Argument for The Abolishment of Capital Punishment GCSE

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Do two wrongs make a right? That is the question you should ask yourself. How can one life be worth more than another?s? Would you like to have your dignity, and even your basic human rights to stripped away from you at the flick of a switch or the pull of a trigger?

What is the point in Capital punishment when it doesn't even

deter crime? A study into the effect of Capital Punishment said, 'the presence of the death penalty in law and practice has no discernible effect as a deterrent to murder.' How does this serve as a deterrent to crime? It offers the convict an easy way out with no reflection on what they've done. They don't learn from their mistakes and although there is obviously no risk of re-offence, the criminal cannot give anything back to society.

What if the next man or woman to be strapped to a chair or a

table had the cure for HIV, AIDS or cancer lodged in his brain, to be lost instead of used for the good of humanity. Lost, when all it would have taken was some support and possibly some teaching, although a fair amount are educated to a good level, approximately a third. Why shouldn't prisons be centers of learning as well as places of incarceration? It could also help with the problem of re-offence, as education is attributed as being the number one cause for crime.

It is a common misconception that execution is more humane

than imprisonment, but how can being fried alive possibly be humane? How can suffering beyond belief be better than correction? There are many cases where it has taken two or three courses to kill a patient. There are many methods of execution. There are lethal injection, the gas chamber, hanging, firing squads and electrocution. All of these are currently still in use in the U.S.A. In...

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... the second drug(a paralytic) and the third(which causes heart attacks) are felt fully by the convict, who is unable to cry out for help as he is partly unconscious and paralysed.

Many people falsely believe that it is less expensive to kill a

prisoner than to keep him. In New Jersey ?$253 million? has been spent in the Capital punishment sector and they?ve killed a sum total of zero people. The cost of maintaining the equipment is exorbitant and the drugs are especially expensive. If the conviction is wrong the government can be sued for massive amounts.

In conclusion, I believe capital punishment to be a great

wrong in today?s society. Many countries have, thankfully, relinquished this barbaric practice but, unfortunately, many continue to do so. I firmly believe that there are far better means of punishment. As I said before, do two wrongs make a right?

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