Ghana abolishes death penalty, with expected reprieve for 176 condemned prisoners

alt2@lemm.ee to World News@lemmy.world – 281 points –
Ghana abolishes death penalty, with expected reprieve for 176 condemned prisoners
theguardian.com
17

You are viewing a single comment

As someone from the states, sometimes I'm shocked by how non-progressive the US is.

I wish I could say I was shocked at this point. Ghana also has universal healthcare for all people within its borders.

The US is only considered a developed country because of its military.

@SomethingBurger @WilliamTheWicked GDP and infrastructure would like to have a word on this topic.

Infrastructure? How many cars had blowouts hitting potholes this week? How many railroad cars derailed? How many power lines were downed by trees?

@FlyingSquid lots: probably thousands of blowouts and power lines, about a couple dozen derailed cars.

How many miles of paved highways in the US? How many people transported via rail, & over what distances over the past week? How many miles of power lines are up? How many miles repaired?
Development doesn't mean perfection and/or things never needing repair; it's more about having the infrastructure that needs to be repaired.

You ignored GDP. What do you define as a "developed" nation?

I was curious about the number of passengers carried by rail, so I looked at the wikipedia page. The US is 12th with 533 million passengers in 2019, which I find surprisingly low when compared to the population/size of this country. In France, same year, there was 1880 million passengers. I don't think the rail infrastructure is well developed in the US, probably to the benefit of car infrastructure.

Murder is the worst thing you can do. For doing it, we will murder you

So weird

And sometimes we know you didn't do it, but we're going to kill you anyway, because it looks good for our political campaign.

And sometimes we'll go ahead and kill you if it's demonstrable that you can comprehend neither the crime committed or the sentence carried out.

It's the classic metric issue.

A third or so of the country wants America to "lead" and not "follow". So they resist change they percieve as being pushed on them from outside, no matter how logical or beneficial.

I mean there's still a lot of countries in Africa that are just as - or more - regressive about social matters as the US.