Submitted by Slavic_Dusa t3_zlhael in UpliftingNews
j_sholmes t1_j06s92f wrote
Reply to comment by TotalProfessional391 in Oregon governor commutes all 17 of state's death sentences by Slavic_Dusa
Couldn't you logically apply this to any punishment though?
CdrJamesCool t1_j06ue8a wrote
You can, yes. However, if an innocent person has been put to death, that’s it. They’re dead.
j_sholmes t1_j0bidfc wrote
Yes, but we all know that the sentence isn't carried out a week from now...the process takes decades in most cases.
How many people have lived their entire lives behind bars...why aren't we talking about that as well?
TotalProfessional391 t1_j06vc3j wrote
Sure but none are as severe or irreversible as killing someone.
There are a number of other reasons the death penalty is a poor and a antiquated system:
It costs taxpayers up to 50% more (than a life sentence) to convict a death penalty case and to run the system.
Many states find it hard to source reliable drugs to administer the deaths, since manufacturers increasingly refuse to be associated with state-sponsored murder. This can lead to botched executions and longer stays on death row, again taxing the system.
While there are many cases in which a murderer may not seem fit to rehabilitate, there are many cases in which they could. Like in the case if Kwame that I posted, even if he had been guilty he was 16 and grew up in a neighbourhood where children are prone to gang violence. It could be argued that the money spent to maintain death row could rather be spent on inner city programming to help prevent violence in the first place.
But if you’re someone who’s loved one was murdered none of these will matter. That’s why we need to come to these decisions as a society and not as the individual.
None of this is as compelling a case for abolishment in my eyes than the fact that innocent people are on death row.
Over 300 people have been exonerated from death row. That’s a fucking genocide.
Edit: I forgot to mention that there are no federal or state reintegration programmes for exonerated people. I guess because they means the gov would have to admit that they get the death sentence wrong.
So if you’ve spent 30 years on death row only to be proven innocent, you’re thrown out on the streets with not so much as even bus money to go.. where?
The US is so fucked.
Disclaimer: I’m Canadian.
[deleted] t1_j06vcjn wrote
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