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xeuyrawp
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That's a pretty flawed argument, Alex. Would you eat beef if you had to kill it? What about chicken? Would you wear clothes if you had to make them? Would you drive if you had to capture a bunch of Asian kids to construct it for you?towny said:my mum made an interesting point today, on the issue of how they try make it so the executionors dont know which one has actually done it. if the people actually doing executions need that kind of peace of mind, should they even be doing it in the first place?
i would be interested to see how many juries gave the death penalty if the actual jury themselves actually had to administer it.
(No, no, yes (but you'd do a shit job) and no, I'd imagine...)
Also, note that we wouldn't have one juror - how would you propose that 12 different people kill a person 12 times? I doubt that would work out. Also, you'll note that jurors are a general sample of our moralistic population - they've never been trained to cope with that kind of guilt. Since our society condemns killing and the jurors are killing someone, they'd be ridden with guilt. Note that our customary laws of killing=bad is a premise which should just be left for the moment.
Like you said: nowadays, they do try, primarily, to stop an executioner from knowing whether he killed someone for reasons of guilt.
I'd doubt that that's actually the ONLY reason, otherwise, why would we have had such a great history full of mob-lynchings and decapitations, where the actual killer is certainly known??
Like I said, it's a function of modern times and allowed a person (a soldier, when firing-squads were first invented) to say to his colleagues 'I didn't kill him, the institution did' in EXACTLY the same way that a judge can say 'I didn't put him to gaol, the institution did'. This mechanism also gives judges/jurors/firing squad members the right to a certain safety - what could they have done, anyway?
Judge-figures have tough decisions to make, and I'd guarantee that a lot of them knew they'd made the morally wrong decision, but had to uphold whatever principles.
Also, there's the matter of perspective - I doubt vengeance killers in places like the Near East are struck with a pang of guilt. In that case, does the fact that they have 'peace of mind' make it right?