This is the best post I've seen thus far, so I'll address it.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Knight
Yet... you believe that they should be locked up in a small cell for the rest of their life? If they don't deserve capital punishment why would they deserve being locked up in a small cell for the rest of their life?
The death penalty is a form of punishment. Our laws in the US were based on Scripture, and death was given to those that purposely took the life of another. (In order to have justice prevail, the punishment MUST fit the crime).
And being cooped up in a small cell is a form of punishment; if it weren't then prisons would all be 1,000 acres of razor-wired fence where prisoners could smell the daisy's and pet lambs all day.
This is the main issue here, is the murderer truly insane? A group of shrinks meeting with a mass murderer for several hours a day for a week or two AFTER the crime has been committed isn't a very good indication of his mindset when he committed the crime.
As you pointed out, you have to take into account his actions prior to the incident, especially if premeditation was a factor in the crime, and what his lifestyle was like prior to the criminal act.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Knight
Yet... you believe that they should be locked up in a small cell for the rest of their life? If they don't deserve capital punishment why would they deserve being locked up in a small cell for the rest of their life?
The purpose is not punishment. Death penalty in itself accomplishes nothing, it is a form of justice that is not needed in a developed society that has secure prisons. The purpose is protecting society.
The death penalty is a form of punishment. Our laws in the US were based on Scripture, and death was given to those that purposely took the life of another. (In order to have justice prevail, the punishment MUST fit the crime).
And being cooped up in a small cell is a form of punishment; if it weren't then prisons would all be 1,000 acres of razor-wired fence where prisoners could smell the daisy's and pet lambs all day.
The question is whether Breivik is insane. I'm not convinced that a man that has planned his actions for 9 years can be held unaccountable. As another psychiatrist has pointed out, the diagnosis paranoid schizophrenic seems weird since the patient lacks the cardinal symptom of the illness, namely hallucinations.
This is the main issue here, is the murderer truly insane? A group of shrinks meeting with a mass murderer for several hours a day for a week or two AFTER the crime has been committed isn't a very good indication of his mindset when he committed the crime.
As you pointed out, you have to take into account his actions prior to the incident, especially if premeditation was a factor in the crime, and what his lifestyle was like prior to the criminal act.