An Eye For An Eye By Stephen Nathanson

808 Words2 Pages

An Eye for an Eye was written by Stephen Nathanson. Mr. Nathanson, like many, is against the death penalty. Mr. Nathanson believes that the death penalty sends the wrong messages. He says that by enforcing the death penalty we “reinforce the conviction that only defensive violence is justifiable.” He also states that we must, “express our respect for the dignity of all human beings, even those guilty of murder.” The term “eye for an eye” is derived from the Latin words lex talionis. In the words of Stephen Nathanson it means, “What people deserve as recipients of rewards or punishments is determined what they do as agents.” In my opinion, criminals take life, liberty, peace, goods, in order to reward themselves with undeserved benefits. Deserved punishment protects society. Once a person no longer abides by the laws which govern society, they are no longer entitled to the protection of the laws of society. Meaning, if you choose to break the law and kill a person, you no longer should have the same rights as those who respect law and authority and you are no longer protected under those said rights. There must be dire consequences for heinous crimes. There should be set standards of punishment. We as a society have an obligation to protect and seek justice for those who abide by social order. We must …show more content…

Unfortunately, we live in a society where people do not want to take responsibility for their actions. It seems those that work and follow the law are punished for being upstanding citizens. We need to break out of the “excuse culture”. If you don’t work, you don’t eat, how is that inhumane? Darwin claimed “survival of the fittest.” Why is one life more valuable than another? It isn’t. The dead still have value and their death deserves justice. Why do we need to provide respect for life to the human who has not respected anyone else’s

More about An Eye For An Eye By Stephen Nathanson

Open Document