You're talking a complete reversal of human psychology.
No, I'm not. I'm talking about a time of understandable desensitization to human suffering and violence even in the most civilized parts of society.
Yet you have no data, no possible way to obtain your data, no historical precedent and God on the other side of the debate. :idunno:
You're wrong from top to bottom, stripe. The data on crimes of passion and what they constitute in terms of percentages of homocides isn't a matter of speculation and that's all I'm reflecting here.
:rotfl:
Lawyer-speak for a good pay package.
Rather, a reasoned and supportable statement met with nothing much but a cartoon and a tired lawyer joke. It's a simple matter of numbers. Do you have any idea about the percentage of cases ending in convictions? No, you don't or you'd approach this differently. Go look it up.The overwhelming number of people charged with a crime in this country confess and plead. The majority of those that go to trial end in conviction because we insist on pretty damning evidence to go forward with prosecutions. And when the system fails, as any system will, the innocent have built in mechanisms for review to reverse the injustice. It's imperfect, but a system that works and I'll stand it against any functioning model in the world today.
The system is overloaded, inefficient, ineffective, expensive beyond belief and regularly fails spectacularly to exact proper justice.
Any system that turns the volume we have will be expensive. You're just talking out of your hat on the rest. Any system fails. Regularly? Not in relation to the volume, no. But that's why we have the appellate process.
You're going to have to do a whole lot better than this opinion and your opinion that God changed His mind.
You're laboring under a couple of misconceptions. The first is that God changed His mind, that He had in mind that our world should reflect and follow the same Law that governed Israel before Christ. The second notion you have is that I'm attempting to convince anyone to alter their position. I've answered the OP to set out my part. I'm not trying to convert you or anyone else to my understanding.
...If would-be murderers knew a swift and painful execution awaited them, the murder rate would plummet.
If the lion's share of homicides here are crimes of passion it doesn't follow that executions, swift or otherwise, would impact it. And what I can guarantee is the increased likelihood that we'd execute even more innocent men and women as a result.
:thumb: Tragic. Almost as bad as releasing a guilty man. But, within my system, good may come of it.
I'm never surprised at the willingness of anyone not under sentence to sacrifice someone else for the greater good.
lain:
And you call the US system "good"?
It's a great system. It works. Like any system, it's imperfect and could use improvement.
No, it's an "Other than Jesus,? No."