akhenaten
<font color=green>Lucky for husband, the neighbors
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2005
- Messages
- 5,844
Is it really? Think about it - you give a man a gun knowing that he is about to use it to kill someone. It makes you just as responsible for the death, IMO.
If you convict a man of a crime knowing with reasonable certainty that the result will be his death, it amounts to the same thing (with respect cause/effect).
The person who kills a prisoner on death row is not the man who "pulls the lever", it is the jury that put him in the "chair".
This is, of course, not a discussion of guilt or innocence - just the actual killing of the person found guilty.
with the extensive appeals process , I am not sure this is correct.
I don't know if I could sit on a jury that had such consequences... the one jury i was on in college had me questioning if I should/could pass judgement on another person..... Judge not...
However if I had to be judged I would want someone like me to do it... someone who could decide to convict but could not do so too easily...