tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2408147694441538424.post6951462937875191453..comments2023-11-09T02:13:49.379+08:00Comments on Unit 1012: The Victims' Families For The Death Penalty.: U.S.A VICTIMS’ FAMILIES WHOM JUSTICE WAS SERVED [2005 TO 2010] 40 QUOTESSAINT MICHAEL 2012http://www.blogger.com/profile/16585770692137527425noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2408147694441538424.post-30434720780990656852015-01-27T15:11:11.206+08:002015-01-27T15:11:11.206+08:00The problem with limiting the maximum penalty for ...The problem with limiting the maximum penalty for murder to life without parole is that in the not-so-distant future, some far Left high court will undoubtedly call THAT "cruel and unusual punishment". That's why we can’t give the opponents of the death penalty one square inch of ground. We’ve all seen what has happened in the last 60 years when we’ve compromised on other social issues like gun control, obscenity, religion and abortion. If we let the Left in, they aren't going to leave until their notion of justice is the new reality. And I'm sure that as soon as they get the death penalty to fall, these same people will begin again in earnest with their NEW cause of making 'life without parole' a thing of the past as well. That’s why state-sponsored executions are best. Now if we could only remove the plethora of appeals and other road-blocks that these people have purposely installed to slow the process down, the death penalty might even become the deterrent to murder that it always could've been.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17638032708788657121noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2408147694441538424.post-51559638321316251522012-03-11T21:39:38.965+08:002012-03-11T21:39:38.965+08:00<> If Cameron Todd Willingham was alive, I w...<> If Cameron Todd Willingham was alive, I will never get him to babysit my children. I got better things to do. Anyway, Cameron Todd Willingham is a guilty monster, http://corsicanadailysun.com/thewillinghamfiles/x46870673/-09-06-09-No-doubts<br /><br /><> I cannot think of an innocent person executed since 1977 when Gary Gilmore was executed. Life imprisonment is better? After the death penalty is abolished, life without parole will be the next target.SAINT MICHAEL 2012https://www.blogger.com/profile/16585770692137527425noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2408147694441538424.post-50744444350627366852012-01-26T21:50:00.236+08:002012-01-26T21:50:00.236+08:00You failed to mention the victims in the http://ca...You failed to mention the victims in the http://camerontoddwillingham.com/ case, what justice to they get when Cameron was allegedly wrongly executed for a crime he may never have committed, a fact suppressed by the state. How many others have been executed for which evidence was later found or at the time suppressed that would have proven innocence or other mitigating circumstances which would have negated the death penalty? Such people show why the death penalty is not an appropriate method of sentencing. Life imprisonment is adequate, and allows for an individual to be later exonerated if evidence arises to prove that they were innocent. Killing someone means that they are just dead, and whether they are later found innocent cannot undo that fact. Ask Governor Perry, he has a large carpet under which the remains of Cameron Todd Willingham were swept without investigation.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com