IT's hard for me to say the punishment is "too hard" if the criminal doesn't learn from it and change his behaviour.
Our society is replete with recidivism from people who "didn't learn their lesson"...
How many repeat offenders do we have for drug dealing and armed robbery? A lot
That, alone, isn't a justification for disproportionate punishment (if we want to be the civilized society we aspire to be)
To reiterate, I personally hate Alex Jones if I'm being honest...I think he's a scourge on society and I think he's put a lot of bad ideas in a lot of peoples' heads.
But if he didn't commit a crime that was worthy of criminal court, how are we justifying hanging him on the hook for a billion dollars?
I think our "civil court" system is deeply flawed. If what he did was so bad that it justifies a billion-dollar award, that thing in question should be a criminal matter and not civil.
Civil court has been somewhat bastardized in a way where it's no longer about "making the wronged party whole", and is more about "well, we don't think we can't smack him down in criminal court, so we'll take it to civil court where the standards are lower in order to
send a message"
The fact that the accused doesn't have the same ability to choose between a judge or jury in civil matters is also a problem.
The evidence of that is what I mentioned before...the awards span the spectrum of absurdity.
Alex Jones gets hit for a billion dollars for spreading conspiracy theories that lead to harassment
Amber Heard gets hit for 15 million for pooping in someone's bed and falsely accusing someone of abuse (that nobody really took seriously)
OJ Simpson gets 33 million for literally stabbing two people to death
There's no consistency to it.
Theoretically, right now, I could say something that someone found offensive, and if someone wanted to take it to court for $20M, I have no ability to waive a jury trial, and as long as he lawyers for the plaintiff can cherry pick a handful of saps that are easily impressionable, I could end up on the hook for that.