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Death Penalty


How can we trust the murderers and thieves of our country to a judicial system that will either let them out in ten years or have us take care of them for twenty years, and then let them go? The criminals do not fear the punishment anymore, because they know they will not die." "It costs $1.6 million to treat 500 inmates per year. That $1.6 million of tax payers"money. These annual taxes that are being paid, are believed to go against tax payers" constitutional laws".
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             In contrast to this argument though, we have Cynthia Gomez from the Inter-American University who states: "No human being has the privileged power of deciding who lives and who dies. No human being can apply the Death Penalty. For one reason, the death penalty is a wrong measurement of punishment. Let's say there is a trial and a person is found guilty of committing a crime such as rape. This person is sentenced the death penalty. Five years after that person was found not guilty. Our first victim was innocent and suffered the fatality of humans" mistakes. People-making errors is perfectly normal because it is part of our nature. As it is like this, how can we hold the responsibility of murdering someone just because of humans" natural characteristic of making mistakes?" .
             And she makes a good point: Who are we to say who gets to live and who gets to die? It is wrong for human beings to "play God". No human being has the privileged power of deciding who lives and who dies. No human being should apply the Death Penalty for the pure sake of the moral issues involved; especially since, due to the fact that we, as nature intended us to be, can make mistakes. Some of these mistakes can prove costly. In a follow-up to a study released in 2000 by Colombia University scholars Florida emerges as one of the states with the highest error rates in death sentencing. In "A Broken System, Part II," the authors of the two reports, which earlier found that an astounding 74% of Florida death sentences are overturned due to constitutional errors, the authors spell out why they think such high error rates occur.


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