For this is my second journal entry and we are talking about the death penalty which I think it’s very necessary to kill someone but at same time that person has a life even if his life is meaningless. Myself as American is established on the system we have here today, for the worst crimes and life without parole is better but yet for so many reasons people do bad things to good people. But then again I don’t how people operate now these days on how people can justify one person life to make a life changing decisions. For what, what’s right for our country, if that’s the case it doesn’t decrease crime, delays the suffering of families murder victims, costs a whole lot more than life in prison, and, worst of all, and risks executions of innocent people. Capital punishment is just the nice term to call death penalty is …show more content…
Like this case Kennedy v. Louisiana, 554 U.S. 407 (2008) was trying sentenced this man named Patrick Kennedy to death after being convicted of raping and sodomizing his eight-year-old stepdaughter but due to the state law “The State Supreme Court affirmed the statute, rejecting petitioner’s reliance on Coker v. Georgia, which prevented the use of capital punishment for the rape of an adult woman.” How the this person didn’t get what he deserves by the eighth amendment which speaks that “Eighth Amendment's Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause did not permit a state to punish the crime of rape of a child with the death penalty” which I think is hogwash that a little girl don't deserve justice because she wasn’t in the right age the laws in the united states are very strict but amendments are those that makes it impossible to arrest
Supreme Court reviewed the cases of Evan Miller and Kuntrell Jackson who were both convicted with committing capital murder at the age of fourteen. Firstly, all defendants are allowed to argue that their punishment violated the Eighth Amendment. According to www.verdict.justia.com, “ On a theory that Miller and Jackson were entitled to individualized sentencing, they were denied the opportunity to argue the relevance of these mitigating factors to their proper punishment in an attempt to persuade their judges that the sentence of LWOP was too harsh.” Specifically, this indicates that the accused people were not allowed to argue that their punishment had violated the Eighth Amendment. Secondly, age matters when deciding the consequence for the convicted criminals.
In the debate two candidate for death penalty were Robert Blecker and Kent Scheidegger. They argument by saying that Everyone wants a neighborhood that 's safe and communities that are strong. And in order to do that, we have to focus on the root causes of crime and punish the criminals proportional to their crime that is the Hammurabi code “An Eye for an eye”. Robert Blecker said, let the punishment fit the crime and The closest we come to serious punishment left in this society is the death penalty. He said he would reserve the death penalty for essentially terrorists, mass murderers, murderers of vulnerable victims, especially children, rapist murderers, contract killers, and torture killers.
Life On Death Row What I Already Knew and What I Wanted to Know When I was younger, I was into Dragon Ball Z and comic books very heavy. I had little action figures I would take to school and play with and as soon as I got in from school, I turned the TV to Cartoon Network to watch Dragon Ball and Then Dragon Ball Z. I wanted to be Goku(the main character of the show), Rocky Balboa, Bruce Lee and Lil ' Bow Wow.
Capital punishment should be prohibited as it is immoral to take another’s life and many wrongful executions can take place. Persons should also contemplate on the repercussions of taking another’s life. Firstly, it is immoral to take another’s life. Man cannot create or give life so therefore should not take life.
The death penalty is the act of punishing a criminal to death who has committed a crime such as first-degree murder, espionage, or treason. This process can also be called capital punishment. The death penalty law started to become a controversial topic in the early 20th century after World War 1. Opponents of the death penalty argue the inhumane, unconstitutional, and wrongly accused aspects of the death penalty. Proponents argue the financial savings, deterrent effects, and retribution aspects of the death penalty.
The death penalty is still in “criminal law” of some of the countries and has a lot of opponents as well as I who think this punishment is not effective for the following reasons. First of all I believe this punishment violates the fundamental principles of human rights according to the United Nation’s Universal Declaration which says everyone has the right to life, liberty and security no matter what is their status, but unfortunately there is no prohibition against the death penalty in international law. There is no clue that the death penalty can reduce the crimes more than life imprisonment. It only can effects the pre-programmed crimes. So in the best case, the offender is aware of the legal consequences of his behavior.
Rising in popularity, the Death Penalty has remained a hotly debated, controversial topic that is consistently spurring numerous moral and ethical arguments. Seen as a straightforward concept, a black and white situation, the death penalty has clearly divided the world in two divisions. One division holds the belief that it is a threat to human life and dignity, that it should be illegal. While the other supports the legitimacy of the death penalty and believe in the good it can bring. Regardless of the differing views, Dead Man Walking illustrates the doubled sided coin that is the death penalty to assert the value of human life and the toll it takes on an individual.
Capital Punishment, also known as the death penalty, means to execute an offender of the law that has been sentenced to death after conviction by a court ruling. Almost 1,500 people were killed under this law in between the years of 1977 and 2016. There are many pros and cons for Capital Punishment. One of the main pros on this particular topic is that the victim’s family or friends that were affected by the criminal, will feel as if they have received justice for their loved one. As bad as that may sound, it is only fair to the victim.
The death penalty was interfering with the right of the 14 and 8 amendments, that were taking away after this sentence had been placed.
Introduction 58 of the 195 countries in the world allow and have the death penalty as legal. One of them is the United States, an English-speaking country with 23 executions in 2017. However, 19 states in the US have chosen to abolish it while 31 states still have it as legal. Because of this, it exists organizations that are working to prohibit the death penalty both in the US and in other countries as well. The three most famous organizations working on this mission are Amnesty International, National Coalition and The Death Penalty Project.
Over the time, death penalty has been a debatable issue in the criminal justice system. There are numerous pro and anti death penalty perspectives that fight each other in the vague of providing justice to the victims. But is retribution justified and deterrent effect successful in providing justice remains a debatable issue. The cost of execution remains debatable again, considered one among the reason whether to execute or not. The proponents and opponents argue if it leads to cruel and unusual punishment violating a nation’s constitution.
The death penalty, also known as the Capital punishment is the execution of a person through death and has been an ongoing practice since the eighteenth century. It has served as a punishment for severe crimes such as when a life is involved by murder or treason. This can be one of the most diverse and arguable laws because of it’s permanent conclusion. It’s unclear rule, also sparks contention on whether or not it is a brutal act of punishment or a socialized humane way of retrieving justice. Since many capital crimes and offences have prolonged to be a huge issue in the United States, Americans are now coming up with solutions to reduce crime impacts.
The risk that innocent people die under death penalty is extremely low due to legal appellations and has succeeded in most of the 58 countries who apply it as a capital crime. Society has a cancer and it’s our duty to eliminate
Some say it is just not suitable for this society, where constitution guarantees the human rights, and the conception that human rights are equally applied to every human being, exists. On the other hand, some say that death penalty is needed to clean and organize this world contaminated by crimes, and is a tool to make an ideal, crime-free world. I cannot deny that human rights are important, but if we keep pushing with human rights, nothing would be done to save furthermore victims, and that is basically out of its purpose to guarantee human rights; victims’ rights will be violated by death, and that is not a result wanted. It might not make sense, but we have to follow the utilitarianism, which encourages sacrifice of the small and less, for the big and many. We can save furthermore victims in future, use taxes in places where really need it, and comfort every family who suffers from such tragedies like family member’s death, by using death penalty for violent
The death sentence is strongly inhumane. It is very cruel of one to take the life of another, whether with an explanation or not. For justification of a crime, it is not needed to spare another life, the life of the offender. Any reason, whether great or small should not be valid enough to result in the ending of a life.