100% certainty is unattainable.
ransom wrote:
I can't get my head around the idea that it's more important to kill a guilty person than it is to not kill an innocent person.
Would you apply the same standard to military operations, or pro-life concerns? A lot of innocents die. It's nothing to celebrate, but it does happen.
You are asking for a perfect legal system. Not gonna happen. I am asking for a just legal system, and improvements to the terrible manner in which we currently implement our criminal justice system. But perfection is not possible.
The same day Troy Davis was executed Texas executed Lawrence Brewer. He's the racist b'strd who in 1998 tied James Byrd, an innocent black man, to the bumper of a truck and dragged him to his death. He covered his body with KKK symbols and boasted of his involvement in the murder. He said before his death, "I'd do it all again".
A penalty of death is the only appropriate societal response to cold-blooded or mass murder. The standard should be "beyond a reasonable doubt", and it should be utilized in only the most egregious and indisputable cases. Any one who sits on a jury of such a case should approach it with significant fear and trembling.
Would you rather protect people like Lawrence Brewer, or James Byrd?
Your suggestion is that the death penalty should not exist because we are unable to be perfect. That would be exactly what Lawrence Brewer (and scum like him) would want. I can't endorse the protection of such a waste product.
I understand the consequences of my stand are that (shamefully) mistakes will be made. I am prepared to accept that terrible responsibility in pursuit of a more just system and protection for men like James Byrd.