Many view the point of those who say that a murderer deserves to die; surely, one may state that Timothy McVeigh deserves this punishment, since he has murdered thousands of people with a single explosion. It is understandable that those devastated families all want retribution; understandably the pain they will perpetually be going through is a point that is clearly understandable. During the two-year …show more content…
Some may even see murderers as people with a cobalt deficiency, because studies have shown that violent behavior, including murder, may indeed be linked to a cobalt insufficiency. Personally, this cobalt inadequacy may just be what is causing this intolerable behavior. Indeed, this may be a cause of the behavior, but that does not excuse it. Additional testimony against the ethics of the death penalty is demonstrated in, “What Have We Learned from Oklahoma’s Lethal Injection Debacle?” which reveals that Oklahoma once used midazolam (an antidepressant) as the first out of the succession of three drugs used in lethal injection. However, some things do not cause anesthesia, which could result in a substandard death penalty. The drug midazolam was never meant to be an anesthetic; it is an