Submitted by IAmNotARobot124 t3_10zq9bn in news
SuperSaiyanCockKnokr t1_j874ina wrote
Reply to comment by SatanicNotMessianic in Family of Oakland baker seeks 'restorative justice' for her death following robbery by IAmNotARobot124
The approach that most probably reduces recidivism and reoffence rate is elimination. It’s the most hardline and brutal approach, but also the most effective. It likely wouldn’t be accepted or legalized in most modern legal systems, but I also doubt that American society in general is prepared to enact change based on the best available research, at least not in the current generations.
SatanicNotMessianic t1_j8753pt wrote
What do you think the overall cultural effect of that would be? Has capital punishment been broadly applied historically, and what was the environment like at the time?
SuperSaiyanCockKnokr t1_j878rra wrote
Capital punishment and what we call murder today have, in certain contexts, been norms in many past societies and cultures. There’s so much complexity in how these traditions and systems developed that hypotheticals, though intriguing, often produce results that don’t really make sense in the real world. The cultural effect of the sudden introduction of hardline capital punishment here in the US would obviously be incredibly disruptive, riots in the streets and perhaps more. I can’t personally envision a society reliant on elimination that doesn’t eventually look like North Korea. But there’s always the possibility that future research indicates permanent removal or destruction (either via death or transformation to the point that a person is so far-removed from their original self that the destruction of said person has essentially occurred) is the best option in certain cases, if not many. I like restorative justice as a concept and it’s encouraging to see places try out new systems, but I’m not sure there will ever be a time when long-term incarceration won’t be a part of it.
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