We, the comrades of Unit 1012, are truly well aware that once the death
penalty is abolished, the ACLU Demons will want to end LWOP.
We, the comrades of
Unit 1012: The VFFDP, DO NOT TRUST them at all and we know that they
are nothing but liars who value the lives of murderers and evildoers, with the
plan on putting innocent people’s lives at risk of getting murdered. These
Anti-Death Penalty Activists are all the ACLU
Demons.
INTERNET
SOURCE: http://www.sfexaminer.com/death-penalty-name/
A death penalty
by any other name
By Kenneth E. Hartman on October 19, 2016
1:00 am
Proposition
62, the “Justice That Works
Act,” claims to end the death penalty in California.
But if it is voted in, it will result in the death of thousands of prisoners.
In this case, a death penalty by another name will kill no less effectively, no
less cruelly.
Life without
the possibility of parole, particularly after the passage of this ballot
initiative, will mean exactly what it says. Or as the author of the proposition
prosaically framed it: “They grow old in prison and
they die in prison.” Death is the expected outcome of the penalty; the
death penalty in other words.
There’s more
to Prop. 62 that should warrant caution. The language calls for all of us so
sentenced, while we’re awaiting our old age and eventual deaths, to be housed
in “high-security” prisons. In this state, home to the largest prison system
ever found by the U.S. Supreme Court to be violating the cruel and unusual
punishments clause of the Constitution, on an industrial scale, that means a
lifetime of suffering and deprivation. It also means a virtual blank check
being handed over to prison bureaucrats to exact whatever kind of brutality
they see fit.
The language
of the initiative elevates the expansions of the widely derided “felony murder
rule” to the almost unchangeable level of constitutional, voter-approved law.
Under the felony murder rule, in a case where the police shoot and kill a
suspect, any accomplices, even a driver, can be charged with first-degree
murder. There are hundreds, if not thousands, of prisoners serving life without
the possibility of parole sentences due to the many contortions of this legal
precept.
In case
anyone has forgotten, these same arguments were made four years ago, and they
failed. The difference this time is added provisions to increase the harshness
of the sentence and an even more direct appeal to revenge sentencing. The
conclusion of the professional death penalty abolitionists appears to be the
only way to rid our state of the stain of capital punishment is to hand the
voters a pile of stones to throw at prisoners.
The rest of
the industrialized, democratic countries long ago abandoned capital punishment
as a violation of basic human rights. They did it by outlawing the death
penalty, plain and simple. There was no ugly trade-off. For some reason I can’t
quite fathom, our professional death penalty abolitionists settled on an
appeasement strategy instead.
Within just
the last few years, the European
Court of Human Rights ruled that life without the possibility of parole
sentences are a violation of human rights and banned them. The interesting
thing is out of a continent of roughly 500 million people there turned out to
be about 100 prisoners sentenced to the other death penalty. There are more
than that in the building I’m assigned to; in California there are close to
5,000, in the U.S., 50,000. And even without these terrible punishments,
somehow the Europeans manage to have a far lower murder rate.
Pope
Francis, in an address to the International
Association of Penal Law in 2014, referred to long life sentences as
“hidden death sentences.”
The Campaign
to End the Death Penalty does not support Prop. 62, and Human
Rights Watch, one of the world’s premier civil rights organizations and
committed abolitionists, does not support it either. These are the kind of
telling details that should raise everyone’s mental radar.
If Prop. 62
passes, I’m sure the backers will congratulate themselves for ending the death
penalty in California. No doubt Mike
Farrell, author and prime sponsor, will be given some kind of humanitarian
award from his limousine-lefty pals.
The truth on
the ground, inside the broken, violent, dysfunctional high-security prisons
will be quite a different story. Almost 6,000 men and women will be forced into
worse conditions, with severely restricted appeal rights, to grow old and die
miserable deaths in prison.
I’ve now
served almost 37 years for killing a man in a drunken fistfight when I was 19
years old. I was guilty, and I deserved punishment. I’ve worked hard to become
better than my worst moment, and punished I most certainly have been. Anywhere
else on this planet, I’d be out of prison by now. But here in California, in
our enlightened, advanced state, self-appointed celebrity leaders of civil
rights groups want my punishment just getting started. That’s no way to end the
death penalty.
If I could,
I’d vote no on Prop. 62.
Kenneth
E. Hartman is the founder and executive director of The Other
Death Penalty Project, a nonprofit organization of prisoners dedicated to
ending all forms of the death penalty, including life without the possibility
of parole. He can be contacted, indirectly, at kennethehartman@hotmail.com.
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