Disenfranchising Felons: Should Ex-Felons Be Allowed to Vote

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The feelings of allowing felons to vote is chilling; those who have been to prison have committed crimes and are out to get their rights back. But it is clear that felons should be “disenfranchised because they have broken the laws,” says Edward Feser, a philosophy professor and writer. Yet people are still questioning whether it is moral to keep felons from getting the rights to vote. Disenfranchising felons is unintentional in racial issues, and is used to punish felons to teach them that once they've broken the laws, they have lost their voting rights as well, and it would also keep felons from violating fellow citizens' voting rights.
The Washington Times, a well-known and widely read newspaper, wrote an article “Fed judges: Felons should get vote.” In this article, the author(s) argued on the fact that felons should have the right to vote. They had argued that the reason felons were being denied the right to voting is because disenfranchising felons was “intended to discriminate against minorities.” On the other hand, disenfranchising felons was never the intention of lawmakers, but there may have been a disproportionate impact on some racial groups because there are more minorities that are in prison than there are of other races. The Los Angeles Times, another well-known and widely read newspaper, has argued in their article “Felons have lost their right to vote” that “at any point in time there are always going to be some groups that commit more crimes than others, but that doesn't make the laws racist-just as the fact that more crimes are committed by men doesn't make criminal laws sexist.” The fact that more men than women commit crimes doesn't mean that our laws are sexist, it just simply means that because of the cr...

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