Capital punishment in the US
The death penalty is a concept that involves beheading people, hanging, shooting, and lethal injection if found guilty of breaching the law, especially committing crimes such as treason. States have not agreed on a common good to accept or deny the death penalty since it discusses even the religious practices. The US civil liberties are an example of states that defies the context of receiving the death penalty. The federal law prohibits killing human beings, which is also referred to as capital punishment but instead advocates for life imprisonment.
Capital punishment in the US opposed to the premise that it is applied unfairly and unjustly contrary to crime level. The people of color exposed to capital punishment than the white people on the assumption that white people have a high level of income to control court proceedings than blacks. Capital punishment criticized for the actions of wasting the taxpayer’s money. Significant discussions in the criminal justice system hold that the death penalty does not effectively deter violent crimes. Therefore, for the US increasing employment rates and reducing drug abuse is the best way to minimize the death penalty’s effects and prevent the further corruption of violence.
Consequently, the FBI’s research in 2016 revealed that most states that have guaranteed the death penalty have with them the increased crime rates since criminals tend to adjust their actions with the assurance that they won’t survive in whichever way. Death penalties have the effects of exposing innocent people to complete risk and fear over court rulings on the premise that they surrender to be guilty to avoid intimidations or threats from people. Capital punishment is entirely cruel and unusual since murderers can reform through the treatment plan’s effect from the rehabilitation centers. Therefore, killing them is not helping reform but finishing them.