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"cavelamb" wrote in message
m... Lew Hodgett wrote: "cavelamb" wrote: Well, I voted against him, but I'll take my hat off to him today. Well done all... Really? Didn't realize you could vote against some one. Thought you could only vote FOR someone. Lew It's been that way for near on 50 years, Lew. Whichever one scares ya most, vote for the other guy... John, 0.5 crises at a time, McCain. That scared me. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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"Capt. JG" wrote:
That sounds about right, and I'm opposed to the death penalty. So am I. Having actually been in an execution chamber gives you a whole different perspective to the process. It also is a lot less expensive to incarcerate some one for life than it is to execute them. Several states, including Texas, now have legislation pending to eliminate the death penalty as a cost reduction. Lew |
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"Lew Hodgett" wrote in news:8ztEl.480$WK5.1
@nwrddc01.gnilink.net: "cavelamb" wrote: Well, I voted against him, but I'll take my hat off to him today. Well done all... Really? Didn't realize you could vote against some one. Thought you could only vote FOR someone. Lew http://coblitz.codeen.org/citp.princ...age/advantage- insecurities-exhibit-lores.mp4 Download this big video (255MB) onto your computer so you'll be ready for your next election. Don't miss watching this one! This video was prepared by a team of IT scientists at Princeton University for a court case against the voting machine company STILL used across New Jersey! Even the poll worker can peek through a slot and see what you're about to vote for....AND CANCEL THAT VOTE AT THE TOUCH OF A BUTTON! That's not the worst of it. If all the Grannies area dead honest running the poll, that makes no difference. Watch how easily this piece of government sponsored crap is HACKED! And you guys actually are bickering over FOR or AGAINST? ONE even marginally placed person can make a whole state vote for exactly who the ruling elite wants that state to vote for...across the board. IT'S ALL A SHAM! If you have the bandwidth, the highest resolution movie is 980MB from: http://coblitz.codeen.org/citp.princ...age/advantage- insecurities-exhibit-hires.mp4 Guess why this movie hasn't been broadcast on any US cable channel...... Electronic ballot box stuffing has been taken to a NEW LEVEL! |
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"Lew Hodgett" wrote in news:amvEl.520$b11.241
@nwrddc02.gnilink.net: Several states, including Texas, now have legislation pending to eliminate the death penalty as a cost reduction. Texas comedian Ron White is going to have to change his routine if that happens. He says, "In most states, there eliminating the death penalty. In Texas, we're puttin' in an EXPRESS LANE!" |
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In article ,
"Lew Hodgett" wrote: "Capt. JG" wrote: That sounds about right, and I'm opposed to the death penalty. So am I. Having actually been in an execution chamber gives you a whole different perspective to the process. Apart from sometimes condemning the wrong person. It also is a lot less expensive to incarcerate some one for life than it is to execute them. Several states, including Texas, now have legislation pending to eliminate the death penalty as a cost reduction. Great news, even if for the wrong reason. I believe it would be a strong signal for human rights to abolish capital punishment in the US, as in any other country. Marc -- remove bye and from mercial to get valid e-mail http://www.heusser.com |
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"Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Capt. JG" wrote: That sounds about right, and I'm opposed to the death penalty. So am I. Having actually been in an execution chamber gives you a whole different perspective to the process. It also is a lot less expensive to incarcerate some one for life than it is to execute them. Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? |
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"Edgar" wrote: Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Pure math. Assume it costs $1,000/week to keep someone in prison. That is $52,000/year. To simplify the math, call it $60,000/year. If you keep a person in jail 60 years the cost is: (60years)*($60,000/year) = $3,600,000 lifetime. The legal costs for a capital case including appeals far exceeds $3,600,000. Also the jail costs continue to accrue thus increasing costs while the legal process continues. The only people who make out are the lawyers. Lew |
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"Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Edgar" wrote: Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Pure math. Assume it costs $1,000/week to keep someone in prison. That is $52,000/year. To simplify the math, call it $60,000/year. If you keep a person in jail 60 years the cost is: (60years)*($60,000/year) = $3,600,000 lifetime. The legal costs for a capital case including appeals far exceeds $3,600,000. Also the jail costs continue to accrue thus increasing costs while the legal process continues. The only people who make out are the lawyers. Lew There is a flaw in that argument. You have not taken into account the fact that there wll also be lawyers fees for the guy who gets life in prison. I agree that the lawyers win whichever route is taken but capital punishment certainly reduces the cost to the taxpayer. |
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On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 12:53:13 +0200, "Edgar"
wrote: "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Edgar" wrote: Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Pure math. Assume it costs $1,000/week to keep someone in prison. That is $52,000/year. To simplify the math, call it $60,000/year. If you keep a person in jail 60 years the cost is: (60years)*($60,000/year) = $3,600,000 lifetime. The legal costs for a capital case including appeals far exceeds $3,600,000. Also the jail costs continue to accrue thus increasing costs while the legal process continues. The only people who make out are the lawyers. Lew There is a flaw in that argument. You have not taken into account the fact that there wll also be lawyers fees for the guy who gets life in prison. I agree that the lawyers win whichever route is taken but capital punishment certainly reduces the cost to the taxpayer. It's not an argument, just an unsubstantiated contention. No listing of costs, no sources. Besides that, the cost of incarceration is bourn by the taxpayer. The great part of legal costs opposing a death sentence are bourn by anti-death penalty activists and contributors, and they also bear the responsibility for and most of the costs of years of incarceration due to delay in carrying out the sentence. It's akin to the murderer of parents asking for mercy because he's an orphan. Not arguing the death penalty here, just faulty argument. Where are the myth-busters when you need them? --Vic |
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"Larry" wrote in message ... "Lew Hodgett" wrote in news:8ztEl.480$WK5.1 @nwrddc01.gnilink.net: "cavelamb" wrote: Well, I voted against him, but I'll take my hat off to him today. Well done all... Really? Didn't realize you could vote against some one. Thought you could only vote FOR someone. Lew http://coblitz.codeen.org/citp.princ...age/advantage- insecurities-exhibit-lores.mp4 Download this big video (255MB) onto your computer so you'll be ready for your next election. Don't miss watching this one! This video was prepared by a team of IT scientists at Princeton University for a court case against the voting machine company STILL used across New Jersey! Even the poll worker can peek through a slot and see what you're about to vote for....AND CANCEL THAT VOTE AT THE TOUCH OF A BUTTON! That's not the worst of it. If all the Grannies area dead honest running the poll, that makes no difference. Watch how easily this piece of government sponsored crap is HACKED! And you guys actually are bickering over FOR or AGAINST? ONE even marginally placed person can make a whole state vote for exactly who the ruling elite wants that state to vote for...across the board. IT'S ALL A SHAM! If you have the bandwidth, the highest resolution movie is 980MB from: http://coblitz.codeen.org/citp.princ...age/advantage- insecurities-exhibit-hires.mp4 Guess why this movie hasn't been broadcast on any US cable channel...... Electronic ballot box stuffing has been taken to a NEW LEVEL! Elections have always been a sham and always will be. Long before the first computer, ballot boxes were stuffed with the votes of dead people, and voters have been coerced into casting their votes exactly as the Powers that Be want them to. I would hazard to say that there hasn't been a truly "honest" election in the entire history of the United States of America. |
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Vic Smith wrote: On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 12:53:13 +0200, "Edgar" wrote: "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Edgar" wrote: Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Pure math. Assume it costs $1,000/week to keep someone in prison. That is $52,000/year. To simplify the math, call it $60,000/year. If you keep a person in jail 60 years the cost is: (60years)*($60,000/year) = $3,600,000 lifetime. The legal costs for a capital case including appeals far exceeds $3,600,000. Also the jail costs continue to accrue thus increasing costs while the legal process continues. The only people who make out are the lawyers. Lew There is a flaw in that argument. You have not taken into account the fact that there wll also be lawyers fees for the guy who gets life in prison. I agree that the lawyers win whichever route is taken but capital punishment certainly reduces the cost to the taxpayer. It's not an argument, just an unsubstantiated contention. No listing of costs, no sources. Besides that, the cost of incarceration is bourn by the taxpayer. The great part of legal costs opposing a death sentence are bourn by anti-death penalty activists and contributors, and they also bear the responsibility for and most of the costs of years of incarceration due to delay in carrying out the sentence. It's akin to the murderer of parents asking for mercy because he's an orphan. Not arguing the death penalty here, just faulty argument. Where are the myth-busters when you need them? --Vic Check out http://deathpenalty.procon.org/viewa...stionID=001000 for a quick primer on both sides of the debate. The costs are not well established, on either side of the argument, and vary from state to state. But consider that in many states with the death penalty, it's been many years since anyone was executed. Put someone on death row for 25 years, all the while tying up state and federal appeals courts and supreme courts, and the costs are very high. And *all* the court costs and prosecutor costs are borne by taxpayers. The differential is not 50 years in prison, or death, it's 20-30 years in prison, plus the court costs (initial lengthier trial and public defender/prosecutor costs) versus 50 years. And that's assuming a young perp who lives a long prison life. Many die on death row - of natural causes. You can also check out http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/numb...nd-region-1976 and see that as of March this year, a total of 1156 prisoners have been executed, across the country, since 1976. About 35 executions per year on average (there were 37 last year). According to DOJ, we have about 3300 death row inmates. That's about 94 years worth at the current rate, so while there may be other confounding variables that would affect that 94 year timeframe, it's clear that a death sentence is a *very lengthy* prison stay, possibly ending in execution, but likely actually being equivalent to life without parole. The death penalty may well be much more expensive than LWOP, or it may be somewhat cheaper, but clearly not by a large margin. Keith Hughes |
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"Edgar" wrote in
: "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Capt. JG" wrote: That sounds about right, and I'm opposed to the death penalty. So am I. Having actually been in an execution chamber gives you a whole different perspective to the process. It also is a lot less expensive to incarcerate some one for life than it is to execute them. Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Leaving the switch on too long....He's a pretty good load! |
Americans take ship back! - update
"Edgar" wrote in message
... "Lew Hodgett" wrote in message ... "Edgar" wrote: Leaving aside the arguments for and against the death penalty, how can it possibly be more expensive to execute somebody than to keep him/her in prison for life? Pure math. Assume it costs $1,000/week to keep someone in prison. That is $52,000/year. To simplify the math, call it $60,000/year. If you keep a person in jail 60 years the cost is: (60years)*($60,000/year) = $3,600,000 lifetime. The legal costs for a capital case including appeals far exceeds $3,600,000. Also the jail costs continue to accrue thus increasing costs while the legal process continues. The only people who make out are the lawyers. Lew There is a flaw in that argument. You have not taken into account the fact that there wll also be lawyers fees for the guy who gets life in prison. I agree that the lawyers win whichever route is taken but capital punishment certainly reduces the cost to the taxpayer. Not really... sure there's the occaisonal attorney, but mostly they rot in jail. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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"Dave" wrote in message
... On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 10:45:06 -0700, "Capt. JG" said: Not really... sure there's the occaisonal attorney, but mostly they rot in jail. The "Human Rights" folks don't get nearly as het up about a life sentence, as compared to a death sentence. Doesn't bring in as many contributions or get as much publicity for them. So, you're saying that people concerned about human rights shouldn't be too concerned about those in prison? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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"Dave" wrote in message
... On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 12:37:40 -0700, "Capt. JG" said: The "Human Rights" folks don't get nearly as het up about a life sentence, as compared to a death sentence. Doesn't bring in as many contributions or get as much publicity for them. So, you're saying that people concerned about human rights shouldn't be too concerned about those in prison? I think what I said was pretty clear. But I'm sure you'll insist on the last word. I'm sure I'll insist that you answer my question before you take your marble and depart. BTW, what does "het" mean? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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"Gogarty" wrote in message
... In article lutions, lid says... "Dave" wrote in message . .. On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 10:45:06 -0700, "Capt. JG" said: Not really... sure there's the occaisonal attorney, but mostly they rot in jail. The "Human Rights" folks don't get nearly as het up about a life sentence, as compared to a death sentence. Doesn't bring in as many contributions or get as much publicity for them. So, you're saying that people concerned about human rights shouldn't be too concerned about those in prison? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com Isn't there something in the Bible that exhorts us to visit those in prison? Don't read it regularly, so I can't answer. However, we are (or should be) judged by how we treat the least of us. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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Gogarty wrote:
In article lutions, lid says... "Dave" wrote in message ... On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 10:45:06 -0700, "Capt. JG" said: Not really... sure there's the occaisonal attorney, but mostly they rot in jail. The "Human Rights" folks don't get nearly as het up about a life sentence, as compared to a death sentence. Doesn't bring in as many contributions or get as much publicity for them. So, you're saying that people concerned about human rights shouldn't be too concerned about those in prison? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com Isn't there something in the Bible that exhorts us to visit those in prison? Hmmm, could be. However remember, a sadist is just a masochist who obeys the Golden Rule. Cheers Martin |
OT Dialect (was Americans take ship.. )
Gogarty wrote:
... what does "het" mean? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com It's "het up." Het by itself means nothing. To get "all het up" is to get all worked up over something trivial. Past tense of heat = heated, het, het up ?? pt of meet = met, met up pt of say = said pt of weave = wove pt of speak = spoke, spoke up, spake pt of break = broke, brake ?? pt of brake = braked pt of shine = shone, shined, shined up pt of cleeve = cloven, cleft, cleeved ??? pt of slide = slid pt of hide = hid , hid up ?? There's nowt so funny/queer/weird as folks.... |
Americans take ship back! - update
On 13 Apr 2009 14:45:01 -0500, Dave wrote:
On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 12:37:40 -0700, "Capt. JG" said: The "Human Rights" folks don't get nearly as het up about a life sentence, as compared to a death sentence. Doesn't bring in as many contributions or get as much publicity for them. So, you're saying that people concerned about human rights shouldn't be too concerned about those in prison? I think what I said was pretty clear. But I'm sure you'll insist on the last word. It would make sense for Jon to have the last word, since you've run of valid rebuttals. |
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On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 09:52:39 +0200, Marc Heusser
d wrote: I believe it would be a strong signal for human rights to abolish capital punishment in the US, as in any other country. Piracy is Federal, but there never has been much Federal death penalty. Maybe thirty in 80 years. One hanging in Iowa in 1962, and McVeigh who bombed that Federal Bldg. There was a soldier who hosed a formation of marching men with a M-16 on death row. I don't know if they have killed him yet. There are a few others waiting. They have recently built a Federal death facility, they had been having the nearest state kill people. Casady |
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On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 08:26:34 -0700, wrote:
You can also check out http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/numb...nd-region-1976 and see that as of March this year, a total of 1156 prisoners have been executed, across the country, since 1976. About 35 executions per year on average (there were 37 last year). According to DOJ, we have about 3300 death row inmates. That's about 94 years worth at the current rate, so while there may be other confounding variables that would affect that 94 year timeframe, it's clear that a death sentence is a *very lengthy* prison stay, possibly ending in execution, but likely actually being equivalent to life without parole. The death penalty may well be much more expensive than LWOP, or it may be somewhat cheaper, but clearly not by a large margin. I have the impression that it usually takes about ten years to run through all the lawyering and kill someone. I understand that in the UK, when they had the death penalty, in the average murder case, it took six weeks from the crime to the hanging. Basically if you were caught killing someone, you would swing in weeks, rather than years. It took almost exactly three years for Saddam, from capture to death. [Ain't Google wonderful. of course I couldn't remember] Casady |
Americans take ship back! - update
In article ,
Richard Casady wrote: On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 09:52:39 +0200, Marc Heusser d wrote: I believe it would be a strong signal for human rights to abolish capital punishment in the US, as in any other country. Piracy is Federal, but there never has been much Federal death penalty. Maybe thirty in 80 years. One hanging in Iowa in 1962, and McVeigh who bombed that Federal Bldg. There was a soldier who hosed a formation of marching men with a M-16 on death row. I don't know if they have killed him yet. There are a few others waiting. They have recently built a Federal death facility, they had been having the nearest state kill people. Still, many states in the US have death penalty: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/FactSheet.pdf 3300 current inmates, 20 executiony this year up to now, more than half of it in Texas. It would help criticise governments such as China, where executions abound, or islamistic states, if the US decided to abolish death penalty altogether. There are good arguments against capital punishment in a democratic state. Do not get me wrong: In actual danger I'd value a hostage's life higher than a pirate's anytime - and it is the pirate that provoked this. I do hope Switzerland decides to send some elite troups to protect ships as well. Marc -- remove bye and from mercial to get valid e-mail http://www.heusser.com |
Americans take ship back! - update
On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 07:48:06 +0200, Marc Heusser
d wrote: I do hope Switzerland decides to send some elite troups to protect ships as well. I accused a Vatican guard with a halberd of having a pistol strapped to his right thigh, inside those shorts, and he said he was left handed. Casady |
Americans take ship back! - update
Richard Casady wrote:
On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 07:48:06 +0200, Marc Heusser d wrote: I do hope Switzerland decides to send some elite troups to protect ships as well. I accused a Vatican guard with a halberd of having a pistol strapped to his right thigh, inside those shorts, and he said he was left handed. Casady Hehe...keep 'em coming! Brian W |
Americans take ship back!
Yes, "Major problems with firearms on commercial vessels..."
So what we need is an "ICE REMOVAL DEVICE". Also know as a flame thrower. |
Americans take ship back!
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