Capital Punishment: case of Stanley "Tookie" Williams


  • Ironically Mary is not a Christian (AFAIR) - nor am i using the gospel as a support against the death penalty, but rather to shoot down Christian arguments for it.


  • @Yanny:

    I’m no fan of capital punishment. I think it’s hipocratic and hurts our nation’s image. We are the only western nation still to execute people.

    But while the law stands, it is still law. A jury of his peers sentenced Tookie to be executed. Let the decision stand.

    I agree comepletly with this.  Back where I used to live (IL) the Govenor (who was against the death penalty) took every person off of death row before he left office.  No case by case basis, nothing, he didn’t like it, so he used his power to legislate in a way he was never intended to legislate.  This is one of the most horrible abuses of power I have ever seen.


  • @cystic:

    Ironically Mary is not a Christian (AFAIR) - nor am i using the gospel as a support against the death penalty, but rather to shoot down Christian arguments for it.

    Than why the spiel about “who would jesus execute?”  Even if she isn’t Christian, she still shouldn’t take what she wants out of the Gospel and leave the rest and try to claim some moral authority by saying her opinion is backed by christ.

    I have read “Mein Kamph” (for college).  If you pick and choose (edit heavily) sentences from it a picture can be painted of Hitler only being very patriotic and looking out for the best interests of the German people.  The truth is far from that, but if do to “Mein Kamph” what Christians and others do to the Bible than you can twist it to say just about anything.

    The bible contradicts, the Gospel does not.  Chirst is very constant in his message.


  • Unilateral pardon can be issued when the individual issuing it plans to retire.

    No doubt the governator plans to keep his office for some time.  Possibly has reelection plans.
    GW can also pardon.  But again, he is aware that congressional elections are less than a year away.  You have at least 4 murder victims worth of supporters who will suddenly be enraged at the diversion of justice.  The clemency supporters would not vote for these guys anyway.

    I remember Clinton held all of his pardons until the last week in office.  
    Question to Bill Clinton is how many pardons did he give in his first term?

    Jesus did not even save himself, nor the two thieves crucified on Calvary with him.

    You can argue that Barabbas was saved by the election of the Jewish mob when Pilate gave them the choice to free a prisoner for the traditional Passover holiday.  That would apply to any of the political figures granted the power to free Tookie.  But they know they would suffer for whatever freedom they granted to the convict. Â

    Results “might” have been different if this was the last week of Arnold’s last term.  As it is, his hands are washed.


  • Zooey, no offense but…

    People who fall back on some divine, omnipotent, omnipresent divine entity as the basis and foundation of their arguments are rather annoying.  With such people, you can;t argue facts, you can;t use logic.  To debate with such a person is to pound your head on a wall of irrational, unreasoning putrescence of thought.

    Some things are worth taking on faith (like what happens to your soul, if you have one, after you die).

    But to rely on a text that was not codified as the Gospels until the Council of Nicene nearly 4 centuries after the life of a philosopher known as Yeshuah of Nazareth (Gospels which were selected after excluding hundreds of other writings and POTENTIAL gospels; and Gospels which were further edited by King James 4 centuries ago)…  And then to realize that ALL of those “written” Gospels were transcribed after an extended period of being passed via an oral tradition…

    Well, let me just say that debating someone who uses a foundation of a 4 century long version of the Kindergarten Telephone Game played 2 millenia ago as the sole basis for their evaluation of modern society leaves something to be desired in the matter of both logic AND faith.


  • I am sure you all remember Scott Peterson, who killed his expectant wife Laci.

    His case is on automatic appeal.

    Who is gonna argue for his life?

    I do not recall news of other unidentified bodies washing ashore in the vicinity of SF Bay after his wife and son were found.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Peterson


  • @ncscswitch:

    Zooey, no offense but…

    People who fall back on some divine, omnipotent, omnipresent divine entity as the basis and foundation of their arguments are rather annoying.  With such people, you can;t argue facts, you can;t use logic.  To debate with such a person is to pound your head on a wall of irrational, unreasoning putrescence of thought.

    Some things are worth taking on faith (like what happens to your soul, if you have one, after you die).

    But to rely on a text that was not codified as the Gospels until the Council of Nicene nearly 4 centuries after the life of a philosopher known as Yeshuah of Nazareth (Gospels which were selected after excluding hundreds of other writings and POTENTIAL gospels; and Gospels which were further edited by King James 4 centuries ago)…  And then to realize that ALL of those “written” Gospels were transcribed after an extended period of being passed via an oral tradition…

    Well, let me just say that debating someone who uses a foundation of a 4 century long version of the Kindergarten Telephone Game played 2 millenia ago as the sole basis for their evaluation of modern society leaves something to be desired in the matter of both logic AND faith.

    I would like to read some of the gospels that “didn’t make the grade” some time just to see how they go with the 4 they picked.

    But some things need to be taken on faith.  I can understand someone only reading the gospel and not going any further, their faith telling them that although there was a lot of “revision” the message is still there because God willed it that way.  My problem is with the people who either never took the time to read the book they supposedly have dedicated their life to, or have butchered the content to suit their lifestyle.


  • Well, then pick up the Dead Sea Scrolls, that is the largest known written collection of materials considered by the Council of Nicene but not selected by the Council to be Gospels.  You can also pick up the Apocrifa which are those books of the Gospels (and portions of books) that WERE determined at Nicene to be Gospels, but which were editted out by King James and are largely excluded from all Protestant New Testaments.


  • have butchered the content to suit their lifestyle.

    This is the story of many reasons why their is human conflict… all because we have false men following false gods defending ideas based on faith and in most cases taking small pieces out of context and allowing it to result in suffering  “in the name of religion”

    If they didn’t blindly follow those damm books and just adopted a sensible philosophy, respect for others would result in less conflict.

    its like having rabid football fans who can see no wrong in what their team does, as long as they keep winning on sunday.
    AS soon as they lose the game they take it out on the fans of the other team that won. Thats why religion can be a dangerous thing IMO.

    But then again this thread is about capital punishment and not the “benifits” of a religious experience.


  • On a side note (and sorry for the off-topic), it is a shame that it takes a non-practicing eclectic neo-pagan that was raised Lutheran to tell a Christian their own history in terms of the books that are and are not in their Bible, when they were selected, and when they were removed.

    Doesn’t anyone do a Catechism anymore?  Doesn;t anyone take Comparative Religion?  Doesn;t anyone ever read any of the myth cycles of other cultures?

    I’d probably REALLY blow folks away if I mentioned that the Gospels and the story of Jesus Christ is almost verbatim the myth cycle of Zoroastrianism, a minor religion in areas of the Middle East (modern Israel, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria primarily) that was popular in the 2nd and 3rd century BCE. (about 300 years before the time of Yeshuah of Nazareth)


  • @ncscswitch:

    On a side note (and sorry for the off-topic), it is a shame that it takes a non-practicing eclectic neo-pagan that was raised Lutheran to tell a Christian their own history in terms of the books that are and are not in their Bible, when they were selected, and when they were removed.

    Doesn’t anyone do a Catechism anymore?  Doesn;t anyone take Comparative Religion?  Doesn;t anyone ever read any of the myth cycles of other cultures?

    I’d probably REALLY blow folks away if I mentioned that the Gospels and the story of Jesus Christ is almost verbatim the myth cycle of Zoroastrianism, a minor religion in areas of the Middle East (modern Israel, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria primarily) that was popular in the 2nd and 3rd century BCE. (about 300 years before the time of Yeshuah of Nazareth)

    Love mythology/religion myself.  A good read is The World’s Religion’s by Huston Smith.  You don’t see many religious studies unless you go to a religious based school, or reach a school of higher learning (college).  That, or maybe in larger cities.
    As you’ve noted in other threads, many ideas/concepts have been adopted by emerging religions to assimilate the “pagans.”  For instance, the occurrence of Christian holidays that correspond with pagan ones.  That’s a whole other topic, though.
    See you in the “Weed-Smoking Jews of Jamaica” topic.


  • @Jermofoot:

    See you in the “Weed-Smoking Jews of Jamaica” topic.

    And I’ll see you in Alcoholic Bondage Pagans Who Play Board Games!  LOL


  • :evil: how do i scroll down on the Topic Summary list to view the post history in its entirety? im annoyed that i cant see it, because i want to post to things that are further back than the list goes.


  • OMG just click on page one?

    Pages: « 1 2 3 4

    look for this on the page?


  • what?


  • @Wargaming_nut:

    Why are you trying to justify this? There is no way a Christian can support the death penalty without completely disregarding Jesus’ teachings.

    Jesus also said he came to fulfill the law, and the law clearly states that a murderer is to be killed.

    Fry the bastard.

    Jesus came to transcend the old Mosaic law. And if you want to go by Mosaic Codes, should we still be stoning adulterous women? Should slaves still obey their masters?


  • @Imperious:

    Question for Mary…or others

    Is their any point in your philosophy where if the murderer of many eventually deserves death?

    I hate to use the Hitler example but hes dreadful enough for this purpose

    would he be put to death under any circumstances? huh?

    You can only carry this Christian thing so far, after a point its utility as a guidline for behavior requires too many unnatural changes.
    we cant just keep up a stiff upper lip in the face of the pure evil allowing it in our presence.

    Jesus would NEVER advocate killing a person, no matter what their crime. “No sin is so great that it cannot be forgiven”. The New Testament is almost exclusively about forgiving people and non-violence.

    And no, I’m not a Christian. But Jesus’s teachings were profound at the time.


  • no true christian would support the death penalty. that said, no true christian would do a lot of things that many “christians” do on a regular basis. ive yet to encounter a “true” christian, in every sense of the faith. that doesnt mean they are bad, they simply have modified beliefs, which is fine. they just shouldnt profess to follow christs teachings to the letter.

    But if someone considers themselves a Christian, they “should” oppose the death penalty. If they support it, they must recognize they are not following Jesus’s teachings, and should try to change their own mind.


  • @Zooey72:

    @Mary:

    Who would Jesus execute?

    Who would jesus have not follow him?  Are you penniless and have no home depending only on God for survival?

    So knock off the Jesus crap, people only use him as a refrence when it suits their argument.  They should focus that energy and take the plank out of their own eye.  If you don’t know what that means, I suggest you read the gospel.

    if we’re quoting, let’s do the whole thing: “And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother’s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and; behold, a beam is in thine own eye? Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother’s eye.””

    How is talking about Jesus’s message of non-violence being hypocritical? Where have I advocated violence or killing people on this messageboard?


  • @Zooey72:

    @Mary:

    Who would Jesus execute?

    Oh, and mary.  This just occured to me.  “Give to Rome what is Rome’s, give to God what is God’s”.

    This pretty much says that Christians shouldn’t interfere in government.  So I am guessing that Jesus would not stop capital punishment, esp. since that is the way he “saved” all of us.

    No, that passage has to do with taxes. If govt. wants you to do something heinous (e.g., round up jews to be liquidated), you’re supposed to non-violently protest (e.g., hide jews, passive protest, etc.) You can try to argue that Jesus would be out there blowing the whistle on some Jews hiding in an attic in W.W. II, but I don’t think you’ll get too far with that.

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