poloktim
\(^o^)/
Hah! I couldn't agree more. I'm even more reminded of the phrase "I'm not racist but..." when thinking of this case. Whenever somebody says the aforementioned phrase, you just know they're going to say something that will brand them as a racist, but are trying to justify themselves (and often fail).0o0 said:what i dont understand is why people like lawforever, support the death penalty in singapore just because it is a law in that country. do you dumbasses not realise that even official laws can be questioned no matter what country they're in? just because its a law, does that mean everyone is meant to shut the fuck up and accept it?
example
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ateqeh_Rajabi
hey look, it was a legal decision to hang this 16yr old girl in iran, i guess by lawforevers reasoning, we got to respect that decision right dumbass?
nguyen or no nguyen, ive always been against the death penalty, i dont give a shit if its law or not, laws can be questioned, why can't you understand this?
now it's all oppinion when it comes to the death penalty, it been done to death already, but when you are arguing FOR capital punishment, try base your oppinion on something else rather then "its their law and we gotta respect it", fuck singapore.
At the moment "I'm opposed to the death penalty but..." is the phrase of choice. It's interesting because the people saying it often end it with something like "... it's not our country." or some other waffle. They say they're opposed to the death penalty, then come out and say something which brands them as a moral vacuum, while thinking they're covered.
Using the "it's their country, therefore it's their laws and we shouldn't question them" excuse is a piss-poor attempt at being politically correct. We didn't like how the law was being run in Afghanistan or Iraq, but instead of respecting the legal institutions there, we marched in and changed them. Sadly, the new democratic Iraq has capital punishment, but we still changed how the law was run in those countries because we didn't like them. Why didn't we respect those laws? We saw them as unjust. Why do so many Australians oppose the capital punishment law in Singapore? We see it as unjust.
As for the talk of letting Ngyuen free, which I've seen on the opinion page, letters etc. I think that's a bit of a wrong idea. He did break the law and therefore should've been punished with a lengthy prison sentence. Singapore says capital punishment acts as a deterrent, while Corby's twenty, then fifteen year sentence has taught many people to lock up their personal belongings when they fly.