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t\'s Workshop a Thes, + https://ilearnlaced.edu/courses/59985/assignments/829109

ID: 3503526 • Letter: T

Question

t's Workshop a Thes, + https://ilearnlaced.edu/courses/59985/assignments/829109 First off, choose one of the prompts below (or come up with your own sample prompt/question and write it above your responses): What is the solution to solving America's overwhelming problem of gun violence? Should the United States continue to rely on the punishment of death for heinous and extreme crimes? Is utilizing the right to vote important for individuals? Why or why not? Should colleges and universities ban the requirement of purchasing tyxtbooks and move to no-cost curricula? Once you have chosen a prompt to work with, think about your response to the question it poses. Where do you stand? Perhaps jot down a few of your initial ideas and then move on to the following questions: 1. Write out your thesis statement. Make sure that your thesis is clear, concise, and most important, an arguable claim on the topic

Explanation / Answer

Answer.

Should the United States continue to use punishment of death against extreme and heinous crimes?

The idea of capital punishment as a proportionate and necessary form of justice for crimes done is an age old concept which has informed the practice of law enforcement across the states. It is my contestation that capital punishment though a common practice is perhaps an anachronistic concept which has lost its effectiveness in the present age.

On the other hand, criticsmay argue that a true punishment is proportionate to the amount of harm caused by a crime, The fact that capital punishment justifies the use of violence against the perpetrator as a retributive form of justice does not mean that it reduces the prevalence of violence in society altogether. Instead, it in fact reinstates the use of violence as the state authorities themselves use violence in the form of punishment to treat other human beings ( here the prisoners).

Therefore, In order to morally justify inflicting suffering on a human being, we  must instead have a forward-looking purpose such as the goal of protecting the innocent from harm. From such a perspective,we would be better able to respond to the ethical challenge of capital punishment and see the merit in the argument that the point of punishment is not retribution, but rather deterrence.