Capital Punishment 2
Capital Punishment 2
Capital Punishment 2
Trevor Paul
Mrs. Wines
CCP Composition II
6 March 2020
Why does the death penalty currently exist in the United States? The death penalty has
been a very prominent topic in America today. It has exsisted for many years under the support
of the United States government, but recently things have started to change as well as the out
look of many American citizens on the death penalty. Many have started to question its current
existence under the American constitution and if it should be allowed to stay at all in our society
as it stands today. The death penalty and capital punishment around the world and especially in
the United States does very little to prevent or deter people from commiting crimes across the
nation and therefore should be abolished as it has been in many other democratic nations around
the world. This is not only because it does very little to help with deterring crime, but it is also
inhumane and is unconstitutional and does not belong in a nation as great as the United States.
Constitutionality has been a big topic of debate in the United States for the entirety of its
existence in the world, since 1776. The United States of America was founded on the belief all
men should be free and protected under our constitution. Whenever the bill of rights was added
to the constitution very shortly after it was created it made individuals and states rights clear as
well as stating ground rules for trials and convictions in the new country. The eighth amendment
to our constitution as part of the bill of rights states that no excessive fines, bail, or cruel and
unusual punishments be inflicted. It is this line the brings in the consitutionality of the death
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penalty for many Americans. “More recently, Justice Stevens likewise concluded that the death
penalty was no longer constitutionally viable” (Steiker 353). This is a quote showing Justice
John Paul Stevens of the supreme court issueing that the death penalty is no holds its
constitutionality and is therefore unconstitutional for the United States government to carry out
unto its citizens. The death penalty violates the eighth amendment of the United States
consitution as it is a cruel and unusual punishment being carried out against its citizens. This
should not be tolerated in a government which holds itself to be so close to the constitution and
The death penalty, even in its current for today, is an inhumane punishment to carry out
onto the citizens of a country as great as the United States of America. For a country that
considers itself to be the greatest in the world and ahead of the game in just about everything, it
is striking to believe that something so ancient and inhumane as capital punishment still exists in
American society today. Looking around the world, it is evident that in most western countries
the United States would like to exist alongside and be associated with have already outlawed and
banned the death penalty in their boarders for this exact reason as well as more authoritarian
countries like China and Russia have always had the death penalty and their numbers are higher
than anywhere else in the world. In the book, An eye for an eye: The immorality of punishing by
death by Stephen Nathanson, he states that, ¨. . . it seems obvious that it is inherently barbaric.
The deliberate killing of a living human being in the most calculating manner, even after that
person has ceased to be a threat to society at large, appears to be ghastly and inhuman”
(Nathanson 97). It this idea of killing someone in a calculated way that makes the death penalty
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so barbaric, like burning someone at the stake. Yet another reason and another way that capital
Capital punishment and the death penalty in the United States of America does nothing to
deter crime and potential commiters of such crimes in our country. In the US, capital punishment
is little more than just another topic to debate about in Washington. For many Americans, it
affects their lives very little but for many, many others, it can destroy their life if they or a loved
one is caughted in its sights. It often does nothing but show a government's power, this shown
many times overseas when in authoritarian countries like china will execute their leaders
political opponents for minor crimes. That is almost the same idea as what is often being used in
the States, executing people to show political power from the government. It does very little to
stop any future similar crimes from happening but does indeed show the government's power
over its citizens. “The effective Coeficienty of E, however, takes on a perverse sign and is not
significantly different than zero: no capital punishment deterent is in evidence”( Passell 69). This
was written in the article, “The Deterrent Effect of the Death Penalty: A Statistical Test.” by
Peter Passell. In the article he goes over the different effects of the death penalty and what it does
to crime in the United States, In this one sentence, he shows that there is no evidence that the
death penalty does anything to deter crime in the United States of America.
Those opposing this argument often say things and use evidence that says that the death
penalty does infact help to lower crime rates and brings down the number of violent crimes in an
area when it is employed. In the book, “The Death Penalty: What’s Keeping it Alive” by Andrea
Lyon, she states that the United States government will seek the death penalty for one of the men
involved in the boston bombing a few years ago, she then goes on to say that many of those
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involved in the prosecution state that they are seeking it in the hopes that it will deter others in
the future (Lyon 26). This is the main reason that many look to the death penalty and keep it
going in the United States, in order to deter others from commiting the same crime. However, it
doesn’t matter how much you believe that it will prevent crime, the facts stay the same. That
there is no evidence to support that capital punishment does anything to deter crimes and prevent
violent actions in the future (Passell 69). It is for this reason and many others that the death
In the future, it would be hopeful to say that the United States would look passed the
death penalty and rejoice in the fact that it is no more. Capital punishment in the United States
should not exist much longer, it should not be able to go one to change and affect anyone’s life
any further. Capital punishment, as it is enforced in the United States not only does not help to
stop or prevent further crime, it is inhumane to those who must live through it or have a loved
one that does so, but it is borderline unconstitutional and should not be tolerated in the United
Sources Cited
Lyon, Andrea D. “The Failure and Fate of Capital Punishment.” The Death Penalty: What's
Nathanson, Stephen. An eye for an eye: The immorality of punishing by death. Rowman &
Littlefield, 2001.
Passell, Peter. “The Deterrent Effect of the Death Penalty: A Statistical Test.” Stanford Law
Steiker, Jordan M. "The American death penalty: constitutional regulation as the distinctive