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just society requires the death penalty for the taking of a life. |
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When someone takes a life, the balance of justice
is disturbed. Unless that balance is restored, society succumbs to a rule
of violence. Only the taking of the murderer's life restores the balance
and allows society to show convincingly that murder is an intolerable crime
which will be punished in kind.
Retribution has its basis in religious values,
which have historically maintained that it is proper to take an "eye for
an eye" and a life for a life.
Although the victim and the victim's family
cannot be restored to the status which preceded the murder, at least an
execution brings closure to the murderer's crime (and closure to the ordeal
for the victim's family) and ensures that the murderer will create no
more victims.
For the most cruel and heinous crimes, the
ones for which the death penalty is applied, offenders deserve the worst
punishment under our system of law, and that is the death penalty. Any
lesser punishment would undermine the value society places on protecting
lives.
Robert Macy, District Attorney of Oklahoma
City, described his concept of the need for retribution in one case: "In
1991, a young mother was rendered helpless and made to watch as her baby
was executed. The mother was then mutilated and killed. The killer should
not lie in some prison with three meals a day, clean sheets, cable TV,
family visits and endless appeals. For justice to prevail, some killers
just need to die."
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