Mentally ill Criminals

1250 Words3 Pages

The issue of executing mentally ill criminals has been widely debated among the public. They debate on whether it is right or wrong to execute a person who does not possess the capacity to think correctly. The mental illness is a disease that destroys a person’s memory, emotion, and prevent one or more function of the mind running properly. The disease affects the way a person thinks, feels, behaves and relates to others.When a person is severely mentally ill, his/ her ability to appreciate reality lack so they aspire to do stuff that is meaningless. The sickness is triggered by an amalgamation of genetic, and environmental factors not a personal imperfection. On the death penalty website, Scott Panetti who killed his mother in-law and father-in-law reports that since 1983, over 60 people with mental illness or retardation have been executed in the United States (Panetti). The American Civil Liberties Union says that it is unconstitutional to execute someone who suffered from an earnest mental illness (ACLU).Some people apply the term crazy or mad to describe a person who suffers from astringent psychological disorders because a mad person look different than a mundane human being. The time has come for us to accept the fact that executing mentally ill offenders is not beneficial to society for many reasons. Although some mentally ill criminals have violated the law, we need to sustain a federal law that mentally ill criminals should not be put to death. It’s amoral to take away a life of a person who is insane. People who are insane are not conscious of what they do because they do not possess the capability of thinking or behaving like a sensible person. They intend to do stuff that does not make sense or integrate up. Ac... ... middle of paper ... ...blind have a right to buy guns” Jane Bryant Quinn September 9, 2013. Web. 25 Nov.2013. "Involuntary Treatment Is Warranted for the Severely Mentally Ill." Mental Illness. Ed. Roman Espejo. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2012. Opposing Viewpoints.Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 18 Nov. 2013. "Mental Illness and the Death Penalty." Death Penalty Information Center. N.p., n.d. Web. 04 Dec. 2013. Mello, Matthew. “What IS Someone Sane Enough to Die? Americanbar.org.The American Bar Association. N.D. Web. 24. November. 2013. Tanfani, Joseph. “Keeping guns away from people with mental illness is a complex issue,” Latimes.com. Los Angeles Time, September 21, 2013 Web. October 31 2013. " Mental Illness and the Death Penalty." American Civil Liberties Union. May 5, 2009. Web. 04 Dec. 2013

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