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Capital Punishment: A Necessary Part of Justice in the United States

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If you are in a rush to attend a very important meeting and you can not find a parking spot, would you risk parking your car in a restricted zone if you knew the fee would only be 25 dollars? Would you reconsider taking the risk of parking your car there if the ticket would be 500 dollars? If the consequences of an action are severe, how many people would take the risk of taking that action? If the penalty to pay for taking other people’s lives was death, would fewer people take the risk of committing such a crime? Life is the most precious possession one holds. When another human brutally robs another of this gift, it is the most heinous of all crimes. It is only justice if the punishment fits the crime committed, and for murder, the …show more content…

Therefore, a man is to be held accountable for the immoral choices he makes (Capital Punishment Maintains Law and Order 2). Furthermore, the same bible that rebukes the act of killing, also teaches the concept of "an eye for an eye.” This concept also includes that a life for a life is the only justice for murder (Capital Punishment Maintains Law and Order 2). Another argument the opposing side makes is that a man deserves a chance to redeem and reconstruct himself in prison, and if he is killed on the death row, he never gets that chance ( Sinclair and Sinclair 20-25). Wilbert Rideau, a murderer in the Louisiana State Penitentiary, explains that prisons are not a “cure all.” They do not provide any assistance to help reform their prisoners. Most prisoners do not change during their time in prison and leave as they came. He explains that prisons should be more like rehabilitation where they try to influence and teach the prisoners the right ways. The only way to really cure criminal act is to delve into the roots of the problems and try to fix the causes of the problem (Rideau169). However, prisons can not accomplish this because they spend a fortune on locking up prisoners, and this leaves no money to create programs such as drug treatments, education, or job training that can help the prisoners and reduce crime (Herivel and Wright 34). Today, over 2.3 millions are held in the

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