Capital Punishment in America In America, we no longer feel that crime should go without harsh punishment. Tim Robbins’ film, “Dead Man Walking” is a movie about a man named Matthew Poncelet (Sean Penn) who is on death row, and the different things he goes through as he counts down his final days until execution. The movie is based on a true story. Through the movie, I was able to see the different the steps that a death row inmate goes through leading up to execution. I cannot really say that the movie was pro or anti death penalty because I think it covered both sides well. In “Dead Man Walking” the justice system was right, and they executed the right man. However, in reality our system isn’t always right and sometimes mistakes are made. Although I don’t think that capital punishment is the perfect solution to our crime problem, I do think that it is necessary. I support the death penalty because it saves our government money, I believe it’s what our founding fathers wanted, it prevents murderers from killing again, and because of it’s deterrent effects. Executions also save our government money. According to Justice For All, an organization that supports capital punishment, life without parole cases cost from one to three million more than equivalent death penalty cases. A cell on death row costs an average of $24,000 a year, but the average cost of a cell in a maximum security prison is $75,000 a year. People that say death row inmates waste government money on appeals, forget that people who are sentenced to life without parole do too. In fact, there’s an average of $150,000-$300,000 spent per case for an inmate sentenced to life, versus $75,000 per case for inmates on death row. In the movie, Matthew Poncele... ... middle of paper ... ... Allen, Amanda. .The Death Penalty. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com. Bartlett, Matthew D.. 20 April 1999. Capital Punishment, Justice Served. Justice For. All.19 April 2001.www.prodeathpenalty.com. Canada, Jonathan. Death Penalty. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com. Lailiberte, Joshua. Life or Death. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com . Rogers, Christopher. The Death Penalty. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com. Scott. Capital Punishment. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com Stuart. Death of a Criminal. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com. Woos. Capital Punishment. 20 April 1999. Justice For All. 19 April 2001. www.prodeathpenalty.com .
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Everyone has an opinion on capital punishment and the death penalty. However, most people never have to think about the person being executed or the circumstances that put them on death row. The movie Dead Man Walking allows the average person to peek into this often hidden world. Although, I can say my view on the death penalty has not been altered, I cannot say that this movie and its presentation of capital punishment did not move me emotionally.
The death penalty today: Death sentences and executions for juvenile crimes January 1, 1973-June 30, 2000. Available: http://www.law.onu.edu/ faculty/streib/juvdeath.htm Whitman, L. (2000, June 20). Bush should halt Texas execution: Human Rights Watch letter to the Texas board of pardons and paroles. Available: http://www.hrw.org/press/ 2000/06/board-ltr.htm
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Capital punishment results in the victims family gaining a greater sense of security, making sure the criminal is able to be punished to the highest degree for his crime, and honoring retribution. The issue of capital punishment has created a division
Radelet, Michael L., updated by the Death Penalty Information Center. Post-Furman Botched Executions. The Death Penalty Information Center
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In this paper I will argue for the moral permissibility of the death penalty and I am fairly confident that when the case for capital punishment is made properly, its appeal to logic and morality is compelling. The practice of the death penalty is no longer as wide-spread as it used to be throughout the world; in fact, though the death penalty was nearly universal in past societies, only 71 countries world-wide still officially permit the death penalty (www.infoplease.com); the U.S. being among them. Since colonial times, executions have taken place in America, making them a part of its history and tradition. Given the pervasiveness of the death penalty in the past, why do so few countries use the death penalty, and why are there American states that no longer sanction its use? Is there a moral wrong involved in the taking of a criminal’s life? Of course the usual arguments will be brought up, but beyond the primary discourse most people do not go deeper than their “gut feeling” or personal convictions. When you hear about how a family was ruthlessly slaughtered by a psychopathic serial killer most minds instantly feel that this man should be punished, but to what extent? Would it be just to put this person to death?
“The case Against the Death Penalty.” aclu.org. American Civil Liberties Union, 2012. Web. 12 Feb. 2013
Bedau, Hugo Adam. “The Case Against the Death Penalty.” ACLU.org. 2012. Web. 4 December 2013. https://www.aclu.org/capital-punishment/case-against-death-penalty
The death penalty continues to be an issue of controversy and is an issue that will be debated in the United States for many years to come. According to Hugo A. Bedau, the writer of “The Death Penalty in America”, capital punishment is the lawful infliction of the death penalty. The death penalty has been used since ancient times for a variety of offenses. The Bible says that death should be done to anyone who commits murder, larceny, rapes, and burglary. It appears that public debate on the death penalty has changed over the years and is still changing, but there are still some out there who are for the death penalty and will continue to believe that it’s a good punishment. I always hear a lot of people say “an eye for an eye.” Most people feel strongly that if a criminal took the life of another, their’s should be taken away as well, and I don’t see how the death penalty could deter anyone from committing crimes if your going to do the crime then at that moment your not thinking about being on death role. I don’t think they should be put to death they should just sit in a cell for the rest of their life and think about how they destroy other families. A change in views and attitudes about the death penalty are likely attributed to results from social science research. The changes suggest a gradual movement toward the eventual abolition of capital punishment in America (Radelet and Borg, 2000).
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Locke, Mandy. “Study: End Death Cases, Save Money.” The News and Observer (2009). ProQuest. Web. 22 February 2010.
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