Capital Punishment Is Not Only Unusual, But Cruel

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Capital Punishment is Not Only Unusual, But Cruel
The most widely known aspect of the eighth amendment is the fact that it prohibits cruel and unusual punishment. Cruel and unusual punishment is perceived as punishment that causes “an unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain” (Bailey). Is capital punishment cruel and unusual? It is one of the most controversial topics in America today. In effect since the 1600s, the US
Supreme Court ruled that the death penalty was “cruel and unusual” in 1972 but reversed this decision when a "cleaner" way to bring about death was found in 1976 (Encarta). This "cleaner" way is death by lethal injection, which is quick and painless if administered correctly. Capital punishment is used for many different reasons and has been enforced in many different methods through the years, for “when crime mounts in the US, the demand for punishment also increases” (Rottenberg 569). Is it right for us to be able to kill another human being who breaks the law? Why don't we just use life imprisonment instead? There are so many moral issues surrounding capital punishment and whether or not it is a cruel and unusual form of punishment.
Few of these generalizations remain very clear, no matter what the situation.
I personally believe the death penalty should be considered cruel and unusual based on three reasons, current racial issues and report findings, personal opinions on punishment standards, and my religious beliefs.
Since capital punishment has been reinstituted, the issue has been a major discussion in the media and among the American public. Along with the discussions, questions have arisen on whether the death penalty is a racist punishment. A 1990 report released by the federal government's General
Accounting Office found a "pattern of evidence indicating racial disparities in the charging, sentencing and imposition of the death penalty" (Bailey). After reviewing over 2,500 homicide cases and sentencing patterns in Georgia in the 1970s, the report concluded that a person accused of killing a white was
4.3 times more likely to be sentenced to death than a person accused of killing a black. The Stanford Law Review published a study that found similar patterns of racial dispair, based on the race of the victim, in Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Il...

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...raised: "Is it morally right?" The number of problems with the death penalty are enormous, ranging from racism to cruel methods, and these problems will never be resolved unless the death penalty is forever seen as unconstitutional in the eyes of the eighth amendment.

Works Cited

Bailey, Erik. "Murder, Capital Punishment, and Deterrence" Salon.com 24
Aug 1997
<http://www.salon.com/feature/news/1997/08/24/opinion.html>
Costanzo, Mark. “Just Revenge.” Elements of Argument. Ed. Annette T.
Rottenberg. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000. 592-601.
Rottenberg, Annette. “Punishment.” Elements of Argument. Ed. Annette
T. Rottenberg. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s, 2000. 569-570.
Wasserstrom, Richard. “Punishment v. Rehabilitation.” Elements of
Argument. Ed. Annette T. Rottenberg. Boston: Bedford/St. Martin’s,
2000. 570-579.
Williams, Mary. “Capital Punishment.” Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia.
CD-ROM. New York: Microsoft, 1998.

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