• Tedesche
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    English
    71 year ago

    Depends on the crime and the context. Sometimes a person’s status as a teenager has no real relevance to the crime, which is why we sometimes try minors as adults. In most of these cases, it’s quite clear the kid knew what they were doing was wrong and what the consequences would be for others.

    Also, I don’t think there’s much of a difference between a 17-year-old being sentenced to live in prison vs. a 21-year-old.

    I also firmly believe that some crimes are so heinous that the criminal does not deserve a second chance. The only reason I don’t support capital punishment is because human legal systems so often get their judgments wrong, and execution is a punishment you can’t take back. But that doesn’t change my opinion that some people do deserve to die for what they did. Ergo, life without parole seems a good alternative.

    • aeternum
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      fedilink
      161 year ago

      eh, you can’t take back 50 years of wrongful imprisonment either.

      • Schadrach
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        fedilink
        111 year ago

        You can’t take it back, but you can at least offer them generous compensation for the government fucking up their life and also clean the slate and expunge the record.

        You can’t do anything to compensate someone for a wrongfully carried out execution. I’d actually support the death sentence if we had a way to be absolutely certain we weren’t ever going to carry it out on someone wrongfully convicted, but that’s impossible.