Saturday, October 12, 2019
Capital Punishment: Costs Of The Death Penalty Essay -- essays researc
 Capital Punishment: Costs of The Death Penalty      Let us suppose that killing as a form of punishment is a moral and  universally accepted practice. Would it then be acceptable to issue this  irreparable sanction to a select few while allowing others, equally accountable,  to avoid it? It is acceptable to our criminal justice system for it seems to be  standard operating procedure. Many embrace the death penalty based on the "eye  for an eye" concept. There is certainly some merit to this argument and it  seems quite fair and logical. Unfortunately our use of the death penalty is  neither fair nor logical. Our criminal justice system's "lip service" to the  age-old concept is an insulting disguise for such an obscurity of fairness and  logic. The death penalty is frivolous and discriminatory in its procedure  because of the unreasonable prices we pay to execute certain groups at much  higher rates than others.  We pay different prices for using a death penalty. Sadly, today more than  ever, the dollar seems to be the endlessly interchangeable standard of value.  We strive to make money, save money and when we spend money we do so with a  valued return in mind. Accordingly, a popular argument contends that we spend  too much money incarcerating prisoners for life. We probably do but the price  tag on issuing a death sentence according to a Florida study is $3.1 million  compared to $1 million for a life sentence; a 3100% difference (Walker 1994,  108). Imagine your death bein...                      
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