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07-20-2003, 05:17 PM | #111 | |
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Re: Re: Re: Re: bien que non!
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Legally, that these men might not have seen the act as violent isn't an excuse, unless they're planning to plead insanity (I'm not sure how that works in a rape trial, so I can't really comment). I think that legally rape should have different consequences based on the particular act, with the worst cases of rape (that do not also result in murder) being punishable by death. I'm not sure how I feel about the practical application of the death penalty, so this is all purely hypothetical, that is to say; this is what I would wish if the death penalty was applied only in cases where the defendant was actually guilty. |
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07-20-2003, 06:06 PM | #112 | ||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: bien que non!
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Beyond that, I am not qualified to determine a sentence, but I do often get the feeling that they are too low in rape cases and child sexual abuse cases. One thing, though... if there is any chance that these people are ever going to get out of prison, they should have to go through some sort of rehabilitation program. Just doing the time is not enough. |
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07-20-2003, 07:46 PM | #113 | |||
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rape sentencing...
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Also, it's significant that the cases where rape should be punishable by death that I was referring to are the ones where the women are severely brutalized and/or left to die. In these cases, the life of the victim isn't a concern to the perpetrator. As I don't believe that rape is a very calculated crime, I don't accept that any of the reasons you provided are significant. Quote:
In this vein, does anyone think that a life sentence is too severe for cases where the rapist forced themself on a victim they knew to be unwilling (just for the sake of clarity, I'll exclude date rape, even though I think that can be just as bad)? |
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07-20-2003, 08:17 PM | #114 | |
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Re: Re: Re: Re: bien que non!
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Part of the problem with "rape" is that many don't even know what it is. The term has been redefined into a kind of meaningless in many circumstances. We now have "mini rapes" in which girls are "leered" at. In California, if I and my date get drunk and have sex, I've raped her. For the purpose of this thread at least, rape should be limited only to violent acts. Ed |
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07-20-2003, 08:46 PM | #115 | |||
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Re: rape sentencing...
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07-20-2003, 09:16 PM | #116 | |||||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: bien que non!
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07-20-2003, 09:46 PM | #117 | ||||||
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Re: Re: rape sentencing...
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I think if extra charges were added to the charge, as opposed to the punishment being for the act as a whole, it might undermine the truth of the brutal nature of the rape. It should be abundantly clear that the violence and the rape are both just characteristics of the same thing, not separate issues. Quote:
I think we also agree that, if the rapist is to be released eventually, rehabilitation is critical. |
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07-20-2003, 11:04 PM | #118 | ||||||||
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Re: Re: Re: rape sentencing...
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Now here's a question that I've seen people get torn to shreds over: If a rapist is himself raped in prison, are you likely to think he got what he deserved and now he knows how the other half lives, or do you think "nobody deserves to be raped, period."? |
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07-21-2003, 12:29 AM | #119 |
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In case anyone is still interested in the original topic of this thread a couple posters mentioned weapons like tasers and stun guns, so I did a bit of research on those topics.
A taser is a ranged weapon like a gun, but in the case of a taser the range is necessary, not just a good idea. 2 dart-like things are shot from it and distance is required so that the darts will have an opportunity to spread far enough apart from one another to make the electrical current effective. If you shoot someone with a taser point-blank, you're not going to get that effect. So this weapon is useless if he's already grabbed you. A taser is most effective at a range of 15 feet. That's really damned far away. So while a gun seems to me a bad choice for protecting against personal assault, a taser seems just as bad if not worse. A stun gun takes about 5 seconds being held in contact with the attacker to be fully effective... 5 seconds through which he's struggling to get you to take the damned painful thing off of him. I don't believe I could hold an object in contact with the body of a man who's trying to stop me for a full 5 seconds. I don't guess most women could. That's a pretty long time considering that he's not just going to stand there and let you do it. That'd give him plenty chance to grab it and use it against me. Both of these seem like good tools for law enforcement, but neither seems like a good way for a woman to protect herself from personal assault. If anyone is considering one of these weapons because they are non-lethal, make sure you get all the facts first. At any rate both are illegal in quite a few states, including mine. |
07-21-2003, 07:13 AM | #120 | ||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: bien que non!
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The California law, AFAIK, can only be used to prosecute men who have had sex with drunk women. If both are drunk, no matter; he has raped her. If only he is drunk, and she entices him, oh, well. Apparantly, the California legislature feels that women are somehow mentally deficient where alcohol is involved, but the men can handle it. Seems terribly sexist to me, and were I a woman, I'd take offence. Quote:
Ed |
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