National Socialist
Well-known Member
- Jun 24, 2025
- 49
- 24
I think the death penalty is bad only because it's a punishment, but I'm not against itA man convicted of murder is twenty times more likely than a woman convicted of murder to receive the death penalty.
How common.Twenty-three Americans have been executed and later found innocent. All twenty-three were men.
This is why Im not an MRA. Instead of being merciful to men, it just wants to hate on women. Male supremacy hurts men.Were women to receive equal charges, equal bail, and equal sentencing, there would be more women’s prisons.
However, even when women admitted making false allegations that they were raped or that their husbands abused them, for example, their admission that they lied was often not believed.
I guess I agree this can be a problem.
after James [Richardson] spent two decades in prison, Bessie Reese finally confessed to poisoning the children. But the belief in “the innocent woman” and “the guilty man” was strong enough that even a second signed affidavit by Bessie did not lead to a new trial for James
The cost of protecting women who kill is the same as the cost of protecting men who kill: the killer continues to kill—not just disposable men but precious children.
This contradicts what I read that incarceration doesn't reduce recividism.
Jennifer said he had abused her. But because Steven survived, he was able to present evidence that made her acknowledge she was lying.
December 1990. The governor of Ohio releases from prison twenty-five women who had been convicted of killing or assaulting their husbands or companions.20 Each woman claimed the man had abused her. Within months, other governors had followed suit.
And why is this wrong? Self-defense should be legal. People are being punished for trying to defend themselves like Marissa Alexander
When mothers who kill are returned to their daughters, we are training daughters who will kill.
Maybe, but Bryan Caplan said this: "Second, most children of criminals don’t become criminals; in the Danish adoption study, over three-fourths of the boys born of and raised by people with criminal convictions weren’t convicted themselves