Persuasive Essay On The Bill Of Rights

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Today in modern day America, we live under a code. That code is known as the Constitution Of The United States of America. It is the pillar that our founding fathers created to establish a strong central government that would forever support the formation of our country. Within the Constitution is the Bill of Rights. The Bill of Rights is the collective name for the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution. The Constitution has been around for 226 years and has managed to run our country for that long. People ask now that it has been a large period of time, does the Constitution still apply and work well in our advanced country? Does the Bill of rights still support each individual 's rights? For example, you have the Eighth …show more content…

For example, there is a electrocution within an electric chair, gas chambers, hanging, and a firing squad. Each form of punishment is extremely painful and slow to cause death. "A penalty must be proportional to the crime, in order not to violate the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment."("Capital Punishment"). Many people see these actions for the death penalty as unconstitutional, but then you have those who oppose and think that those people that commit those crimes deserve what happens to them. They feel as if putting a person in jail is not a proportionate to the crime that they have committed. For these reasons, the states have changed to try and use less painful forms of executions. Eventually, these problems would lead to cases that would have to be addressed by the supreme court. One prime example of a supreme case is the “Lockett V. Ohio” court case. Sandra Lockett, who had encouraged and driven the getaway car for a robbery that resulted in the murder of a pawnshop owner, was found guilty and sentenced to death. "The death penalty was mandatory unless: 1) the victim had induced the offense, 2) the offense was committed under duress or coercion, or 3) the offense was a product of mental deficiencies."("Lockett v. Ohio." ). Although Sandra was sentenced to death, The case was later overturned. However now in recent times, the states have resorted to using less painful methods of

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