billyshelby
Well-Known Member
You just posted a link to a website that basically obliterates any argument that the death penalty saves money. Nice work, ace.
You just posted a link to a website that basically obliterates any argument that the death penalty saves money. Nice work, ace.
The post you quoted, and are responding to, there had nuthin to do with "pain." It was addressed to the issue of what a "guess" and "speculation" is.
If ya ax me, it is just more of your sophistry; an attempt, by virtue of dubious definition, to change form into substance. Callin sumthin a "guess" don't make it a guess, and I spoze I give MD's credit for knowin a little more than you do. I didn't know that every medical diagnosis was merely a "guess," ya know?
we don't know how painful the guillotine is or how long individuals remain concious.
The death penalty itself don't cost nuthin--mebbe a coupla bucks for the drug. Among other things that there abolishionist site claims, for example, that: " Capital cases are far more complicated than non-capital cases. Experts will probably be needed on forensic evidence, mental health and the social history of the defendant."
Would none of that be needed if you were "merely" gunna give a guy life without parole, that it? Does a case suddenly become "more complicated" to investigate and prove depending solely on whether a prosecutor decides to seek the death penalty? If so, why should it? Is it because we will willingly give a guy life without any undue attention bein given to his guilt or innocence, that it? For someone who is concerned about not punishin the innocent, the demand should be that more care and time be spent on *every* trial, I figure.
Of course, in a lot of "life-without-parole" cases there are no costs of trial. That's because the perp cops a plea to avoid the death penalty. Indirectly, the death penalty probably saves 10 times as much as it costs to prosecute those who won't plead guilty, due to that factor.
Even your own link (which is an about.com article referencing an urbanlegends.com article which no longer exsists, hardly a medical treatise) acknowledges that medical scientists can estimate the outer boundary as "roughly thirteen seconds"
Like my homey who cut off his own fingers, a guy who gets guillotined probably doesn't even have enough time for any sensations of "pain" to register in his consciousness.
To call an informed expert opinion a mere "guess" is indeed the epitome of "sophistry," Kicky, sorry.
If I took a tape measure and measured sumthin to the 1/16th of an inch, but could not be more precise than sayin sumthin like: It's closer to 29 feet, 6 and 5/16 inches than it is to either 1/4 or 3/8 inches, you would presumably call that a "guess."
As to conciousness, it really doesn't say much of anything. It might happen immediately, it might last all 13 seconds. Not exactly much more than a guess given that it leaves the whole range open.
Now this is sophistry. The only purpose of this example is to obfuscate, rather than rebut, the counter-argument.
[No, it simply illustrates the nature of your attempt to equate a lack of absolute precision with "guesswork]
Key difference: You'd have MEASURED something.
[Difference? Like high energy phosphates can't be measured, that the idea?]
... you resort to name calling and labeling such as labeling a very simple and consistent argument sophistry. These are things that made you one of the most despised posters on the old board, eventually getting banned, and is presently contributing to your racing out to having the lowest rep on the current board. Maybe it's time to take the hint.