justice stevens disavows the death penalty
Posted on April 17, 2008 | Filed Under death penalty
In an opinion released on Wednesday, United States Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens wrote:
I have relied on my own experience in reaching the conclusion that the imposition of the death penalty represents “the pointless and needless extinction of life with only marginal contributions to any discernible social or public purposes. A penalty with such negligible returns to the state (is) patently excessive and cruel and unusual punishment violative of the Eighth Amendment.”
Absolutely right …
It is difficult for me to discern even a “marginal” contribution to the public good. What does the death penalty accomplish, except to satisfy an unholy …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
a prayer for good friday
Posted on April 6, 2007 | Filed Under death penalty, justice, spirituality
Lord Jesus, forgive us for all the ways we deny you …
… by remaining quiet in the shadows, not daring to speak our faith in the public arena
… by quietly going about our own business, while neglecting to wonder what your business might be
… by being more American than Christian, more the children of our culture than the children of God
… by adopting a lifestyle and a system of values that are indistinguishable from the rest of the world, pursuing wealth instead of justice, accumulating things instead of sharing generously, protecting ourselves whatever the cost instead of showing mercy whatever …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
renewed debate about lethal injection
Posted on December 19, 2006 | Filed Under death penalty
From an article by Oren Dorell and Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY:
The questions over lethal injection that have led executions to be halted in Florida and California are likely to curb the use of the death penalty across the USA, according to analysts who support capital punishment and others who oppose it.
However, it’s unclear whether the increasing focus on whether lethal injection is unconstitutionally painful represents a significant and lasting turn against the death penalty or a temporary slowdown in executions that will end once procedures for injections are improved.
“I think we’re headed towards fewer executions,” says Deborah Denno, …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
wise words from amnesty international on the saddam verdict
Posted on November 6, 2006 | Filed Under death penalty, justice
From Malcolm Smart of Amnesty International:
Every accused has a right to a fair trial, whatever the magnitude of the charge against them. This plain fact was routinely ignored through the decades of Saddam Hussein’s tyranny. His overthrow opened the opportunity to restore this basic right and, at the same time, to ensure, fairly, accountability for the crimes of the past. It is an opportunity missed and made worse by the imposition of the death penalty.
Read the rest of the Amnesty International commentary on the Saddam trial.
Tony Blair also acknowledged Britain’s opposition to the death sentence: We are against …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | 1 Comment
a sick and perverted spectacle
Posted on December 13, 2005 | Filed Under death penalty, justice
A sick and perverted spectacle …
Those are the words Stanley Tookie Williams used to characterize his impending execution. Williams was executed early this morning, after appeals for a stay of execution were denied by the California Supreme Court, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the United States Supreme Court, and after a plea for clemency was rejected by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
It was a sick and perverted spectacle …
… not because an innocent man was put to death. It is entirely possible that Williams did not commit the murders for which he was convicted; he always maintained his innocence. …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
a shameful milestone
Posted on December 2, 2005 | Filed Under death penalty, justice
The execution by lethal injection of Kenneth Lee Boyd in North Carolina marked the 1000th execution in the United States since the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976. A report by Amnesty International reveals that in 2004, the United States executed more human beings than any other nation with the exception of China, Iran, and Vietnam. For more on today’s execution and the reaction to it, click on the following link:
World News Article | Reuters.co.uk
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
why the death penalty is wrong
Posted on October 28, 2005 | Filed Under death penalty, justice
The death penalty is wrong because it serves no moral or practical purpose.
1) The death penalty is not an effective deterrent. Jeffrey Fagan, Columbia Law School professor, offers this testimony:
Recent studies claiming that executions reduce murders have fueled the revival of deterrence as a rationale to expand the use of capital punishment. Such strong claims are not unusual in either the social or natural sciences, but like nearly all claims of strong causal effects from any social or legal intervention, the claims of a “new deterrence” fall apart under close scrutiny. These new studies are fraught with technical …
About this Post
Permalink | Trackback |
|
Print This Article | Leave a Comment
