Summary

Donald Trump criticized President Biden’s decision to commute the sentences of 37 federal death row inmates, calling them “violent criminals” and wishing them to go to hell.

Trump also took the opportunity to sarcastically wish a “Merry Christmas” to Chinese troops in the Panama Canal and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Trump’s post also included references to his previous attempts to purchase Greenland and his suggestion that Wayne Gretzky run for Canadian Prime Minister.

  • Forester@pawb.social
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    5 days ago

    Would you be for a death penalty in cases where you can prove beyond a shadow of a doubt that the person that is accused is the perpetrator? And by shadow of a doubt, I am not referring to the very loose standards that most law enforcement relies on. I mean that the person was caught in the act.

    • Vraylle@lemmy.sdf.org
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      5 days ago

      In my case, no…for two reasons.

      First, you can never be 100% sure you have the right person (especially given a lengthy history of police falsifying evidence, etc., and there can always be other factors involved). If you incorrectly put someone in jail you can attempt to make amends later, but how do you make amends to a person you murdered?

      Second, given how human beings have evolved and how their brains function, life in solitary would be a far worse punishment if the goal is to punish or make them suffer for their crime. If your goal isn’t punishment or reform, but instead simple revenge, then I suppose this argument wouldn’t carry much weight for you.

      • Forester@pawb.social
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        5 days ago

        I feel you are misunderstanding me. I am not asking about hypotheticals where the police lie. I am saying that in a hypothetical where YOU can prove beyond the shadow of a doubt.

        It’s not about rehabilitation or punishment. It’s about logistics. If there is a dog that repeatedly attacks other people, children and dogs and rehabilitation has failed. The only recourse would be to terminate that dog as it is unsafe for society for the dog to be allowed out. Sure, you could build a secure containment facility to house your inmate dog but at what cost. At that point you are then taking resources that could be better spent to help people in need to contain a problem that will not be solved. I am actually in agreement with you that it’s a far crueler punishment to keep somebody alive in a non autonomous position that they would hate.

  • ShaggySnacks@lemmy.myserv.one
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    6 days ago

    Trump is sad that he only gets execute one of the remaining three. The other two (Dylan Roof and Robert Bowers) are destined for bigger things in the Trump cabinet.

  • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    To be fair under Trudeau Canadian Hospitals started encouraging patients to kill themselves in the name of “Freeing a few beds”, to be even more fair Donald Trump isn’t even the president-elect, why are they talking about him and not the actual election winner, 47th President of the US, Elon Musk?

    • Strykker@programming.dev
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      6 days ago

      Maid was never about killing people to free space. Maid was intended for people who’s injury / illness has condemned them to suffering every moment for the rest of their natural life, it is an optional way out for people who have zero quality of life with the expectation that it will never get better.

      I will never expect someone to use Maid, but I will never criticize so.eone who does.

      • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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        6 days ago

        It may not have been intended for such, but we are seeing many cases of hospitals outright encouraging people to use maid, peopole are told they’re selfish for not choosing euthanasia, TV Commericials and Youtube Ads advocating for suicide and trying to make it seem glamorous and romantic, and most heartbreaking people who choose it simply because Canada has forced them into poverty with no way out.

        As some one also in a country (America, Land of the Free for those who can afford it) that forced me into poverty with no way out, and who struggles with mental illness… it keeps me up at night sometimes.

        I got people in medical fields doing everything they can for me, multiple people, because there is a nice municipal healthcare system in place where I live.

        Would I still be alive if I were Canadian? Would the people who stopped me from killing myself be the ones to pull the proverbial trigger if I lived up North?

      • Taleya@aussie.zone
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        6 days ago

        So uh, i’m actually mates with Jonathan Marchand.

        maid is absolutely being used in soft pressure against the disabled community

      • captain_oni@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        6 days ago

        As someone whose grandparents suffered a lot their last days on earth, I would (for me, not them).

        Specially if I turn out to have Alzheimer’s like one of them. I want to die with as many of my memories as I can; and not let future me live in constant confusion and fear; not knowing where he is or who are all the people around him.

        I understand why other people wouldn’t. But if I can have the choice; I would be seriously inclined to do it.

  • futatorius@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    He’s got some real skill at expressing inarticulate, impotent rage.

    And if there were a Hell, Trump would be headed for the least pleasant precinct in it.

    • smeenz@lemmy.nz
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      6 days ago

      He’s already there, and we’re living in it with him. This is the bad place.

  • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Biden’s move reduced the death sentences of 37 out of 40 prisoners on federal death row to life imprisonment without parole and followed pressure from campaigners who warned that they were likely to be executed on Trump’s return to the White House.

    The exceptions applied to three men who had been convicted of offences regarded as terrorism or hate crimes, including Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was found guilty of carrying out the 2013 Boston marathon bombing attack.

    Honestly if it’s taking us this long to off the Boton Marathon Bomber, is it really any difference? /joke

    • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      Before I clicked this link, I already had visions of that kid with tears in his eyes as they put him in the electric chair… and hoped that it wasn’t the same one.

      I’m surprised to learn he’s 14, he looks 9!

    • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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      7 days ago

      I have two reasons why I’m against it.

      1. Innocent people will get sentenced. There’s no way around that. Sententing an innocent person to death is among the greatest injustices I can think of so I’ll rather have someone guilty walk free. Granted that sentencing an innocent person to life in prison aint that much better but this is where the second reason comes in.

      2. I don’t believe in free will. Punishing someone for something they did is not compatible with the way I see the word*. It’s like punishing a grizzly bear for attacking a person. If you’re danger to society you should be locked up one way or another but not as a punishment but to keep others safe. I think that even if you’re a murderer you should be treated well and we should figure out a way for them to live relatively normal lives behind the bars. They can’t help themselves. They didn’t choose to be born that way and thus shouldn’t be punished as if they could have acted otherwise.

      * Risk of consequences still works as a deterrence and that “punishment” be it fine or jail time should still be carried out because otherwise it loses its credibility.

      • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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        6 days ago

        I don’t believe in free will. Punishing someone for something they did is not compatible with the way I see the word*.

        Let me guess, part of the Sam Harris cult?

          • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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            6 days ago

            No it’s not. He is a confidence man repackaging a New Age interpretation of Buddhism into Atheist friendly language

            His core belief, that freewill doesn’t exist is predicated upon a very generous re-interpretation of the Libet study, a study often refuted by Benjamin Libet himself who noted that what many ignore about his experiment is the existence of what he called “Free Won’t”

            In which subjects showed that although the readiness potential existed, it was still possible for them to change their mind and not press the button regardless of how much readiness potential was present.

            Other studies on the subject have lead to radically different results.

            https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/free-will-is-only-an-illusion-if-you-are-too/

            tl;dr for this article

            They did another study that suggests meaningless decisions have readiness potiential. Such as idly scratching an itch or deciding what leg you’re going to start walking on. However readiness potential is NOT detected at all if the decision has actual weight behind it.

            As tested with a study where people were asked to push a button on the left or right to determine which of two charities would get a thousand dollar donation. Readiness potential was only detected in the control group, which was told to push a button to decide which charity they personally liked better with the 1000 dollar donation being split evenly between them.

            Meaning that if a decision requires any thought behind it at all, it was consciously made by a free agent.

            At best Libet’s work shows that we have a subconscious mind, which is not going to be a revelation to anyone with a 2nd Grader’s understanding of Psychology.

            Sorry my friend, I’m afraid you exist, your choices matter, and Sam Harris is a hack who unironically suggested a pre-emptive nuclear strike on Arabic Communities under the premise that belief in Allah was an incurable mental illness that can only lead to mass genocide and a thirst for white blood.

            Basically there’s not much difference between Sam Harris and the Spirit Science guy outside of what team they play for.

      • LANIK2000@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        In extreme cases sure, tho I feel the need to point out the context of the vats majority of criminals being conditioned into crime by their surrounding. Poverty and discrimination come to mind among others. I my opinion the best way to prevent anything is to hit it at its source, in this case making every day life more livable. Not only does that mean life must be comfortably affordable, but mental health should also be a top priority.

      • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Doesn’t point 2 kind of justify execution too? We’re not chosing to execute that action it was pre-determined that we would execute that person from the moment the universe began.

        • lad@programming.dev
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          6 days ago

          I feel like you’re considering death penalty to be the default, but if the same logic is applied while considering lifetime in prison as the default, the result would be the opposite.

          And considering that death of age looks to me more natural, I’m inclined to think no death penalty should be the default

        • girsaysdoom@sh.itjust.works
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          6 days ago

          Just because it happened doesn’t mean it wasn’t a mistake that we can learn from. In that regard, it was not justified.

          Now if you are talking about taking the same action in a parallel universe, then that definitely depends on the perspective you’re modelling.

            • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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              6 days ago

              Sorry, but I don’t understand the argument you’re trying to make here. You seem to be implying that no free will would mean we live in a fatalistic universe but I don’t think that is true. Fatalism doesn’t make any logical sense to me. It seems to imply action without a cause which is the exact opposite of what determinism means.

              • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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                6 days ago

                My understanding is determanism means every actions is based on perfectly predictable physical systems such that everything would go exactly the same way if the universe was reset and run again. In such a situation the people executing the guy would be no more capable of not executing him than a rock is capable of ignoring gravity.

                • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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                  6 days ago

                  I’m not sure if determinism necessarily means that re-running the “simulation” would always produce the exact same result. It’s conceivable that some randomness could exist, where a single elementary particle behaving one way rather than another millions of years ago could change the entire trajectory of the universe. You can always track backwards the causal chain of events but I don’t think you can do it forward. Not even if you’re Laplace’s Demon.

                  While I believe it’s true that people couldn’t have acted otherwise - meaning that if an event, like an execution, happened, it doesn’t make sense to say it could have been avoided - that doesn’t mean the future can’t be influenced. A person may be “pre-determined” to kill, but if you intervene and manage to convince them not to, their change of mind is still perfectly compatible with the absence of free will.

      • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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        6 days ago

        Punishment is a behaviorist intervention. It doesn’t rely on the concept of free will. In fact, it depends on the lack of free will to make any sense at all. If there were free will, people would be able to change without punishment.

        But killing someone isn’t a punishment. It’s a deterrent. It’s not designed to change behavior. It’s designed to end it.

        • Free_Opinions@feddit.uk
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          6 days ago

          Carrying out a punishment doesn’t make much sense as the person couldn’t have done otherwise but not carrying it out sends the signal to others that actions don’t have consequences and thus the deterrence stops working. That’s why we have to “punish” people for breaking the law. Not because it makes a difference to that specific individual but it sends a signal to others.

      • fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc
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        7 days ago

        I absolutely agree with point 1.

        I’ve never really thought about point 2. I don’t think I’m ready to say I don’t believe in free will, but I do agree that people are largely a product of their circumstances. I think in the case of a serial killer, it might not meet your definition of “free will” but it’s a person who has been methodical about the taking of life and not shown any contrition.

        I would however add point 3. I don’t want to take someone’s life even if they deserve to die.

        … and point 4 I just thought of… there’s not really any good reasons for capital punishment. It’s not a deterrent, and who cares about the cost of incarceration really.

  • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
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    7 days ago

    A tyrant’s rage

    A nation divide

    Like toddlers tears

    When rattles denied

    “That was my thing!”

    Now broken plans

    As he wipes a tear

    with little hands

    Biden stole

    His hateful thunder

    Who’s next in sight?

    I mustn’t wonder.