• @ratatouille@feddit.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    13 days ago

    Because at first you have to find the cause of the behavior. Punitive justice should be the last resort. The problem, the moment justice has to work, a problem was not discovered and solved early enough. I would say every government punishment is a prove about a community and government failure. The moment justice step in you need to punish an incorrect behavior to prove that the rules that exist are valid and enforced. So one part of the punishment is not for the criminal it is for strengthen the existing rules.

    In developed countries there should not only be the punishment but also an investigation how this could happen and some form of help to solve the issue. And additional punishment if other people where harmed.

  • FistingEnthusiast
    link
    fedilink
    English
    406 days ago

    Because rehabilitation is more effective

    Punitive justice won’t change the way people think, the cycle will just repeat

    Things like the death sentence don’t work, because people are still murdering, even though they know that they face execution for it

    It’s a pointless punishment

    • Makhno
      link
      fedilink
      English
      46 days ago

      It’s a pointless punishment

      Idk, there are some pieces of shit that just need a bullet to the head. Serial killers/rapists don’t need rehabilitation. They need to be erased.

      • @kofe@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        136 days ago

        I want to preempt this by apologizing if you are a victim yourself, or at least say I don’t speak for all victims. That said, threatening violence - unless as immediate defense - is not moral within my view. I’ve been raped and had loved ones violently murdered. I would not wish pain on those responsible. I want them to understand and grow as people. Maybe it will never happen, and I can accept that. I can’t accept loosening my moral standards and sinking to their level.

        Sequestering them from society is more preferable. Requiring therapy. Community service.

        I’ve been in therapy off and on for years. One piece of advice a therapist gave me that I’ll never forget is to never stop being an idealist.

  • @Anomalocaris@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    English
    246 days ago

    rehabilitation is better

    however, we do have to do something with those billionaires and oligarchs

      • teft
        link
        fedilink
        English
        5
        edit-2
        6 days ago

        Let’s get rid of poverty for everyone. No one deserves to live poor.

        We should force the people who were super greedy and became dragons with hoards of cash to work for the public in a service job like janitor or old person care. Maybe that will make them think about other people.

  • @sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz
    link
    fedilink
    English
    216 days ago

    For me, personal justice almost has to be punitive. But I’m an asshole. And more importantly, I’m not society, just an insubstantial slice of it. Any study on how to deal with crime shows that punitive measures rarely, if ever, increase the wellness of society. Rehabilitation, understanding, hippie dippy shit, has a much greater positive impact on society, as hard as that may be to stomach. Facts are facts, regardless of feelings.

  • @BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    56 days ago

    The world has had punitive justice systems for hundreds of years. It doesn’t work. The countries trying restorative and rehabilitative justice systems are seeing amazing results.

  • Don Piano
    link
    fedilink
    English
    46 days ago

    Because that empirically tends to negatively interfere with rehabilitative functions of justice. If crime is bad, preventing crime is good, and stopping crime prevention therefore is bad.

  • @humanspiral@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1
    edit-2
    5 days ago

    The higher question is why shouldn’t society be punitive?

    To start with prison/justice, rape/violence being a feature means gang support systems are a feature, and crime university is a feature. Police are empowered by being agents of punishment. Privatization of parts of justice system incentivize kickbacks for punishment, and school to prison pipeline for the structurally oppressed classes.

    Structural oppression in society serves oligarchist low hanging fruit of wage suppression. Structural desperation that motivates gang/mafia membership and crime as alternate protection from a punitive society. Importantly, if society isn’t hateful, corrupt, and punitive, then why the fuck would you care about a politician who champions putting bandaids on it to make society more hateful and divisive, even if their real agenda is more war and service to Israel? Late stage democracy ensures collapse for zionist oligarchist pillaging.

    UBI/freedom dividends is the only democratic idealist function. Not political power. It eliminates structural crime and oppression. Liquid democracy with UBI eliminates corruption and dysfunctional policy. A functional improving sustainable society is impossible when hate is prioritized.

  • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
    link
    fedilink
    English
    16 days ago

    The question doesn’t really make sense as asked. The entire criminal justice system, almost by definition, revolves around punishment.

    Punishment has several different purposes such as deterrence, removal, rehabilitation. I suspect you wanted to ask about why some of these purposes are “better” than others…

    Here’s a comic explaining this: https://lawcomic.net/guide/?p=60

  • Rayquetzalcoatl
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1
    edit-2
    6 days ago

    Punishment is part of justice. Seeing that somebody who does wrong intentionally and with malice suffers, proportionally, is part of the lesson that the justice system teaches.

    In my opinion, punishment is important for the victim (to see that they are protected, and to satiate any craving for extra judicial revenge), society at large (to demonstrate that there is a governing body that will not let people get away with causing harm), and for the criminal themselves (to show that harmful acts will result in reprisal).

    It crucially can’t be the whole lesson, though. There has to be guidance, forgiveness (on a legal level), and a corrective path available to people who hurt others. Punishment on its own often just perpetuates systems that produce criminality, and isn’t enough to effectively reform people who have done wrong.

  • @Shanmugha@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    16 days ago

    It shouldn’t be, period. As long as we keep producing people having no problem with causing more harm than good, they will keep doing just that