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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
7 pages in length. The issue of capital punishment is, perhaps, one of the most hotly contested of all contemporary controversial issues; while some believe that one who kills should pay his debt to society with his own life, others contend that two wrongs -- in the case of executing a murderer -- do not make a right. The writer offers both sides of the debate, as well as illustrates how supporters are now outweighing opponents in the twenty-first century. Bibliography lists 13 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCDethP.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
pay his debt to society with his own life, others contend that two wrongs -- in the case of executing a murderer -- do not make a right. In
centuries gone by, capital punishment was not only utilized as a painful means of death but also a way of demonstrating ones mistakes in front of the community. It
was a grand way in which the guilty paid for their crimes by forfeiting their lives and were forcibly inflicted with extreme humiliation while they suffered imminent death. The
presumption was that those who witnessed such an act of barbaric magnitude would refrain from committing any such crimes themselves. Examining the purpose of capital punishment, it can readily
be argued that its origins held a triple purpose: to kill the convicted by means of torturous measures; to maintain order within the community by way of overwhelming intimidation; and
to provide entertainment for the cheering public masses, as was such in the time of Caligula. Today, the high cost of housing prisoners
and pressure to reduce the number of inmates is causing states to consider other options as a means by which to thin the overpopulation. For a prisoner over the
age of fifty-five years old, the upkeep can be as high as sixty thousand dollars per year because of their greater medical needs. A recent survey by the Rand
Corp. has found that longer jail terms cannot effectively curb drug usage and drug-related crimes and that harsh prison terms actually cost taxpayers more money. The United States has
the worlds highest incarceration rate because of federal minimum sentencing requirements mandated by law in the 1980s, which has resulted in exploding state correctional prison budgets and a national inmate
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