Capital Punishment: A Probel Beyond Repair

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Strapped on to a large chair, electrical conductors positioned all around my head and wrists, I am seconds away from the end of my life. I am petrified, roar of the jury surrounding me as they witness me fall to my doom. It is unfair for me to die like this, even as a criminal. This is a cruel and inhumane system of punishment, and I am defenceless to prevent my wretched faith. As the man pulls down the switch, waves of electrical currents enter my body, my body squirming endlessly with treacherous pain. The waves suddenly stop as the switch is pulled back. My head falls forward, my chin tilting towards my chest. As I plunge to my death at the hands of the government as the words of Desmond Tutu echo through my head, "To take a life when a life has been lost is revenge, not justice." The government that must represent the people has just taken the existence of one of its own and all it has left of me is a corpse, cold and lifeless. The death penalty, commonly known as capital punishment affects more than just my life. Capital punishment is a cruel and merciless method of punishment that government is not allowing me to recover through rehabilitation and give back to society. The judicial system is not solving any problem by killing me as it has had made the same impact on society that I had. The expenditures necessary for the death penalty only hurts the fragile economy that we are in after the recovery of the recession. With a great number of problems with this form of punishment, I beseech to everyone to rid of capital punishment worldwide and instead punish criminals like me through a method that is considered humane.

While I lay dead, some may ponder into the future in which, if I had a chance to rehabilitate, I would have re...

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... a better life without crime. The government would be leading by example as they will not take on the same actions as I, the criminal. There are great savings to be had that could be spent on beneficial activities for society and not spent on a criminal like me. We as people have come so far but there are parts of the past that are left to erase.” Capital Punishment is considered inhuman and “it’s been somewhat embarrassing, quite frankly, that nations just as so-called civilized as ours think we're barbaric because we still have capital punishment." (deathpenalty.org 27 February 2011). Reginald Wilkinson was a prison director in Ohio and speaks the truth in saying that is an embarrassment to a nation to continue with capital punishment. Thus, in final consideration, capital punishment must be abolished and we must move on as it has become a problem beyond repair.

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