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SOURCE: http://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2015/12/some_reading_for_conservatives_who_oppose_the_death_penalty.html
December 5,
2015
Some Reading for Conservatives Who Oppose the Death Penalty
In recent
years, opponents of capital punishment have leveled key criticisms against
conservatives, claiming major hypocrisy in their continued approval of
society's most serious criminal sanction. One claim is that
conservative support for the death penalty violates the most central tenet of
conservatism – that of limited government. How can conservatives,
they ask, in their suspicion of and disdain for large, powerful government,
advocate use of the greatest governmental power of all, the taking of
life? Contradiction – indeed, hypocrisy – is said to exist.
This charge
is faulty, even bogus. Unfortunately, this and other equally faulty
charges have resonated with certain members of the conservative movement, among
them state and federal lawmakers.
Why is the
above claim so faulty, in fact lacking of substance? The answer lies
in the fact that conservatives are not anarchists. Yes,
conservatives do believe in very limited size and power of
government. However, that does not mean they abandon the most basic
functions of government, chief among them protection of the people through
military and police powers. Or a court and penal system to further
provide safety and administer justice.
Does the
death penalty bring about justice? To many citizens, the answer is
yes, absolutely. When someone takes the life of another or several
others in a wanton, cruel, and malicious way, nothing less than the forfeiture
of the killer's life brings justice. Life for a life (or many lives)
taken.
Does the
death penalty bring about safety? Yes, for sure. Executed
killers will never claim new victims. They are completely
incapacitated, something life without parole cannot guarantee. And
executions, beyond a doubt, deter others from committing murder. How
many depends on a variety of circumstances, but to claim there is no (zero)
deterrence brought about via execution of the guilty is completely
absurd. As death penalty expert Dudley Sharp points out, levels may
vary depending on the severity of sanction, but there is absolutely no such
thing as a negative sanction having zero deterrence. Numerous
peer-reviewed studies at major universities showing that the death penalty
deters back Sharp.
Capital
punishment, then, helps to fulfill the most basic of government functions: protecting
the public and furthering justice. This fact renders "big
government" arguments against it rather empty.
Another
claim leveled at conservatives in their so-called contradictory support for
capital punishment is that the death penalty is fiscally
unsound. Everyone knows that conservatives rail against government
deficits and debt brought about by too much government
spending. Conservatives want the fiscal ship of government to be in
order. Opponents, then, point out the huge financial costs associated
with the death penalty. Death sentences for murder are way more
costly than life imprisonment, they say. These death penalty
opponents are largely correct. Capital trials are more expensive
than non-capital trials. Years and years of appeals are also quite
costly.
That
capital trials are more expensive is a fact of life, given what is at
stake. The answer to the larger argument, however, is a resounding
"So what?" Defenders of the death penalty often correctly
reply that you can't put a price on justice or the life of the
victim. And the cost argument is rendered moot by offsetting the
larger costs of capital trials with a reduction and streamlining of
appeals. So many appeals are nothing more than frivolous stall tactics,
which need to be eliminated. They are "dilatory," as one
federal judge put it. As for other challenges, reasonable timetables
(deadlines) need to be established for defense lawyer filings and judicial
hearings/rulings. If these commonsense reforms were put in place to
counter delay efforts and foot-dragging by defense lawyers and (quite often)
sympathetic judges within the judiciary, serious cost reductions would occur,
rendering the "death penalty is fiscally unsound" argument
meritless. But in a main way it is already meritless in that many of
the very people claiming exorbitant costs are those largely responsible for
them.
Opponents
of capital punishment inside and outside government, through various methods
formal and informal, purposely drive up expenses, then disingenuously claim the
death penalty unworthy due to its tremendous costs. A
"broken" system is said to be at hand. This is tantamount
to a person placing a large boulder between the rails on the tracks in front of
an oncoming locomotive, then blaming the railroad company for the train's
derailment and wreck. Opponents of capital punishment know that
the system would obviously work much better if it weren't for their
intransigence and if various commonsensical reforms were put
in place. But would they ever support implementation of such
reforms? Hell, no! This is what makes their
"exorbitant" argument so hollow, not to mention phony.
Finally,
members of the anti-death penalty crowd say conservative supporters of capital
punishment are at odds with their pro-life stance in opposing
abortion. It doesn't seem to occur to death penalty opponents that
there is a tremendous moral difference between the two
issues. Abortion takes a completely innocent life. Fetuses have
committed no crimes. Capital punishment takes the lives of those who
are guilty of the most horrific actions known to humankind. Opposing
abortion does not require one to oppose capital punishment. There is
no contradiction whatsoever. Conservatives who have bought into the
idea that support for capital punishment violates the pro-life position due to
a lack of consistency on life have not made, or are incapable of making, a very
serious moral distinction.
In fact, a
strong argument exists that execution of those guilty of murder is very pro-life. How
so? As mentioned, executed killers will never again take innocent
lives. Also, many would-be killers are deterred from murdering by the
prospect of their own lives being taken for such actions. Cleary,
the death penalty doesn't deter some from committing murder, but it does stop
others. Support for the death penalty – because it without a doubt
saves innocent lives – is a very pro-life stance to take.
One might
also believe that a killer's not suffering the ultimate punishment (death) for
committing the ultimate crime (murder) devalues the life of the
victim. Execution asserts that an innocent child's life is/was so
precious that nothing less than death should occur for the
perpetrator. A child-killer's execution makes a very profound pro-life
and sanctity of life statement.
Conservatives
jumping on the anti-death penalty bandwagon in recent years need to rethink
their position. They have been manipulated – duped by the seemingly
sound and logical statements of death penalty opponents. Deeper
reflection demonstrates these claims to be very shallow and without merit.
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