On Tue, Aug 25, 2015 at 12:55 AM, Greg Chalik <mrg3105@gmail.com> wrote:
​A public execution sanctioned by the judicial system is usually intended to instill the popular trust in that system, and not to instill fear.



I politely beg to differ.

Capital punishment is most often justified as a deterent to the commiting of murder and similar crimes. As such, this necessarily means that fear of receiving said punishment is the operative means of such deterence.

[NOTE: Whether or not capital punishment actually IS an effective deterent to such crimes is a different discussion, one that we should probably not go into here, since it will likely lead to Political Debate.]

There is also - at least in the past if not currently - the dimension that the public execution of rebels and dissidents was a means of instilling fear of the existing government's retribution into the minds of *prospective* rebels/dissidents.

--
Richard Aiken

"Never insult anyone by accident."  Robert A. Heinlein
"A word to the wise ain't necessary -- it's the stupid ones that need the advice." - Bill Cosby
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