Instigator / Pro
11
1636
rating
33
debates
93.94%
won
Topic
#3975

Resolved: On balance, the death penalty in the US does more harm than good.

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
3
3
Better sources
4
4
Better legibility
2
2
Better conduct
2
2

After 2 votes and with the same amount of points on both sides...

It's a tie!
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
4
Time for argument
One day
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
11
1587
rating
182
debates
55.77%
won
Description

Resolution: On balance, the death penalty in the US does more harm than good. 

Death penalty (from Merriam-Webster): death as a punishment given by a court of law for very serious crimes: capital punishment  

 

The burden of proof is shared. PRO must prove that the death penalty in the US does more harm than good. CON must prove that the death penalty in the US does more good than harm. 

Rules: 

-No semantic Kritiks 

-No personal attacks 

-Focus only on the death penalty in the United States 

-Forfeits result in the loss of a conduct point, but the debate still continues

-I will be using research from a previous debate. You are welcome to do the same.
 

Structure: 

R1: Constructive arguments (no direct rebuttals) 

R2: Rebuttals/defense 

R3: Rebuttals/defense 

R4: Conclusion (no new arguments)

-->
@AustinL0926

"likely innocent" you kept forgetting the "likely" which you conceded anyways in the debate when you went on about how Innocence is impossible to prove.

-->
@RationalMadman

I look forward to the vote - thanks in advance.

"then it stands to reason only guilty people get the death penalty anyways"

I'm pretty sure I refuted that with my 4.1% statistic - as far as I'm aware, CON failed to counter that.

I may well vote on this then.

I will give it a proper read later on and vote in the next day.

-->
@AustinL0926

I see what you're saying, but you're arguing against extra trials to prevent innocent convictions in that process.

You say you want to improve LWOP trials, but you didn't really explain how in the rebuttals. In fewer innocent people are given the death penalty due to the many trials, then it stands to reason only guilty people get the death penalty anyways, and what is wrong with that?

LWOP is also torture for the inmate, a removal of their rights, and if we draw out the legal process for LWOP, it's still the same trauma to the family anyways.

I see where you're coming from. I am against the death penalty myself. But for those reasons I had to vote CON.

-->
@Public-Choice

I see where you're coming from. However, my overall stance, throughout the debate from R1-R3, was simply:

-A death penalty case inherently requires more appeals and a longer process
-More appeals and a longer process causes trauma to the victim's family
-Hence, the death penalty is undesirable

-LWOP causes less trauma to the victim's family
-Hence, LWOP is more desirable than the death penalty

-LWOP (and the justice system) is flawed
-The death penalty wastes money
-The money can be used to improve the LWOP trial process

So I don't really see any internal contradiction. Anyway, I'm not asking for you to change your vote, just trying to set the record straight. Thanks for your time and consideration.

-->
@AustinL0926

So, you agreed the many retrials prevented innocent deaths from occurring and then said this is bad because it brings trauma to the family.

This is why I handed it to CON, because sending innocent people to their death was precisely an argument you gave against the death penalty in your initial round, and LWOP actually has the potentiality to do just that in a much larger number since there are significantly fewer retrials. They basically just await their death in prisons, as CON pointed out, which you dropped completely.

-->
@AustinL0926

When you said:
"Second of all, death penalty cases have a long and lengthy appeal process, which can bring trauma to both the accused’s and victim’s family. Far from bringing peace and closure, this process, which can take several decades, only opens old wounds."

In your R1.

And here:
"Reversed. The death penalty does not bring closure to a victim’s family; instead, it does the opposite. Death penalty cases have a long and lengthy appeals process to minimize innocent convictions. This process can take several decades. These are several decades in which the victim’s family has to relive the trauma over and over again."

You then quote a judge that wished she didn't hand out death penalties because of the many retrials that followed which caused trauma for the families as an argument for LWOP, which doesn't have these extra trials.

To me it seemed pretty clear you were against the idea of additional trials to prevent death penalties from being given out willy nilly. In fact it really seemed like you believed that LWOP is better precisely because it DOESN'T have extra trials.

-->
@Public-Choice

Thanks for the vote - I appreciate the feedback.

One objection though - where exactly did I say that I "wanted to do away with all those useless trials, which make it more difficult to murder an innocent person."

I checked my arguments, so I'm a little bit confused where that came from.

-->
@Sir.Lancelot
@AustinL0926

I have voted. Both sides brought up great points, but the debate really devolved by the time R4 showed up.

-->
@Public-Choice

Thank you for the vote!

-->
@AustinL0926

that doesn't change style and tactics much, the shared BoP solely stops Con going 'oh there are equal drawbacks and gains' which Con should avoid anyway.

-->
@RationalMadman

"I am a very destructive debater, my skill is in destroying my enemies and crippling them more than building my own case brilliantly."

Shared burden of proof moment

-->
@AustinL0926

I challenged you, check notifications and read the description. :)

I accept you underestimating me as it's earned. However, you should be warned that my 'skill' is more than you may assume. I am a very destructive debater, my skill is in destroying my enemies and crippling them more than building my own case brilliantly. I will use your Round 1 to frame my own and then destroy you from there as brutally as you did me when I was Con and as you did Lancelot here (I skimread it, I reckon you won and may vote later on as in with 1 day left or something).

-->
@AustinL0926

It will be hard not to accidentally copy you, you write the points well so I probably will lose by plagiarism issues.

Are you saying you actually think you can beat your Round 1 if the person plays the later Rounds correctly? There is literally no leeway.

-->
@RationalMadman

I'd bet 3-1 I could win this as CON against you

Con on this topic is unwinnable, it's rigged if Pro argues it correctly because Con cannot leverage things against the fact that DP has drawbacks, since DP is such an edge case and doesn't really reduce crime due to the limitations on its enforcement (by design).

-->
@Sir.Lancelot
@AustinL0926

Glad you both appreciated it.

-->
@whiteflame

Thank you for the excellent vote.

-->
@whiteflame

I read through the vote in the doc and found it both detailed and insightful.

-->
@Sir.Lancelot
@AustinL0926

I will vote on this when I get voting privileges.

Bump for a vote

-->
@RationalMadman

Care to add a vote? Thx in advance.

-->
@AustinL0926

My bad then.

-->
@Barney
@Intelligence_06

A fair vote would be appreciated - thx in advance.

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Look, I was sort of annoyed last night after spending 20 minutes manually going through every single link you provided in the sources, and not finding anything related to the statistic.

I apologize for threatening to accuse misconduct - I was annoyed and thinking you were making up evidence, especially after I spent another 10 minutes searching the web for "32 innocence", "32 claimed innocence", "death penalty 32", "32 7000 death penalty", etc, and finding absolutely nothing.

I wanted to try and settle it in the comments peacefully, since I'm interested in having an actual debate regarding the death penalty, not an argument over who has better sources. I would always prefer to look at your source and genuinely refute it, rather than just saying it doesn't exist at all.

After having a dinner to think about it, I decided to try and assume good faith instead when writing my final argument - perhaps you had simply missed an important source and didn't see my comments, which is what actually happened.

Anyway, this is my attempt to explain what happened, and apologize for what you might have seen as "bluffy" or "obnoxious" behavior - I assure you this was not the case.

-->
@AustinL0926

I'm not entirely sure what you were trying to accomplish with this.

It's one thing to say I didn't provide a source, it's another to deliberately try and find fault by alleging misconduct, and then walk it back at the same time.

Incredible.

-->
@Intelligence_06

In retrospect, I have to agree with your advice - I appreciate it, and will remember it in the future. I don't really think it'll change much though, since my opponent probably didn't see it anyway.

-->
@AustinL0926

No one blames you if the opponent doesn't give his sources, and no one other than the ranking system blames the opponent for failing to provide any sources.

Well, I am not trying to scold you, but in doing so, you haven't restored as much faith as the potential loss you have caused due to you enabling the opponent a headstart going into a new round.

Hey Sir.Lancelot, thanks for the excellent debate - I wanted to add a short conclusion, but I ran out of characters. Overall, I think you had good arguments, but some of them didn't have enough relevance to the resolution, or significantly measurable impact - I admit that I was a bit guilty of that as well. Nevertheless, I enjoyed this interesting discussion regarding the death penalty - I have a feeling neither of us will change our minds, but perhaps some voters will.

P.S. sorry for the spam notifs.

-->
@Intelligence_06

Yes, that's a fair point - I'm trying to assume good faith, however.

-->
@AustinL0926

#10(and #14) is an active attempt at weakening the relative strength of your arguments. You don't want your opponent to back anything outside the confinements of the rounds if you aren't going to do the same.

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Last warning before I formally accuse you of poor conduct in my R4 argument

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

I know you're online, please respond to comment #10

Given that no executions of death penalty are being made currently, the Pro position is heavily limited by including "does".

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Friendly tag, last chance for mutual clarification before I put up my argument

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Do you have a source for "32 of around 7,200 cases claimed actual innocence"? I checked the DPCI link you provided, but found no relevant figures supporting your claim.

-->
@AustinL0926

No worries, it looks great!

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Apologies for the slightly messy style of writing, I had to type it up in 30 min or so because of a busy day.

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

That's a valid strategy, but keep in mind that you might get squished by the character limit if you try to rebut my responses from both R2 and R3.

-->
@AustinL0926

Forgive me for not acknowledging your rebuttals in Round 2. I was keeping my response brief, so you didn’t get annoyed with the length of the response.

In Round 3, I’ll focus specifically on your rebuttals from Rounds 2&3.

-->
@AustinL0926

The problem is that you can't prove the 'good' without proving prison more bad or something and that is just too difficult because DP is directly dedicated to the most deranged criminals that don't react sanely to deterrance.

Awesome

-->
@Sir.Lancelot

Sure, I made it an open challenge for a reason.

-->
@AustinL0926

May I accept?

I had similar discussions about this particular subject on Reddit. Though, I don’t know how much my actual insight will pan out as a whole.

-->
@RationalMadman

Up for a rematch?