Should The Death Penalty Be Abolished In Britain?

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The Death Penalty is defined as the intentional killing of a person who is guilty to have committed serious crimes such as murder. Historically, the guilty person would be sentenced to death almost immediately as the trial was finished and was found to be guilty. The death penalty also known as part of the capital punishment is the international killing of a person who had committed crimes or murders. However, death penalty has a controversial impact on other issues such as political, social systems and judicial movements. There was many forms of punishment that was used for capital punishment apart from death penalty, there was electrocution, gas chambers, lethal injections, hanging and many more horrendous and immoral punishments. It's an unlawful method of punishing …show more content…
The first punishment of execution was the use of hanging by the British, as the time had went by they had started to adopt other methods of execution to extreme extent of beheading, boiling which was an very inhumane way to die for anyone, Kant would argue, that taking in consideration the right of humans and knowing that we are all human and share the same pain, so putting yourself through their share you would not think about doing it again. It shows the extreme anguishing pain and unimaginable punishment. And it was a harsh way for anyone to die. It goes to show how Britain had introduced death Penalty to the United States. The death penalty, better known as capital was first introduced to the United States prior The Declaration of Independence. Which was then discovered in 33 colonies of America, however up until today we can see a progressively increase in numbers. In the 19 century Harold, stated that not everyone was accepting with idea of death Penalty and now in the twentieth first century was can see the increase of people who are against the death