rule you already admitted: that letting the guilty escape punishment sets a bad precedent.

You prattle on about me reducing the age as if that could ever help your position in the first place. It's not me with an untenable position to start with...

You keep reducing the age because you're trying to provoke revulsion, not defend your exception.

That's been obvious for pages.

Oh, and the stuff with rape gangs marauding and Biblical support for your thread premise? Well, provide the evidence for the former so it's not hyperbole and with the latter, live up to that insufferably pompous username of yours, do the math and then figure out why there isn't any.

On the biblical point, the issue remains simple.

I can point to passages commanding that murderers be put to death.

You're the one insisting on an age-based exception.

If you want to say my view lacks biblical support, then show where your exception gets its authority. Otherwise, be honest that your standard is coming from somewhere else entirely.

As for Britain, hand-waving at “hyperbole” is not engagement. The scandal is public knowledge, and your refusal to deal with it does not make it disappear.

Or, smugly self congratulate yourself on being a mod who would have been kicked off these boards years ago for advocating the stuff that you do nowadays with impunity (much like ICE funnily enough)

I miss this place when there was self admitted conservative bias but not bat crap crazy city as it's unfortunately become...

Saying I should have been kicked off years ago isn't an argument. It's just an admission that you'd rather the position be suppressed than answered.

And complaining about how the forum is run does nothing to answer the issue either. It just confirms that when your exception can't be defended, you retreat into grievance, revulsion, and venue complaints instead.

You still haven't defended your caveat as a principle. You still haven't shown that your exception rests on any clear, objective, non-arbitrary standard.

All you have left is ‘it’s obvious,’ ‘it’s science,’ ‘people would be revolted,’ and ‘you should be banned.’

You have no argument.

All you can do is retreat.

The wicked flee when no one pursues,But the righteous are bold as a lion.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
That's a convenient way of saying you can't answer it.



Then it should be easy for you to defend it.

But you still have not.

You keep repeating the caveat as though repetition turns it into a principle. It doesn't.



No one disputes that children are less developed than adults.

What you still refuse to show is how incomplete development gives you a clear, objective, and non-arbitrary basis for exempting an entire class of offenders from the rule you already admitted: that letting the guilty escape punishment sets a bad precedent.



You keep reducing the age because you're trying to provoke revulsion, not defend your exception.

That's been obvious for pages.



On the biblical point, the issue remains simple.

I can point to passages commanding that murderers be put to death.

You're the one insisting on an age-based exception.

If you want to say my view lacks biblical support, then show where your exception gets its authority. Otherwise, be honest that your standard is coming from somewhere else entirely.

As for Britain, hand-waving at “hyperbole” is not engagement. The scandal is public knowledge, and your refusal to deal with it does not make it disappear.



Saying I should have been kicked off years ago isn't an argument. It's just an admission that you'd rather the position be suppressed than answered.

And complaining about how the forum is run does nothing to answer the issue either. It just confirms that when your exception can't be defended, you retreat into grievance, revulsion, and venue complaints instead.

You still haven't defended your caveat as a principle. You still haven't shown that your exception rests on any clear, objective, non-arbitrary standard.

All you have left is ‘it’s obvious,’ ‘it’s science,’ ‘people would be revolted,’ and ‘you should be banned.’

You have no argument.

All you can do is retreat.

The wicked flee when no one pursues,But the righteous are bold as a lion.

Gordon Bennett, I don't need to reduce the age from five, it's so obvious why we have laws that reflect mental development and take such into account where it comes to accountability (and lack thereof) for crime(s). It shouldn't even need to be explained at all and it certainly doesn't need defending against what are effectively just a bunch of whacked out musings from yourself. I reduce the age to underscore just how inconsistent (as well as absurd) your position is. Even you aren't stupid enough to argue that babies should be held accountable for crimes and yet the title of your thread is that the DP should be applied to all ages. So why not? if it's absurd to hold a new born accountable for their actions then consider why our respective laws don't hold five year old's to the same standard as adults. Never mind the "revulsion" side for the present - although obviously that comes naturally to most people.

You admit that five year old's are less developed than adults (not that you have any choice in the matter) so why should they be held to the same standard? Common sense should tell you why, they might be more developed than a newborn baby but in much the same way as a five year old hasn't reached anywhere near the peak of physical maturity, nor have they developed to any such a degree mentally. It really is that simple. That's why no civilized country would enact any of the type of laws that you posit. Because they're insane.

Unless the Bible is supposed to lay down the transparently obvious at every given turn, it should be obvious that any verse where it comes to crime/punishment applies to those who have reached an age of accountability where they can be held responsible, In other words, not young children. So either find a verse that specifically supports your contention or concede that there isn't one. The onus was and still is on you for that.

Britain is not a island of marauding rape gangs JR so either find a link that isn't from social media or don't.

I'm not saying you should be banned. I'm pointing out that when this forum was in its heyday that you would have been. A conservative site this has always been and upfront about it but it wouldn't tolerate bat crap crazy and from any side of the aisle. Frankly, I'd rather any extreme views are allowed to be expressed so that they can be confronted, torn apart etc.

Frankly, why we have the laws we do and not ones aligning with your own ideals is darned obvious. Sanity. That's why we don't let five year old's create laws funnily enough. And I had to laugh at your last. You consider yourself as bold as a lion? Did you type that with a smug, self righteous grin on your face. Please....
 

JudgeRightly

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Gordon Bennett, I don't need to reduce the age from five, it's so obvious why we have laws that reflect mental development and take such into account where it comes to accountability (and lack thereof) for crime(s).

"Obvious" is not an objective standard, and it is certainly not textual warrant.

You keep asserting the exception. You still have not justified it.

It shouldn't even need to be explained at all and it certainly doesn't need defending against what are effectively just a bunch of whacked out musings from yourself.

If it does not need defending, then defend it.

So far all you have done is repeat that your exception is “obvious,” “common sense,” and “scientific.” None of those tells us where the line is, why it is there, or why it is anything other than assumed.

I reduce the age to underscore just how inconsistent (as well as absurd) your position is.

No, you reduce the age to provoke revulsion.

That is why you keep counting downward instead of defending your exception on principle.

Even you aren't stupid enough to argue that babies should be held accountable for crimes and yet the title of your thread is that the DP should be applied to all ages. So why not? if it's absurd to hold a new born accountable for their actions then consider why our respective laws don't hold five year old's to the same standard as adults. Never mind the "revulsion" side for the present - although obviously that comes naturally to most people.

Again, you are trying to smuggle your conclusion into the premise.

No one disputes that a newborn and a five-year-old are different. The question is what clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle you are using to convert developmental difference into legal exemption.

So far your answer is still just: “it’s obvious.”

That is not a standard.

You admit that five year old's are less developed than adults (not that you have any choice in the matter) so why should they be held to the same standard?

Because developmental difference is not itself a legal principle.

That is the part you keep skipping over.

You have not shown how “less developed” yields a clear threshold for accountability. You have only assumed that it does.

Common sense should tell you why, they might be more developed than a newborn baby but in much the same way as a five year old hasn't reached anywhere near the peak of physical maturity, nor have they developed to any such a degree mentally. It really is that simple. That's why no civilized country would enact any of the type of laws that you posit. Because they're insane.

Physical maturity and criminal accountability are not identical categories, and appealing to what "civilized countries" currently do is still just an appeal to consensus.

Calling your own position "sanity" does not make it a principle. It just means you are borrowing social approval where argument is lacking.

Unless the Bible is supposed to lay down the transparently obvious at every given turn, it should be obvious that any verse where it comes to crime/punishment applies to those who have reached an age of accountability where they can be held responsible, In other words, not young children.

No. The issue is textual warrant.

If Scripture states a rule, command, reason, or judgment, we are not justified in carving out unstated exceptions unless Scripture itself gives us warrant to do so.

Silence is not warrant. Compatibility is not warrant. Discomfort with the rule is not warrant.

When God says, "You shall not murder," and commands that murderers be put to death, I have textual warrant for the general rule.

You are the one asserting an age-based exception.

So where is your textual warrant for the exception?

You do not get to insert “except for the young” into the text and then call it obvious. That is eisegesis, not exegesis. That is you importing a standard from outside the text because you prefer it.

So either find a verse that specifically supports your contention or concede that there isn't one. The onus was and still is on you for that.

No. I have textual warrant for the rule: put murderers to death.

You are the one asserting the exception.

So again: where is your textual warrant for the exception?

Britain is not a island of marauding rape gangs JR so either find a link that isn't from social media or don't.

That is just caricature in place of engagement.

The point was never that Britain consists of nothing but rape gangs. The point is that Britain has had a very public scandal involving rape gangs, weak enforcement, and institutional cowardice.

Minimizing that does not answer it.

I'm not saying you should be banned. I'm pointing out that when this forum was in its heyday that you would have been. A conservative site this has always been and upfront about it but it wouldn't tolerate bat crap crazy and from any side of the aisle. Frankly, I'd rather any extreme views are allowed to be expressed so that they can be confronted, torn apart etc.

That is still not an argument.

And it is not even a very good claim about the rules.

Under the older TOL rules, the site explicitly distinguished between advocating lawful government punishment and advocating criminal activity or vigilantism. The example given by Nathan was that saying “the government should execute murderers” was allowed, whereas personally advocating execution outside the criminal justice system was not.
Thread 'ARCHIVE:The 16 commandments at TheologyOnLine (OLD)' https://theologyonline.com/threads/archive-the-16-commandments-at-theologyonline-old.33/

The 2009 rules and the current rules likewise bar advocating criminal behavior, while also reserving broad discretion to moderators in how they enforce the rules. In other words, your complaint is not really that my position violates the written rules. It is that you dislike the position and would rather see it suppressed than answered.
Thread 'The NEW-UPDATED 10 TOL Commandments' https://theologyonline.com/threads/the-new-updated-10-tol-commandments.9648/
Thread 'The Current UPDATED TOL Ten Commandments' https://theologyonline.com/threads/the-current-updated-tol-ten-commandments.59431/

So no, waving vaguely at some imagined golden age of the forum does not answer the argument. It just confirms, once again, that when your exception cannot be defended, you retreat into grievance about the venue instead.

Frankly, why we have the laws we do and not ones aligning with your own ideals is darned obvious. Sanity. That's why we don't let five year old's create laws funnily enough.

Again, "sanity" is not a standard. It is just a congratulatory label you attach to your own assumptions.

And nobody argued that five-year-olds should create laws. That is another non sequitur.

And I had to laugh at your last. You consider yourself as bold as a lion? Did you type that with a smug, self righteous grin on your face. Please....

No, I cited a proverb because it fit.

And judging by how quickly you retreated from principle to sneers, venue complaints, and tone-policing, it fit rather well.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
"Obvious" is not an objective standard, and it is certainly not textual warrant.

You keep asserting the exception. You still have not justified it.

Then you need to amend the title of this thread if you aren't actually willing for the DP to be applied to all ages, such as newborn babies because ironically, you're making your own exceptions. You can't have it both ways

If it does not need defending, then defend it.

So far all you have done is repeat that your exception is “obvious,” “common sense,” and “scientific.” None of those tells us where the line is, why it is there, or why it is anything other than assumed.

I've defended it multiple times in this thread alone and beforehand, not that it needs to be. When science is factored in then common sense follows and it's obvious why we don't have laws that execute five year old kids. You don't need to be an expert in human cognitive development to figure this stuff out. Have you any idea or understanding on the matter at all?

No, you reduce the age to provoke revulsion.

That is why you keep counting downward instead of defending your exception on principle.

JR, what do you suppose an average adults response is where it comes to the executing of five year old children if not one of revulsion? I don't need to lower the age in order to provoke a response thanks and I'm showing the absurdity and inconsistency of your premise. So if you're not willing to apply the DP to all ages and have your own caveats then at what age should it start and why?

Again, you are trying to smuggle your conclusion into the premise.

No one disputes that a newborn and a five-year-old are different. The question is what clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle you are using to convert developmental difference into legal exemption.

So far your answer is still just: “it’s obvious.”

That is not a standard.

A five year old is less developed than a ten year old too and they're both regarded as children and afforded protections under law in light of that. If a ten year old child has sex with an adult then the only one guilty of committing a crime is the adult. Do you agree with the law as it stands on this or should the child be held culpable as well?

See, the laws we have across the West aren't arrived at via some sort of whim or a popularity vote, We don't hold children as accountable for crimes as we do adults because they're still in the early stages of development. By five, language and social skills are developing but barring rare conditions that advance the development exponentially, they're still in the basic stages. They don't have the capacity for abstract thought yet, let alone being able to plan calculatedly, something which serious crimes usually entail. So yes, it's obvious.

Because developmental difference is not itself a legal principle.

That is the part you keep skipping over.

You have not shown how “less developed” yields a clear threshold for accountability. You have only assumed that it does.

See above

Physical maturity and criminal accountability are not identical categories, and appealing to what "civilized countries" currently do is still just an appeal to consensus.

Calling your own position "sanity" does not make it a principle. It just means you are borrowing social approval where argument is lacking.

Again, see above

No. The issue is textual warrant.

If Scripture states a rule, command, reason, or judgment, we are not justified in carving out unstated exceptions unless Scripture itself gives us warrant to do so.

Silence is not warrant. Compatibility is not warrant. Discomfort with the rule is not warrant.

When God says, "You shall not murder," and commands that murderers be put to death, I have textual warrant for the general rule.

You are the one asserting an age-based exception.

So where is your textual warrant for the exception?

You do not get to insert “except for the young” into the text and then call it obvious. That is eisegesis, not exegesis. That is you importing a standard from outside the text because you prefer it.



No. I have textual warrant for the rule: put murderers to death.

You are the one asserting the exception.

So again: where is your textual warrant for the exception?

I knew you wouldn't find a verse that would specify children so it makes me wonder why on earth you brought up the verse about "putting away the evil from among you" as a kind of "defence". It's clearly non relational in context so that was bewildering.

The fact is, the Bible shouldn't have to spoonfeed the obvious and it actually encourages people to think and use discernment too, hence the parables among else. So, with that being said, does it need to explicitly state that five year old kids are not to be put to death for murder because they're just kids or can you use some discernment? Here's a verse for you, specifically 11-12 but the whole passage is evocative


That is just caricature in place of engagement.

The point was never that Britain consists of nothing but rape gangs. The point is that Britain has had a very public scandal involving rape gangs, weak enforcement, and institutional cowardice.

Minimizing that does not answer it.

Britain has had it's fair share of scandals, not least regarding the Metropolitan police lately but 'marauding rape gangs' is just ridiculous hyperbole.

That is still not an argument.

And it is not even a very good claim about the rules.

Under the older TOL rules, the site explicitly distinguished between advocating lawful government punishment and advocating criminal activity or vigilantism. The example given by Nathan was that saying “the government should execute murderers” was allowed, whereas personally advocating execution outside the criminal justice system was not.
Thread 'ARCHIVE:The 16 commandments at TheologyOnLine (OLD)' https://theologyonline.com/threads/archive-the-16-commandments-at-theologyonline-old.33/

The 2009 rules and the current rules likewise bar advocating criminal behavior, while also reserving broad discretion to moderators in how they enforce the rules. In other words, your complaint is not really that my position violates the written rules. It is that you dislike the position and would rather see it suppressed than answered.
Thread 'The NEW-UPDATED 10 TOL Commandments' https://theologyonline.com/threads/the-new-updated-10-tol-commandments.9648/
Thread 'The Current UPDATED TOL Ten Commandments' https://theologyonline.com/threads/the-current-updated-tol-ten-commandments.59431/

So no, waving vaguely at some imagined golden age of the forum does not answer the argument. It just confirms, once again, that when your exception cannot be defended, you retreat into grievance about the venue instead.

What you advocate isn't lawful government, it's far from it. It doesn't sit well with most people, the concept of killing children under any guise and here was no exception. I don't just dislike your position JR, I find it the most sickening, twisted and abhorrent posit that's ever been aired on these boards, but get this straight. I don't support your being suppressed from putting those views out there so you can drop that angle....

Again, "sanity" is not a standard. It is just a congratulatory label you attach to your own assumptions.

And nobody argued that five-year-olds should create laws. That is another non sequitur.

Well it kinda is. For example, if some government dept tried tried to pass a law outlawing the wearing of shoes on a Saturday, then most folk would regard that as insane, the same with your own position only yours is rather more off the scale. I'm guessing you're not a parent?

No, I cited a proverb because it fit.

And judging by how quickly you retreated from principle to sneers, venue complaints, and tone-policing, it fit rather well.

It really didn't but convince yourself that it did if ya like
 

JudgeRightly

裁判官が正しく判断する
Staff member
Administrator
Super Moderator
Gold Subscriber
Then you need to amend the title of this thread if you aren't actually willing for the DP to be applied to all ages, such as newborn babies because ironically, you're making your own exceptions. You can't have it both ways

No. You are still confusing an absurd caricature with an unstated exception.

The issue is not whether newborns and five-year-olds differ. The issue is whether you have any clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle for your exception.

You still do not.

I've defended it multiple times in this thread alone and beforehand, not that it needs to be. When science is factored in then common sense follows and it's obvious why we don't have laws that execute five year old kids. You don't need to be an expert in human cognitive development to figure this stuff out.

No, you have asserted it multiple times.

That is not the same thing as defending it.

You keep repeating “science,” “common sense,” and “obvious,” but none of those gives you a clear standard. They are labels standing in for one.

Have you any idea or understanding on the matter at all?

Whether I understand human development or not is not the controlling issue. The command is “You shall not murder,” and the penalty is death for murderers. My personal grasp of developmental psychology is not a prerequisite for enforcing the stated rule.

You are the one asserting an exception to that rule, so the burden is on you to justify the exception.

JR, what do you suppose an average adults response is where it comes to the executing of five year old children if not one of revulsion? I don't need to lower the age in order to provoke a response thanks and I'm showing the absurdity and inconsistency of your premise. So if you're not willing to apply the DP to all ages and have your own caveats then at what age should it start and why?

Revulsion.

Which is exactly what you keep appealing to.
Thank you for confirming the point.

And no, I am not going to manufacture your exception for you. You are the one asserting the carve-out. The burden is on you to justify it.

A five year old is less developed than a ten year old too and they're both regarded as children and afforded protections under law in light of that. If a ten year old child has sex with an adult then the only one guilty of committing a crime is the adult. Do you agree with the law as it stands on this or should the child be held culpable as well?

That is a category shift, not an argument. You are moving from the question of a child committing a grave crime to a case where the child is treated by law as the one being victimized. That does not settle the principle under dispute.

See, the laws we have across the West aren't arrived at via some sort of whim or a popularity vote, We don't hold children as accountable for crimes as we do adults because they're still in the early stages of development. By five, language and social skills are developing but barring rare conditions that advance the development exponentially, they're still in the basic stages. They don't have the capacity for abstract thought yet, let alone being able to plan calculatedly, something which serious crimes usually entail. So yes, it's obvious.

And again, that is assertion, not warrant.

You are still trying to turn developmental observations into a legal principle without actually showing how the line is derived.

Five, ten, fifteen, eighteen, “barring impairment,” “rare conditions,” and so on. Once you abandon the rule for a sliding developmental model, the line moves wherever you want it to.

That is not an objective principle. It is a social convention draped in scientific language.

See above

Again, see above

Yes, we have all seen the above. What is above is still assertion, not justification.

I knew you wouldn't find a verse that would specify children

Exactly, because I am not the one inserting “children” into the text at all.

The text gives the rule, "put murderers to death." You are the one adding the exception.

So the question is not whether I can find a verse that explicitly says children are included. The question is what textual warrant you have for excluding them when the text itself does not.

The burden is on you to justify the “but not these,” not on me to prove the text includes the exception you want to read into it.

so it makes me wonder why on earth you brought up the verse about "putting away the evil from among you" as a kind of "defence". It's clearly non relational in context so that was bewildering.

Because the broader point remains the same: law is not merely reactive. It sets the public boundaries that keep a society from decaying.

It does not simply answer evil after the fact. It teaches beforehand what a society will and will not tolerate, and what consequences attach to crossing those lines.

Once those boundaries are softened by sentimental exceptions, society learns the wrong lesson. It learns that justice is negotiable, that guilt can be diluted, and that even grave evil may be explained away if the case is emotionally difficult enough.

In the end, a society will sink to the level its laws are willing to tolerate.

If you excuse children for committing serious crimes simply by virtue of their age, you teach society that childhood can function as a shield for grave evil. And, as you yourself already admitted, that sets a bad precedent.

The fact is, the Bible shouldn't have to spoonfeed the obvious and it actually encourages people to think and use discernment too, hence the parables among else.

Discernment is not a license to invent exceptions without warrant.

If Scripture states a rule, command, reason, or judgment, we are not justified in carving out unstated exceptions unless Scripture itself gives us warrant to do so.

Silence is not warrant. Compatibility is not warrant. Discomfort with the rule is not warrant.

So, with that being said, does it need to explicitly state that five year old kids are not to be put to death for murder because they're just kids or can you use some discernment?

If by “discernment” you mean permission to insert an unstated exception into the text, then no.

Discernment is for rightly understanding what the text says, not for carving out exceptions the text itself does not give.

You are asking whether “they’re just kids” is enough, by itself, to supply an exception where Scripture states none.

My answer is no.

If Scripture gives the rule, then the burden lies on the one narrowing it. You are the one saying, in effect, “Yes, murderers are to be put to death, but not these murderers.”

So again: what is your warrant for the “but not these”?

Here's a verse for you, specifically 11-12 but the whole passage is evocative


1 Corinthians 13 is about love, not about silently rewriting judicial standards by importing your preferred exceptions into unrelated texts.

Love is not the refusal to punish evil. Love and justice are not opposites.

Britain has had it's fair share of scandals, not least regarding the Metropolitan police lately but 'marauding rape gangs' is just ridiculous hyperbole.

You can complain about the phrasing, but the substance is unchanged. Britain had a major rape-gang scandal, and the failure to deal with it decisively is one more example of what happens when law becomes selective, cowardly, and subordinate to social pressure.

Both the Guardian and Reuters have covered the scandal and the institutional failures around it, so this is not some ‘social media myth’ you can hand-wave away.



What you advocate isn't lawful government, it's far from it.

That is just another assertion.

You have not shown that from Scripture, from any objective principle, or even from the forum rules you were waving around earlier. You have simply declared it.

It doesn't sit well with most people, the concept of killing children under any guise and here was no exception.

And that is still just an appeal to popularity and revulsion.

Whether most people recoil from a hard case does not determine whether the underlying principle is true.

I don't just dislike your position JR, I find it the most sickening, twisted and abhorrent posit that's ever been aired on these boards,

That is disgust language, not argument.

You keep reaching for adjectives because you still do not have a clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle for your exception.

but get this straight. I don't support your being suppressed from putting those views out there so you can drop that angle....

Fine. Then drop the forum-history grievance too.

If you are not arguing for suppression, then whether I supposedly would have been kicked off years ago is irrelevant.

The issue is still the same: you have not defended your exception. You have only asserted it, appealed to revulsion, and condemned the position in stronger and stronger emotional terms.

Well it kinda is. For example, if some government dept tried tried to pass a law outlawing the wearing of shoes on a Saturday, then most folk would regard that as insane, the same with your own position only yours is rather more off the scale. I'm guessing you're not a parent?

No, “sanity” still is not a standard.

That example only proves that people call things insane when they strongly dislike them. It does not turn the word into a legal or moral principle.

And the parent remark is just another insinuation in place of argument.

It really didn't but convince yourself that it did if ya like

You have still not defended your exception. You have still not given any clear, objective, non-arbitrary warrant for it. You have still not shown where the text itself authorizes it.

You have not shown any of that from Scripture, from any objective principle, or even from the rules you were waving around earlier. You have simply declared it.

And saying that most people would recoil, or that you find the position sickening, twisted, and abhorrent, still does not answer the argument. It only shows that your response to it is emotional rather than principled.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Then you need to amend the title of this thread if you aren't actually willing for the DP to be applied to all ages, such as newborn babies because ironically, you're making your own exceptions. You can't have it both ways



I've defended it multiple times in this thread alone and beforehand, not that it needs to be. When science is factored in then common sense follows and it's obvious why we don't have laws that execute five year old kids. You don't need to be an expert in human cognitive development to figure this stuff out. Have you any idea or understanding on the matter at all?



JR, what do you suppose an average adults response is where it comes to the executing of five year old children if not one of revulsion? I don't need to lower the age in order to provoke a response thanks and I'm showing the absurdity and inconsistency of your premise. So if you're not willing to apply the DP to all ages and have your own caveats then at what age should it start and why?



A five year old is less developed than a ten year old too and they're both regarded as children and afforded protections under law in light of that. If a ten year old child has sex with an adult then the only one guilty of committing a crime is the adult. Do you agree with the law as it stands on this or should the child be held culpable as well?

See, the laws we have across the West aren't arrived at via some sort of whim or a popularity vote, We don't hold children as accountable for crimes as we do adults because they're still in the early stages of development. By five, language and social skills are developing but barring rare conditions that advance the development exponentially, they're still in the basic stages. They don't have the capacity for abstract thought yet, let alone being able to plan calculatedly, something which serious crimes usually entail. So yes, it's obvious.



See above



Again, see above



I knew you wouldn't find a verse that would specify children so it makes me wonder why on earth you brought up the verse about "putting away the evil from among you" as a kind of "defence". It's clearly non relational in context so that was bewildering.

The fact is, the Bible shouldn't have to spoonfeed the obvious and it actually encourages people to think and use discernment too, hence the parables among else. So, with that being said, does it need to explicitly state that five year old kids are not to be put to death for murder because they're just kids or can you use some discernment? Here's a verse for you, specifically 11-12 but the whole passage is evocative




Britain has had it's fair share of scandals, not least regarding the Metropolitan police lately but 'marauding rape gangs' is just ridiculous hyperbole.



What you advocate isn't lawful government, it's far from it. It doesn't sit well with most people, the concept of killing children under any guise and here was no exception. I don't just dislike your position JR, I find it the most sickening, twisted and abhorrent posit that's ever been aired on these boards, but get this straight. I don't support your being suppressed from putting those views out there so you can drop that angle....



Well it kinda is. For example, if some government dept tried tried to pass a law outlawing the wearing of shoes on a Saturday, then most folk would regard that as insane, the same with your own position only yours is rather more off the scale. I'm guessing you're not a parent?



It really didn't but convince yourself that it did if ya like

Have to give you props for continuing with this. Not a subject I wanted to get into, all the parsing is too much for me. But I agree with you all the way through, so thank you for being a voice of sanity.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
Do you even anything about what you are talking about? There is so much rape now in Britain that the courts can't even keep up with them all.

Can you even type a sentence that makes coherent sense? Otherwise, I can only assume that you get your "news" from crisp packets because you're clearly clueless where it comes to the UK.
 

VladtheDestroyer

Active member
I can only assume that you get your "news" from crisp packets because you're clearly clueless where it comes to the UK.



 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member
No. You are still confusing an absurd caricature with an unstated exception.

The issue is not whether newborns and five-year-olds differ. The issue is whether you have any clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle for your exception.

You still do not.



No, you have asserted it multiple times.

That is not the same thing as defending it.

You keep repeating “science,” “common sense,” and “obvious,” but none of those gives you a clear standard. They are labels standing in for one.



Whether I understand human development or not is not the controlling issue. The command is “You shall not murder,” and the penalty is death for murderers. My personal grasp of developmental psychology is not a prerequisite for enforcing the stated rule.

You are the one asserting an exception to that rule, so the burden is on you to justify the exception.



Revulsion.

Which is exactly what you keep appealing to.
Thank you for confirming the point.

And no, I am not going to manufacture your exception for you. You are the one asserting the carve-out. The burden is on you to justify it.



That is a category shift, not an argument. You are moving from the question of a child committing a grave crime to a case where the child is treated by law as the one being victimized. That does not settle the principle under dispute.



And again, that is assertion, not warrant.

You are still trying to turn developmental observations into a legal principle without actually showing how the line is derived.

Five, ten, fifteen, eighteen, “barring impairment,” “rare conditions,” and so on. Once you abandon the rule for a sliding developmental model, the line moves wherever you want it to.

That is not an objective principle. It is a social convention draped in scientific language.



Yes, we have all seen the above. What is above is still assertion, not justification.



Exactly, because I am not the one inserting “children” into the text at all.

The text gives the rule, "put murderers to death." You are the one adding the exception.

So the question is not whether I can find a verse that explicitly says children are included. The question is what textual warrant you have for excluding them when the text itself does not.

The burden is on you to justify the “but not these,” not on me to prove the text includes the exception you want to read into it.



Because the broader point remains the same: law is not merely reactive. It sets the public boundaries that keep a society from decaying.

It does not simply answer evil after the fact. It teaches beforehand what a society will and will not tolerate, and what consequences attach to crossing those lines.

Once those boundaries are softened by sentimental exceptions, society learns the wrong lesson. It learns that justice is negotiable, that guilt can be diluted, and that even grave evil may be explained away if the case is emotionally difficult enough.

In the end, a society will sink to the level its laws are willing to tolerate.

If you excuse children for committing serious crimes simply by virtue of their age, you teach society that childhood can function as a shield for grave evil. And, as you yourself already admitted, that sets a bad precedent.



Discernment is not a license to invent exceptions without warrant.

If Scripture states a rule, command, reason, or judgment, we are not justified in carving out unstated exceptions unless Scripture itself gives us warrant to do so.

Silence is not warrant. Compatibility is not warrant. Discomfort with the rule is not warrant.



If by “discernment” you mean permission to insert an unstated exception into the text, then no.

Discernment is for rightly understanding what the text says, not for carving out exceptions the text itself does not give.

You are asking whether “they’re just kids” is enough, by itself, to supply an exception where Scripture states none.

My answer is no.

If Scripture gives the rule, then the burden lies on the one narrowing it. You are the one saying, in effect, “Yes, murderers are to be put to death, but not these murderers.”

So again: what is your warrant for the “but not these”?



1 Corinthians 13 is about love, not about silently rewriting judicial standards by importing your preferred exceptions into unrelated texts.

Love is not the refusal to punish evil. Love and justice are not opposites.



You can complain about the phrasing, but the substance is unchanged. Britain had a major rape-gang scandal, and the failure to deal with it decisively is one more example of what happens when law becomes selective, cowardly, and subordinate to social pressure.

Both the Guardian and Reuters have covered the scandal and the institutional failures around it, so this is not some ‘social media myth’ you can hand-wave away.





That is just another assertion.

You have not shown that from Scripture, from any objective principle, or even from the forum rules you were waving around earlier. You have simply declared it.



And that is still just an appeal to popularity and revulsion.

Whether most people recoil from a hard case does not determine whether the underlying principle is true.



That is disgust language, not argument.

You keep reaching for adjectives because you still do not have a clear, objective, non-arbitrary principle for your exception.



Fine. Then drop the forum-history grievance too.

If you are not arguing for suppression, then whether I supposedly would have been kicked off years ago is irrelevant.

The issue is still the same: you have not defended your exception. You have only asserted it, appealed to revulsion, and condemned the position in stronger and stronger emotional terms.



No, “sanity” still is not a standard.

That example only proves that people call things insane when they strongly dislike them. It does not turn the word into a legal or moral principle.

And the parent remark is just another insinuation in place of argument.



You have still not defended your exception. You have still not given any clear, objective, non-arbitrary warrant for it. You have still not shown where the text itself authorizes it.

You have not shown any of that from Scripture, from any objective principle, or even from the rules you were waving around earlier. You have simply declared it.

And saying that most people would recoil, or that you find the position sickening, twisted, and abhorrent, still does not answer the argument. It only shows that your response to it is emotional rather than principled.

Well, there was really no need for so much parsing so I will pick up on the gist and you can respond or not cos I'm not spending a load of time parsing out in turn.

The premise of this thread is that the DP should be applied to all ages equally, so from any age post birth to just before death and all manner of ages in between. It's no good crying "foul" when you're called out on the inconsistency and absurdity of such a position. For sure, what you advocate is repulsive, twisted and indefensible from any standpoint and you know fine well that it would be received as such even within the majority of conservative, evangelical circles. But setting that aside - as I have for the purposes of this, your position is thoroughly inconsistent in itself. Why should the DP not be applied to new born babies? When should it be viable to hold people accountable for their actions and why? 2? 3? You should amend the title of this thread if you make any exceptions at all. And then you should consider why you're making them and why such a position is utterly absurd at best

The laws we have are not based on emotion, no matter how many times you trot out that same emotive tripe. I don't need to make an appeal to anything because we have laws that take the science of cognitive development into account with logic and common sense flowing accordingly. You OTOH assert something that flies in the face of science and logic and you're clearly ignorant as regards the stages of neurological development to even try. It's entirely salient to bring up a case of a ten year old having sex with an adult even if it makes you uncomfortable, and frankly it should. If you believe that a five year old can be held accountable and put to death for murder, then surely a ten year old has greater understanding of what they're doing where it comes to having sex. The law classifies that as statutory child rape which it should.

Your ongoing 'appeal to popularity' nonsense can just be dismissed as pointed out prior. Your entire thread fails on its ludicrous premise alone and has zero chance of coming about and it's been explained as to why. Essentially, you're just some bloke on the net advocating something that fails on every level. Where it comes to scripture, you'll get no support for your proposal from the Bible unless you think that speaking and reasoning as a child has no relevance? Use your God given brain and some discernment if you can on the matter.
 

Arthur Brain

Well-known member



So, this makes the UK an island of marauding rape gangs, how? I'm well aware of scandals within the island thanks and wow,there has been some other than this as with any other country, but am not so thick as to use hyperbole in place of argument.
 

VladtheDestroyer

Active member
Well, there was really no need for so much parsing so I will pick up on the gist and you can respond or not cos I'm not spending a load of time parsing out in turn.

The premise of this thread is that the DP should be applied to all ages equally, so from any age post birth to just before death and all manner of ages in between. It's no good crying "foul" when you're called out on the inconsistency and absurdity of such a position. For sure, what you advocate is repulsive, twisted and indefensible from any standpoint and you know fine well that it would be received as such even within the majority of conservative, evangelical circles. But setting that aside - as I have for the purposes of this, your position is thoroughly inconsistent in itself. Why should the DP not be applied to new born babies? When should it be viable to hold people accountable for their actions and why? 2? 3? You should amend the title of this thread if you make any exceptions at all. And then you should consider why you're making them and why such a position is utterly absurd at best

The laws we have are not based on emotion, no matter how many times you trot out that same emotive tripe. I don't need to make an appeal to anything because we have laws that take the science of cognitive development into account with logic and common sense flowing accordingly. You OTOH assert something that flies in the face of science and logic and you're clearly ignorant as regards the stages of neurological development to even try. It's entirely salient to bring up a case of a ten year old having sex with an adult even if it makes you uncomfortable, and frankly it should. If you believe that a five year old can be held accountable and put to death for murder, then surely a ten year old has greater understanding of what they're doing where it comes to having sex. The law classifies that as statutory child rape which it should.

Your ongoing 'appeal to popularity' nonsense can just be dismissed as pointed out prior. Your entire thread fails on its ludicrous premise alone and has zero chance of coming about and it's been explained as to why. Essentially, you're just some bloke on the net advocating something that fails on every level. Where it comes to scripture, you'll get no support for your proposal from the Bible unless you think that speaking and reasoning as a child has no relevance? Use your God given brain and some discernment if you can on the matter.
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