KIRK: All of a sudden, you look at some of these savages. Like, in Indiana, there was this guy that went in and killed a pregnant woman and her three kids. And you know what? I wanna watch that execution. That'll make my day better. I wanna see him on a public block and get him be publicly executed. And I think that would be justice. You think children should have -- you should see it? What is the age -- at what age should you start to see public execution?
BOWYER: 16.
NEFF: I think you could do it earlier. I think you -- maybe at age 12. 6th grade or so. You are a person -- you know, they're old enough to -- you don't need to, like, really wallow in it and have them be broken on a wheel or anything. But if it was something like chopping -- you know, if we had a guillotine or something.
BOWYER:I think it's the age where they can't be, you know, it's -- I think it's too early and you become desensitized to maybe like this. I think it's when you can actually embrace --
KIRK: But it should also be taken in a holy way --
BOWYER: The meaning. The meaning.
KIRK: And I don't mean holy in a bad way. I mean that, like, this is heavy.
NEFF: Bluntly, we have kids who are 14 who are committing carjackings --
KIRK: A hundred percent.
NEFF: In cities and doing --
KIRK: Yes.
NEFF: Bad stuff. And I think if you sent the message to them, if you do a bad crime, you will die, and it will be like this, and that will be you, it would be a positive message.
[5:21 PM]
KIRK: Here's a question for anyone that might be not persuaded. Would crime go up or down?
BOWYER: It would go way down.
KIRK: Down. So why is this even a question?