The Death Penalty
Kim du Toit
February 26, 2003
11:21 AM CDT
I have often been asked to justify my support for the death penalty, so without further ado, here are the reasons (in no particular order):
- Vengeance—retribution is a perfectly acceptable social construct, especially for victims’ families/friends;
- Dispassion—dangerous vermin need to be exterminated;
- Economy—why should tax money support these vermin (accommodation, medical care etc) for the rest of their lives?
- Logic—when you knowingly step so far outside the norms of society, you should not expect civilized treatment in return;
- Deterrence—if you’re frightened off committing murder by the possibility of extreme retribution, fine; if you’re not, so much the better that we kill you;
- Prevention—no executed murderer has ever killed anyone else; but imprisoned murderers later released for “good behavior” etc. often have.
My only question is why these are not obvious to everyone. What bothers me most is the degree of rationalization needed to deny them.
