Death: The Ultimatum

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Death: The Ultimatum

In itself, death ends all, be it inanimate or animate. For that, there exist many conflicting opinions concerning death, and the deaths that have imposed legally. The two major sides who hold opinions can be named as “those who oppose” and “those who support” the death penalty respectively. Despite the existence of two “extremist” parties, not many people consider a middle ground where the people punished by the death penalty are chosen with a stricter selective force. Though, the current status of death penalties keeps itself fairly low, only about 1300 people having been punished by death since the 1970s. In any effort, supporting prisoners’ upkeep costs money, and plenty at that, since all their essential commodities
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Taking into account the 81 death row inmate average and the execution wait time average, states (who allow the death penalty) will save approximately 50 million dollars. In an objective essence, the death penalty, when enacted, has the ability to prevent the state from spending money on some of the prisoners, since maintaining prisoners can be …show more content…
The side that claims that the death penalty is unethical supports that claim saying that its inherently murder in itself. The side that upholds the Capital Punishment supports its claim by explaining that a crime garners its deserved punishment, and sometimes that punishment results in the death of the perpetrator, in addition to their argument that the death penalty deters crime. As all crimes must be handled, a criminal receives his punishment, if any, after thorough examination of his case, so the steps taken before receiving that punishment never change, which is to say that whenever a criminal learns of his capital punishment, the punishment is well deserved. Capital Punishment is only given to those whose crimes garnered that kind of punishment, because otherwise, their punishment would be much less severe. Amendment VIII of the Constitution states that “Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.” By the literal foundation of the United States of America, excessive or unnecessarily unusual punishments cannot be imposed, therefore a criminal’s punishment when committing a capital offense cannot be considered breaking an amendment. The crimes whose severity garners capital punishment count few and rarely ever occur, which have been described by the webpage procon.org