The Pros And Cons Of The Death Penalty

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Is the death penalty a punishment, or is it a way to make tax payers pay more in taxes? The death penalty is a punishment enforced by the U.S. government, to kill someone who has committed a serious crime. The death penalty was first created in Eighteenth Century B.C. for people who committed murders. Over the centuries the crimes for someone to receive the death penalty increased. This punishment is too easy of a punishment for someone that committed a serious crime such as murder, treason, drug trafficking, attack on a government official and many more.
Many American citizens believe that the death penalty is the best way to get “mentally unstable” people off the streets. Not only are these people ok with something so horrific, they are also satisfied with the fact that the government is using the tax money to kill another human being. Edward Coch, an editor for Newsmax, agrees with the death penalty. He believes that “society needs to show its outrage for heinous crimes.” He also …show more content…

A lot of them may only get five to ten years or the death penalty. The death penalty is too easy of a punishment because it does not teach the criminals a lesson. In fact, it only teaches other criminals that may get life for selling drugs and that a murderer’s life is more valued than theirs. 9 times out of ten someone who is selling drugs will serve more time behind bars than a serial murdered or child molester. College student, John Enochs, raped two female students, plead guilty, and he was charged with one day in jail and a year of probation. John Enochs should have sat in prison and thought about what he did just like William Dufries. William Dufries was sentenced to life for having 67 pounds of marijuana on him while driving. If someone with a misdemeanor charge is forced to looking at the prison walls, someone that permanently damaged someone’s life should do the same, not be put to

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