kayisking said:
LoathsomePete said:
kayisking said:
LoathsomePete said:
Um... yes. Regardless of whether the defendant knows it or not doesn't negate that a crime has been committed. If a person blacked out because of drug or alcohol abuse and murders someone, they're still going to be convicted. Maybe only on an involuntary manslaughter charge, but you can't ignore the evidence that says person A killed person B.
A lot of people don't seem to understand this, but justice isn't fair, it's just.
I don't agree, justice is fair. If justice isn't fair, then it's not justice but revenge.
Welcome to the American Justice model, otherwise known as "Just Desserts" which says that if you do something against the law you'll be punished in 3 ways:
1) Take your money
2) Take your freedom
3) Take your life
Sounds like revenge to me.
How is giving you a fine for speeding revenge?
Still don't believe me, just look at the way we treat ex-felons. Just look at their title, they're not reformed criminals or even citizens, they're ex-felons. Doesn't matter that they've served their sentence in prison. We as a society want to see them suffer. That's why they can't vote, can't get jobs they're qualified for, and won't be known as anything other than an ex-felon. If they were a doctor or an accountant or a teacher before they went in, there's no way in hell they'd be allowed to continue on with that career. But why? I mean the judge gave them a sentence and they served it. So why do we continue to punish them? Because our justice system is based around an eye for an eye. It's not fair, it's not always right, but it's just.
I really don't want to pull this card, but I'm a Criminal Justice major and have been studying American Criminal Law for two years now. I went into this degree thinking the same things, but after reading my text books and listening to instructors' lectures it really changes the way Law is portrayed in popular media.