Results 31 to 45 of 98
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9th May 2005, 05:19 PM #31Originally Posted by craigb
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9th May 2005, 06:04 PM #32Originally Posted by Rusty
Give them a long sentence and in 25 years time so goody two shoes goose will be leading a movement to have him released. He'd go before a parole board of acedemic, know-it-all fruit cakes and highly qualified professors who have no concept of the real world.
I've had dealings with the family of one of Bryant's victims and have seen first hand what it does. Nope , absolutely no sympathy from me.
Don't say punishment isn't a deterent - try littering in Singapore and see how you go. Regardless of that though, I don't care about the deterent either - he wouldn't be able to do it again if he was gone.If at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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9th May 2005, 06:33 PM #33Originally Posted by DanPMick
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9th May 2005, 06:42 PM #34Originally Posted by Gingermick
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9th May 2005, 06:47 PM #35Retired
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Keep this one on topic please.
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9th May 2005, 06:50 PM #36Registered
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Originally Posted by
Al
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9th May 2005, 07:02 PM #37Originally Posted by GumbyMick
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9th May 2005, 07:05 PM #38
Killing people, beating them, locking them up for 100 years, shooting their parents for having them or any other draconian measures will not stop drugs coming into this country. No matter how much money we spend on policing and border patrols, drugs will continue to come into the country. There is simply way too much money in it. The people who make the money are rarely the ones who get caught. It is almost always the desperate, the unfortunate or the plain stupid ones who are put into the position of highest risk. Even if the “Mr Big”s get caught there are another 3 lining up behind them to take their place.
If we actually start to intercept 90% of the illicit drugs that are destined for this country, the people who make the money will simply increase there shipments into Australia. Heroin, cocaine, marijuana etc. simply grows on trees (well plants anyway). It costs so little to produce they can afford to do this with very little impact on supply.
We need to control the importation, manufacture and distribution of all the currently illicit drugs. Take the money out of the drug trade and you will have no drug trade.
People will still take drugs no matter if they are legal or illegal. It doesn’t matter if people know that the drug is bad for them they will still become users of it. Have a look at tobacco.Photo Gallery
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9th May 2005, 07:19 PM #39
Its the financial cost of drugs that damage society so much.
We need to get people off drugs for good through their own cognition rather than fear of punishment.Mick
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9th May 2005, 07:31 PM #40Deceased
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Originally Posted by bitingmidge
Fully agree with that, and it is not only Indonesia it is also other Asian countries that have the same laws. They are also well publicised.
The other thing I have heard a lot on the radio is that their system of justice is 3rd rate unlike ours because they are not presumed innocent until proven guilty. Their system of justice being based on the Code Napoleon was introduced by the Dutch and is the same as in use in most European countries.
Under this system the Bali 9, having been arrested and charged by the police, are automatically, in the eyes of their law, guilty unless they can prove their innocence. The court case is there to give them the opportunity to prove their innocence. Which I don't think they can.
In view of the evidence against them I the death penalty in this particular case is the most appropriate.
Peter.
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9th May 2005, 07:32 PM #41
i myself think the death penalty is too barbaric
because i cannot believe anyone whether told to by their government or not has a right to take another persons life
but they would have known the risk & chose to take it & now have to suffer the consequences of their actions which is a probable death sentence.
i think a more appropriate punishment would be a long prison term in the country the crime was committed in not a prisoner exchange program.
the ones i feel sorry for are their families
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9th May 2005, 08:16 PM #42Senior Member
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I'm glad the stuff was stoped there and didn,t get far enough to be pushed onto my kids.
Of cause the feds knew what they were doing. They are probably getting sick of spending hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars of taxpayers money finding drug runners. Then that again getting them convicted in court then starting over in a few years time when they get out of jail.
Another isue is if they are aware of someone braking the law in another country it is their duty to inform the authorities in that country. Just as we would expect police in another country to inform our police if they had any information about what was happing here.
I dont have a strong feeling about what should hapen to them, so long as they are not aloud to smuggle any more drugs. Its getting expencive to keep people in jail over here about $50 000 per year.
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9th May 2005, 08:18 PM #43
[QUOTE=Gumby]Disagree. Surely you don't think ba$tard$ like Martin Bryant & Juian Knight shouldn't be swinging on the end of a rope?QUOTE]
And if you execute just 1 innocent person?
The rest of your life in jail is a much bigger punishment imoMick
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9th May 2005, 08:21 PM #44
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9th May 2005, 08:25 PM #45
Thats not the point
Mick
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