A simple notion, the punishment should fit the crime.
Please don´t take it the wrong way, but I don´t think this is a simple notion. Rather I think it is merely a practically meaningless phrase.
„Fitting the crime“ in which way? In that it harms the harming person as badly as he harmed others? Why would we want to do that? Which purpose would that serve?
I am under the impression that our intended goal is to remove harmful behaviour, and not add harm upon harm.
That way, a thief gets a sentence that is proportional to taking someone's property, as opposed to taking someone's life.
I don´t seem to get the „proportional“ thing. If a thief takes someone´s property returning the property (and possibly paying for the temporal loss) would be proportional. Compensation.
Unfortunately you can´t compensate for taking a life, so this part is obsolete.
So what the heck does „fitting the crime“ mean theoretically and practically when it comes to violence crimes that you can´t compensate for?
Yup.
Even if a criminal is born this way, they are still a criminal and need to be incarcerated as such.
No. We want to protect ourselves, and we feel we need to incarcerate them in lack of a more reasonable and compassionate alternative.
But not necessarily all murderers.
As I have said before, I think it would be a good idea to determine what exactly you want to discuss. When I spoke about your average murderer, you responded by pointing to sociopaths. When I answered in regards to sociopath, you answered „but not necessarily all murderers“. I´m confused.
But at least we agree that:
1. the punishment must fit the crime.
I´m not sure I agree with that. For the time being I have problems understanding what that is supposed to mean, in the first place.
Furthermore I sense (correct me if I am wrong) that you use this unspecific term in order to introduce revenge for a factor. I don´t agree with that.
2. serial offenders must be prevented from re-offending
Yes, agreed. The question is: What is the best method for doing this, and which basic principles of a humane society are we willing to sacrifice for the goal of protecting ourselves from these persons.
My specific point on this is regarding paedophiles. Their re-offending rate is extremely high (I think around 80% even after 'treatment') and to lock them up for a few years is not a workable solution.
If this is so, I currently don´t see any way around locking them up for the rest of their lives.
Also, a problem with prison is that if the general public think it is a soft option, being denied freedom, then are we heading down the road of retribution to satisfy the public's need for justice?
I don´t think being denied freedom, and, yes, the „soft option“ argument seems to be based on nothing but the idea of retribution – harming the person for harm´s sake.
So there is no perfect one-solution-fits-all, and each type of crime needs to be judged on its own merits.
My approach doesn´t circle around the idea of judging crimes, but around the idea of protecting ourselves with causing as little harm as possible. This indeed requires individual consideration of every single case, but I don´t see any case in which the death penalty is required for that.
The problem with sociopaths is that, while around 1% appear to be this way, this figure can increase dramtically in certian circumstances - military training, for example.
Then there is quite obviously something wrong with military training (in general or in the way it is performed with these results). Let´s fix that instead of harming its victims even more.
And as for early release, this appears to be a big problem in the UK as our prisons are at breaking point.
Simple solution - build more prisons, at taxpayers expense.
But is there a more permanant solution?
I personally would expect much good coming from getting rid of the idea of coercing and conditioning humans into the desired behaviour. Education.
I also would expect great progress coming from a society that doesn´t violate its own principles. The acceptance of institutionalized premaditated killing (and besides the death penalty I mean war here in particular) is not reconcilable with the desire to establish the idea that human life is the highest good.
Trying to teach people to not act upon their negative emotions and instincts, whilst officially establishing negative emotions and instincts as one of the parameters for justice can´t come across as a credible approach.
A permanent solution? To the fact that some people kill others? No, I am afraid I don´t have such. Since the death penalty is demonstrably not such a solution either I don´t see that as a problem of the position that opposes the death penalty.