Jebus wrote:As far as you know, huh? What about the link I posted earlier?
So, it's a controversial topic and, therefore, we can't know much about it.
Cloppy wrote: I think instead we should have rehabilitation centers where people remain, get checked and can then get back to society if they represent no danger to the public anymore or never represented any dangers to begin with.
I think the hidden premise in that
rehabilitation for criminals is that psychiatry today is better than useless. I don't see any reason to think that's the case. Up until the mid 19th century, most of the medicine was worse than useless. It's quite possible psychiatry still is.
I think it's better to do nothing with the criminals until it's proven beyond a shade of doubt that some policies indeed help.
People have this idea that there is some objective justice. While there probably is objective morality, it hardly follows there is objective justice. The world is not just, actions don't have predictable consequences, and attempts to make it more just (communism...) have a terrible track record.
Furthermore, I think that, if there is some objective justice, it's not just to punish smaller criminals if the biggest criminals out there remain unpunished. Nobody got punished, for example, for killing tens or hundreds of innocent civilians in the Varivode Massacre (and for more than a decade, the Croatian government denied it even happened). Given that fact, how is it justice that somebody who murders one person, or merely steals something, gets punished?