Seventy-seven lives, actually.
Did you consider in any way how offensive your post would be, Vikarion? Or how redundant it is?
Most of us have already considered what you say here. Some pointers are highly exaggerated, but most are annoying realities.
No, he will not be released after some 15-16 years for good behavior, or whatever. He will remain in jail for the maximum penalty, I've no doubt at all about that. 2.1 decades. Not his whole life, but it's a start.
Will he ever walk the streets again? No. The rule of law we hold dear here don't much care to let him walk free to be beaten to death by an angry mob. Our
self-righteous egos would never handle something that
barbaric and
cruel, so he won't get the chance to die at the hands of the hate-filled mob. Not because we care for his life, not for his benefit - for our benefit.
You point out how soft our prisons are as if we are not all fully aware. Few if any will like it, (outside of the jailed themselves, of course) but that's how it is. Deal with it. We have to.
Breivik won't get to see much of his own prison on that wonderful flat-screen of his. We don't have a tendency to make shows about our prisons. Ergo, anything he sees on it will be a reminder of what he has forever lost. Anywhere he goes will not be anywhere outside his polished, gold-trimmed bars. He will be trapped in a fluffy cage, forever knowing his comforts will keep him in health to live a long, boring, uneventful and irrelevant life.
When he die in his bed it won't be in his house.
I for one don't like this. I'd love for our jails to be less... accommodating. But they are as they are, and nothing I do changes that. I'll make do with what I can. But when I think of it, this is suitable punishment. No amount of discomfort will return our dead, heal our wounds or repair the broken lives. We can't torture our fallen back to life, nor can we kill to return the joys of life. But we can flip him a finger and march on as we have, offering him a level of civilized conduct not seen many other places - like any other criminal. Kindly tell me why we should bend our own rules or break our own principles for this man? Why is he a special case?
His victims will not be forgotten anytime soon. That you can be very sure of. Nor will the events. The man himself however will fade away, quietly, his name as well as his body. 50-70 years from now the victims of the worst atrocity since WWII will endure - their actions, ideals and examples living on in the hearts and minds of the people and in the annals of the largest political party in the nation. The man behind it will hardly be spoken of with any detail at all. We don't glorify or martyr our worst offenders.
The poisonous spider and harmful bacteria has one thing in common - they are both mindless natural events. They can't help be poisonous or harmful, but they still are, so we deal with them. If we could ask the spider to go away and it was inclined to obey, we might try that. Less stains to wash away. Breivik was not a harmful bacteria. He was a man with a plan who knew exactly what he did, what it would do, and he did it anyway. He will be treated no better, and no worse, than any other dangerous human criminal. Dangerous human criminals go to jail. Dangerous poison spiders are crushed.
This IS Justice. Our justice. Odds are the near 5-million people in this nation has over 5 million ideas for a more elaborate or fitting punishment but it won't do. The man is not special, or in any way an exception. He is merely a mass-murderer, and those go to jail. We will all deal with it however we want, however we can. Because while you believe in and perhaps want a darwinian world, we want something better and more civilized. That includes cuddling our prisoners to death.
*EDIT* [Clarification] This was a reply to a post that's now
banned.I do wonder for a bit (and await) the removal of this reply as well, I think. Should likely have reported the post not responded, but I felt like addressing the concerns stated, even if delivery could have been so much better...