The Death Penalty: The Infliction Of Death As A Punishment?

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What is punishment? The dictionary states that it is the infliction of a penalty as retribution for an offence. Punishment is used in so many instances. For example, a child is running in the house when his mother told him not to, and he accidentally breaks her vase. The child would be punished. Another example is playing with fire. If a person plays with fire, he will get burned. Even nature has punishment. The world needs punishment, but how far should a man be punished? If one murders another is it okay to say his punishment should be murder as well? Death as a punishment has been around ever since the history books can account. The death penalty dates back to the Eighteenth Century when King Hammaurabi of Babylon codified the death penalty for 25 different crimes (“Early”). Today there is capital punishment. A person accused of murder is to stand trial …show more content…

Ted Bundy was convicted for two of the more than thirty murders he committed. He was sentenced to death by electrocution. Bundy feared death and spent his whole nine years on death row trying to find a way out of it. He tried everything from insanity to blaming pornography. What Bundy dedicated his life doing to other he feared the most himself. He wanted life without parole. If we had no death penalty he would have nothing to fear. Crime should fit the punishment and what Bundy did; there should be no other punishment other than death. Not everyone who murders should be put to death. There are justified killings, but there should be a better definition for who should die. “Mass murderers, terrorists, sadistic serial killers, contract killers or other paid assassins deserve to die” (Blecker). Rape and molestation are heinous crimes, but they should result in life without parole. Fellow inmates will decided their fate from there. Crime should fit the punishment, and if they murder in a brutal way then they should be put to

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