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The Death Penalty In The United States

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While innocent people can sometimes be wrongly executed, we the people have the responsibility to punish those who deserve it and to the degree they deserve it, and in some cases the death penalty should be enforced. The death penalty costs the government less as opposed to life imprisonment without parole. Justice requires punishing the guilty even if only some can be punished and sparing the innocent, even if all are not spared. We reserve the death penalty in the United States for the most heinous murders and the most brutal and conscienceless murderers, and the death penalty deters such heinous crimes. The death penalty is currently used by 32 states and the federal government and is illegal in 18 states.
Britain influenced America's …show more content…

Unlike in most countries, the United States criminal justice system is not represented by a single, all-encompassing institution. Rather, it is a network of criminal justice systems at the federal, state, and special jurisdictional levels like military courts and territorial courts. Criminal laws at these levels vary, although these are all based on the US Constitution. Often times people confuse retribution with revenge. Vengeance means to signify inflicting harm on someone out of anger because of what he/or she has done. Retribution is the punishment inflicted on someone as justice for a wrong or criminal act. The death penalty is a necessary and appropriate punishment. One cannot reject capital punishment because it is retribution; the issue is whether it is an appropriate form of retribution.When a society fails to punish criminals in a way thought to be proportionate to the gravity of the crime, the danger arises that the public would take the law into its own hands, resulting in vigilante justice, lynch mobs, and private acts of retribution. Everyone agrees that there should be some punishment for murder. This mandate turns capital punishment into a necessity when nothing else serves as real punishment for a …show more content…

Not only does it provides justice to survivors of murder victims, but it also allows more resources to be invested into solving other murders and preventing future violence. We should use the hundreds of millions of dollars we'll save to protect some of those essential services, such as education. The annual cost to keep a prisoner in jail is $43,352 per year. The annual cost of sentencing the death penalty $1.26 million. $43,352 per year with life imprisonment would amount to a tremendous amount more that $1.26 million. Claimed 'cost studies,' often performed by or at the will of death penalty opponents, are frequently so incomplete as to be false and misleading. For example, they do not take into account the increase in the cost of life without parole cases if there were no death penalty. It is not cheaper to keep a criminal confined, because most of the time he will appeal just as much causing as many costs as a convict under death

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