Death penalty

Should we bring back the death penalty


  • Total voters
    45
Well I would and could do it :cool:

I would agree that you would have difficulty deciding on for example if the persons who murdered Lee rigby
Joe cox
David amiss
3 children in Southport
Are guilty

And be some what concerned about there human rights ? But hey ho
No. Totally missing the point.

WHO EXACTLY decides any case is clear cut.

It's not about what is or isn't clear on a forum. On a legal, state level, somebody has to make that decision. Who should it be?

Too easy just to use slogans !
 
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Was it not mostly those associated with left that voted brexit ie working class labour voters
It was more a protest vote against labour's move to the right under bliar, whose disastrous campaign in irack is still bearing fruit. They are still protesting as witness 20 pee lee's re election. Borris realised the northern wall would give him votes, and too late people realised he was just a bag of runny ****e, who did sweet fa for the north with the possible exception of nissan who were going to invest anyway.
 
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It was more a protest vote against labour's move to the right under bliar, whose disastrous campaign in irack is still bearing fruit. They are still protesting as witness 20 pee lee's re election. Borris realised the northern wall would give him votes, and too late people realised he was just a bag of runny ****e, who did sweet fa for the north with the possible exception of nissan who were going to invest anyway.
so labour voting people voted for a right wing idea in protest at tony blair moving labour to the right .
 
so labour voting people voted for a right wing idea in protest at tony blair moving labour to the right .

Brexit really shook things up. At the 2019 election some of my family had very unusual voting patterns. My father in law, who had previously only ever voted Labour, voted for Boris in a red wall seat. My sister and brother in law, who are dyed in the wool Tories, voted for Jeremy Corbyn as the best chance of stopping Brexit. My father, an ardent and lifelong Tory, who vehemently opposed joining the Common Market and always hated the EU, refused to vote for Boris because he thought he was of low character; so he didn't vote (for the first time ever in a general election).
 
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Brexit really shook things up. At the 2019 election some of my family had very unusual voting patterns. My father in law, who had previously only ever voted Labour, voted for Boris in a red wall seat. My sister and brother in law, who are dyed in the wool Tories, voted for Jeremy Corbyn as the best chance of stopping Brexit. My father, who is an ardent and lifelong Tory, who vehemently opposed joining the Common Market and always hated the EU, refused to vote for Boris because he thought he was of low character; so he didn't vote.
Great summary of how mixed the country was too
 
Are you arguing for the death penalty in all "cut and dried" murder cases? Not just these extremely emotive and high profile cases.
All, were the court decide it is murder, and there is no doubt about the murderer - but with certain exceptions, such as for instance Ruth Ellis.
 
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