Death Penalty

             "Why I oppose the death penalty"
             A central principle of a justice society is that every person has an equal right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." That is why I oppose the death penalty. If you are Queer, or a woman who does not behave in socially acceptable ways, courts and juries are stacked against you, including those that can send you to death row. This is particularly true if, in addition to being queer, you are poor or not white. If anti-queer in not enough to oppose the death penalty try ethics, if killing is wrong for an individual, it's wrong for cold bureaucratic machinery. If you can afford good legal representation, you won't end up on death row. Over 90 percent of defendants charged with capitol crimes are indigent and cannot afford to hire an experienced criminal defense attorney to represent them. They are forced to use inexperienced, underpaid court-appointed attorneys.
             In most states the pay for court appointed attorneys is so low that lawyers assigned to capital cases will lose $20-$30 an hour if they do an adequate job. Many capital trials last less then a week, hardly enough time to present a good defense. An FBI study shows that states, which abolish the death penalty, averaged lower murder rates than states, which have not. We cannot turn to dictionaries or law books to provide us with our moral definitions. If we could do that, there would be no reason to practice philosophy. It is often said that in order to be moral creatures, we must have free will, which includes the possibility of choosing evil. Then how can we deny the humanity of those who choose evil, or declare them to both of a fundamentally different moral constitution? Evil is within human boundaries.
             By applying capital punishment, we imply that we are objective judges (which we are not). That we are perfect (which we are not), that we have the right to assign punishment (which we do not), an...

More Essays:

APA     MLA     Chicago
Death Penalty. (1969, December 31). In MegaEssays.com. Retrieved 05:19, May 20, 2024, from https://www.megaessays.com/viewpaper/35367.html