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- From: nate@psygate.psych.indiana.edu (Nathan Engle)
- Subject: Re: A Stolen Life, A Dying Soul
- Message-ID: <nate.998@psygate.psych.indiana.edu>
- Sender: news@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu (USENET News System)
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- Organization: Psych Department, Indiana University
- References: <1h536uINNcpl@meaddata.meaddata.com> <1992Dec24.234313.26934@ringer.cs.utsa.edu> <nate.990@psygate.psych.indiana.edu> <1992Dec28.145643.4764@memstvx1.memst.edu>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 15:01:27 GMT
- Lines: 124
-
- kebarnes@memstvx1.memst.edu writes:
- >nate@psygate.psych.indiana.edu (Nathan Engle)
- >> sbooth@lonestar.utsa.edu (Simon E. Booth) writes:
- >>]I read this and was sickened by it. All I've got to say is that's what
- >>]the death penalty is for. I honestly hope those three killers get the
- >>]gas chamber, no appeals.
-
- >> I read the original post, but my reaction was merely to be saddened.
- >> Perhaps my study of history has inured me to violence, but it's difficult
- >> for me to get too overwrought about individual cases like this one.
-
- >Reminds me of a quote (don't infer insult from this):
-
- Not at all. As a matter of fact I would say that my muted reactions
- to violence are perhaps part of a larger problem in that many, many people
- feel much the same as I do. It's really tough to listen to reports of
- brutal teenage killers without it getting a little old after a while. We
- have two other teenage killer cases going on in the news here in Indiana,
- one in which a girl was killed by a group of other girls, and one in which
- a teenage boy confessed to a murder that occurred down in Florida. I'm sure
- that Simon is correct that I should be outraged, but in the context of all
- the other stuff going on I just can't work up the energy to be equally
- outraged by every single case.
-
- >"A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths
- >is a statistic."--Joseph Stalin
-
- >"Uncle Joe" [The Great Satan] knew whereof he spoke.
-
- He certainly did.
-
- >>]Call me crude, but something must be done.
- >>
- >> I think that your gut reaction may lead you to wish for something less
- >> than purely poetic justice. IMHO the most appropriate thing that could be
- >> done would be to throw those three guys and a case of A1 sauce into a cell
- >> with Jeffery Dahmer. (There you go, Simon, you weren't nearly as crude
- >> as me)
-
- >What are we to make of the case of Wesley Allan Dodd, convicted serial
- >child rapist-murderer in Washington state who says he wishes to
- >be executed by hanging, since that is what he did to the 4-year-old
- >boy who was his last victim?
-
- I guess we'd better call in "Dr Dripper"; sounds like a prime candidate
- for Dr-assisted suicide if every I saw one.
-
- >I find it discouraging that the ACLU wishes to contest this proposal,
- >and that the only way it seems for someone such as Dodd to be put
- >out of his own misery and everyone else's is for him to request that
- >the execution be carried out, ala: Gary Gilmore's request for a
- >Utah firing squad.
-
- The ACLU seems to base its fights on principles which are not always
- based in practicalities, but I can think of too many examples of other
- groups that seem to have that same problem to want to get too deeply into
- that topic.
-
- >It also seems curious that liberals who would no doubt fight for
- >Jack Kervorkian's right to kill, would have any qualms about seeing
- >this man die, who has violated the civil liberties of the innocent
- >in the most extreme way.
-
- Yes, some liberals certainly feel that way. I agree that their position
- is internally inconsistant, but once again I'm not prepared to get too
- deep into that one for fear of opening other cans of worms.
-
- >Though I may not agree with Rush's strict
- >"pro-life" position on abortion, he has a point about the effect
- >of the cheapening of human life which is brought about by rampant
- >abortion, and even euthanasia, in a society where the unjust taking
- >of life goes unpunished in many cases.
-
- Honestly I don't think that abortion (which definitely cheapens fetal
- life) is the primary contributor to this modern craze for grotesque murders.
- For that I would say that we have Hollywood, the film industry, and our old
- buddies Stallone and Schwartzeneger(sp?) to thank. When was the last time
- you saw graphic visual images of dozens of people getting buttered across
- the landscape?
-
- >Does execution deter?
-
- It certainly cuts down on those repeat-offender statistics.
-
- >If we were to execute any criminal who murdered while committing
- >another felony, we could have our answer. If there were fewer
- >murders associated with the commission of felonies, the effect
- >of such a law could readily be demonstrated. The necessity
- >of convicting the accused twice, first of the felony, and then the
- >capital murder charge, should add an extra measure of protection
- >against executing the innocent. It would be a good experiment to
- >try, and might ease jail overcrowding :-}.
-
- >How we should deal with the juveniles in this particular case
- >[Bob Greene's column] is a far more difficult question.
-
- >Might we simply delay executing them until they are adults,
- >mercifully granting them at least a fraction of their lives?
- >Or, can such children be "rehabilitated"? Are child criminals
- >any more capable of "rehabilitation" than adults?
-
- >Accepting for the sake of argument that these children became
- >"soulless" thanks to their parents, or their environment, what
- >can be done to help other children who are similarly endangered?
-
- >For the sake of the victims now, and in the future, our national
- >"soul" must be found, and healed. And fast.
-
- Perhaps so. To get back to my dispassionate analytical mode, I would
- note that violent, "soulless" cultures have a tendency to be fairly
- successful empire builders. As long as the inherent tendency towards
- violence doesn't impair population growth our prospects for continuing
- as a nation are fairly good. If you would like to make the argument that
- the current level of violence is excessive then I would agree, but at
- least from a historical perspective I would say that the level of violence
- we're seeing doesn't necessarily pose an immediate threat to our survival
- as a nation. It would certainly be much more pleasant to have nice neighbors
- whose kids we're pretty sure aren't going to murder us, but at this point
- I think that the murder rate is still less than the birth rate.
-
- --
- Nathan Engle Software Juggler
- Psychology Department Indiana University
- nate@psygate.psych.indiana.edu nengle@copper.ucs.indiana.edu
-