Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
And calling someone out for a software glitch that you have to KNOW, having been around long enough to have seen it happen before, is worse than petty.
True, but reread some of the exchanges here and see if it is really out of place. Besides, it amused me.

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
"Presuming" that anyone here has argued for capital punishment without due process is a sure sign you aren't here to debate but to inflame.
Go back to the first post. The accused referred to has not yet been tried, let alone convicted, and the poster is saying, in nearly as many words, that he will get off with a relatively light sentence when the penalty he truly deserves is unavailable under English law. That's trial, verdict and sentence in half a dozen lines. Where's the due process there, and whose argument is the more inflammatory?

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
Quotations carry with them an understanding of some of the arguements that originally back it up. To call someones use "trite' is uncalled for, especially as none of us needs to hear all of the logic and dialogue that would be needed to say it otherwise to understand those peoples' opinions.
One has to describe things the way one sees them. "A life for a life" is so hackneyed and tired that is has lost all the impact it once had. So, yes, it is trite, and I am entitled to say so.

Now I have reviewed this thread, I see it was you who first introduced the phrase. At least you used it only to try to elucidate the meaning of yet another tired and hackneyed quotation. It has also been used by another poster to support the cause of judicial murder, however.

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
I don't think anyone is saying the death penalty stops others from killing, but we know it stops the executed person from doing so again.
I think we all realise that.

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
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... Fortescue wasn't suggesting that a person found guilty should not be capitally punished. In fact, a system of justice that goes out of its way to be sure of guilt, has the right to punish capitally. He was against capricious justice systems.
Yes, I accept that. What kind of system would English criminal justice be, if not capricious, if it executed suspects in the manner proposed in post number 1? Fortescue would have argued (I presume - I have not read him), that it would be "capricious" to execute someone when it was not certain he deserved the death penalty.

But we can't, as I've pointed out a couple of times already, always be sure ...

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
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That said, no point in you arguing we can't be sure. We've (mostly) already agreed on that point and agree that a capital sentence must come with a series of automatic reviews, appeals, and the application of new science as it becomes available.
I see you have anticipated me, but we haven't fully agreed on this point. They must be there, of course, but they must also be completely reliable. Most of you on your side of the argument might agree with the proposition as it is ... must agree, I suppose, but no-one on my side (and there have been one or two) can possibly concede it. The appeals system is inadequate: innocent people have been hanged here in spite of it. As I said before, the Common Law approach to determining guilt or innocence depends more upon the barrister's skills than whether the accused committed the crime.

As for science, there's a long way to go before it can be relied upon completely for absolute certainty, so we shouldn't be acting as though it is foolproof already. As yet, not even DNA can prove a person committed a crime.

Quote Originally Posted by Ozme52 View Post
And yet... I appreciate your sense of humor and history.
Yes, a little levity now and then is important when frank and earnest points of view are being exchanged, no matter in how friendly a manner.

The observation was startlingly clever and highly amusing.