Yes, that's the sound the Chair makes.Zźzzzzz....America doesn't really have the death penalty
Yes, that's the sound the Chair makes.Zźzzzzz....America doesn't really have the death penalty

Yes they do. 27 states do.Zźzzzzz....America doesn't really have the death penalty

Do they still use it though?Yes they do. 27 states do.


Based on the different data you presented:No it isn't. 1 in 4 are on the PNC.
42.95M people (in your data set) and 12.6M on the PNC (of the same set).
12.6 / 42.95 = (not 1:4)
You're doing this on purpose now. All numbers are millions unless otherwise stated.Indeed, not 1 in 4.
An even higher perentage than IT Minion presented - 12.6 / 42.95 is 1 in 3.4.
Yes it can.America cannot be held as an example of the death penalty not working
So they are both imprisoned for a long time then executed., and when it is, many prisoners then spend forever on death row
Proven false. It does not stop, prevent or lower the crimes for which it serves. In fact critics say that the presence of the death penalty increases murder rates.The death penalty, when the threat of it is credible, is highly effective

Only loony-left critics that is, Boyo! The number of murders and attempted murders in Britain started to rise immediately on abolition of the death sentence and look at how many we now have. The evidence is overwhelmingly against the loonies, but unfortunately the loonies lie and they are in charge.critics say that the presence of the death penalty increases murder rates.

And again, this is convictions, cautions, no charge, pending charges or just entered into the computer for no obvious reason. These are people with a police record, but not necessarily a criminal record.
I can confirm that the number of Nominal records held on the PNC for individuals with a criminal element against their names, as at the latest available report (April 2024) is 12,591,780.
Nonsense. Murder rates have steadily increased with population increases over the same period. There have been spikes throughout the same period.The number of murders and attempted murders in Britain started to rise immediately on abolition of the death sentence

By your lunatic claim that the death penalty increases the murder rate, shouldn't abolition have brought it down?Nonsense. Murder rates have steadily increased with population increases over the same period. There have been spikes throughout the same period.
MBK actually...By your lunatic claim that the death penalty increases the murder rate, shouldn't abolition have brought it down?
If you have capital punishment, you will run the risk of innocent people being executed.
That is the first problem.
The second is that with high stakes come high risk, if the sentence is death, then the perpetrators will escalate their violence to avoid capture.
No they didn't. You've misunderstood that.The Home Office have confirmed that 12,591,780 people in the UK have a criminal record
A nominal record with a criminal element means they were associated with a crime, not that they were convicted or cautioned. It's a reasonable mistake to make if you don't dig in.I can confirm that the number of Nominal records held on the PNC for individuals with a
criminal element against their names,
And again, the biggest error here you and he are making is taking the number of nominal records and then failing to understand how many people they are shared between.Himmy isn't trolling you, he's just pointing out your error
The truth is the death penalty is not a deterrent. It's an expensive folly for the right wing so that they can re-live the heady days of lynchings and summary executions.By your lunatic claim that the death penalty increases the murder rate, shouldn't abolition have brought it down?