singular_me
21st March 2015, 03:50 AM
On top of that lets not forget the psychopathic madness of democide, big pharma, banking cartel, etc... anyone supporting death penalty at this stage may need to spend some time in the amazonia and investigate some altered state of consciousness.
Interestingly and more rationally, now we have a collectivist website praising the Libertarian founding fathers... both sides of the spectrum when pushed too far mean same (Duality Principles as a Natural Law), also explaining why polarization of thoughts led the entire planet on the edge of the abyss. The more decentralization the better for society as a whole, and the paramount is voluntaryism. One has to wonder how this very knowledge was already available 4000+ years ago and allowed the masonic-zionist take over.... duality another new age crap ??? No at all, it is about sciences and understanding why the human brain strictly follows the Natural Laws Of Electromagnetism
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According to a 1990 study, the total cost to build a maximum-security prison cell is $63,000, which breaks down to approximately $5,000 a year in principal and interest. The annual cost to maintain an inmate in this cell is approximately $20,000 a year. Together, these costs mean an annual expenditure of $25,000 to incarcerate an inmate. Based on a sentence term of 40 to 45 years, one inmate would cost the taxpayer only slightly more than $1 million—less than a third of what it would take to pay for the process that culminates in execution. A twenty-five-year-old woman convicted of first-degree murder would need to serve a life term to the age of 145 before the costs of incarcerating her would surpass those of executing her.
Read more: Capital Punishment - The Costs Of Capital Punishment - Death, Appeals, Row, and Execution
http://law.jrank.org/pages/5002/Capital-Punishment-COSTS-CAPITAL-PUNISHMENT.html#ixzz3V0zheeAn
http://www.davidicke.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/get-attachment-2811-587x431.jpg
Capital punishment and the brutality of class rule in America
20 March 2015
The latest abomination in a US death chamber took place on Tuesday night in Missouri when Cecil Clayton, 74, was injected and killed with a single dose of pentobarbital. The condemned inmate was executed despite overwhelming evidence of his intellectual disability.
In 1972, Clayton was working in a lumberyard when a piece of wood broke off the sawmill and struck him in the head. Surgeons were forced to excise a fifth of his frontal lobe—the area of the brain that controls judgment, inhibition and impulsive behavior—to remove shards of bone that had pierced deep into his brain.
The accident had a shattering impact on Clayton’s life. The former devoted husband and father developed severe memory loss and began to suffer from hallucinations and paranoia.
A quarter century later, Clayton was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of a Missouri sheriff’s deputy. He remained on death row for nearly two decades as his appeals worked through the legal system. Numerous psychiatric exams revealed that the condemned prisoner had diminished intellectual capacity, social functioning deficits and dementia.............
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/03/20/pers-m20.html
What Did The Founding Fathers Think Of The Death Penalty?
4:52 PM 12/01/2014
.............. Early American leaders were enamored by Beccaria’s philosophy, and many strictly adhered to it. President James Madison, the author of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights opposed the death penalty and stated, “I should not regret a fair and full trial of the entire abolition of capital punishments by any State willing to make it.” Benjamin Franklin, who similarly wasn’t a fan of the death penalty, said, “It is better 100 guilty Persons should escape than that one innocent person should suffer.”
Founding father and Declaration of Independence signatory, Dr. Benjamin Rush, who was also vocal in his opposition to capital punishment, stated, “The Supreme Being alone possesses a power to take away human life, and that we rebel against his laws whenever we undertake to execute death in any way whatever upon any of his creatures.” Marquis de Lafayette, a key figure in the American revolution, also viewed capital punishment with disdain and exclaimed, “I shall ask for the abolition of the Penalty of Death until I have the infallibility of human judgment demonstrated to me.”
George Washington was likely well-versed in Beccaria’s philosophies as well, and, as a general, Washington even pleaded with congress to limit capital crimes on multiple occasions. Even though Washington begrudgingly signed death warrants in his day, he said, “We should not introduce Capital executions too frequently.”
He was known for pardoning the guilty and granting clemency as a general and even into his presidency. Thomas Jefferson, who was known for frugality and limited government early in his political career, drafted legislation to limit executions at the state level in Virginia. He even remarked that the notion of “eye for an eye” was a “revolting principle.”
The lack of viable alternatives to the death penalty in early American history likely sparked some of the ambivalent support for capital punishment from certain founders. State and federal prisons capable of indefinitely housing inmates were practically nonexistent at the founding of the United States. The very first American penitentiary did not open until after the Constitution was ratified. Therefore, some founders believed that capital punishment was necessary because an infrastructure to support life-without-parole didn’t yet exist in America. Today, state and federal prisons are ubiquitous and life without the possibility of release is not only a viable option but also a cheaper alternative.
http://dailycaller.com/2014/12/01/what-did-the-founding-fathers-think-of-the-death-penalty/
Interestingly and more rationally, now we have a collectivist website praising the Libertarian founding fathers... both sides of the spectrum when pushed too far mean same (Duality Principles as a Natural Law), also explaining why polarization of thoughts led the entire planet on the edge of the abyss. The more decentralization the better for society as a whole, and the paramount is voluntaryism. One has to wonder how this very knowledge was already available 4000+ years ago and allowed the masonic-zionist take over.... duality another new age crap ??? No at all, it is about sciences and understanding why the human brain strictly follows the Natural Laws Of Electromagnetism
-----------------------------
According to a 1990 study, the total cost to build a maximum-security prison cell is $63,000, which breaks down to approximately $5,000 a year in principal and interest. The annual cost to maintain an inmate in this cell is approximately $20,000 a year. Together, these costs mean an annual expenditure of $25,000 to incarcerate an inmate. Based on a sentence term of 40 to 45 years, one inmate would cost the taxpayer only slightly more than $1 million—less than a third of what it would take to pay for the process that culminates in execution. A twenty-five-year-old woman convicted of first-degree murder would need to serve a life term to the age of 145 before the costs of incarcerating her would surpass those of executing her.
Read more: Capital Punishment - The Costs Of Capital Punishment - Death, Appeals, Row, and Execution
http://law.jrank.org/pages/5002/Capital-Punishment-COSTS-CAPITAL-PUNISHMENT.html#ixzz3V0zheeAn
http://www.davidicke.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/get-attachment-2811-587x431.jpg
Capital punishment and the brutality of class rule in America
20 March 2015
The latest abomination in a US death chamber took place on Tuesday night in Missouri when Cecil Clayton, 74, was injected and killed with a single dose of pentobarbital. The condemned inmate was executed despite overwhelming evidence of his intellectual disability.
In 1972, Clayton was working in a lumberyard when a piece of wood broke off the sawmill and struck him in the head. Surgeons were forced to excise a fifth of his frontal lobe—the area of the brain that controls judgment, inhibition and impulsive behavior—to remove shards of bone that had pierced deep into his brain.
The accident had a shattering impact on Clayton’s life. The former devoted husband and father developed severe memory loss and began to suffer from hallucinations and paranoia.
A quarter century later, Clayton was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1996 murder of a Missouri sheriff’s deputy. He remained on death row for nearly two decades as his appeals worked through the legal system. Numerous psychiatric exams revealed that the condemned prisoner had diminished intellectual capacity, social functioning deficits and dementia.............
http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/03/20/pers-m20.html
What Did The Founding Fathers Think Of The Death Penalty?
4:52 PM 12/01/2014
.............. Early American leaders were enamored by Beccaria’s philosophy, and many strictly adhered to it. President James Madison, the author of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights opposed the death penalty and stated, “I should not regret a fair and full trial of the entire abolition of capital punishments by any State willing to make it.” Benjamin Franklin, who similarly wasn’t a fan of the death penalty, said, “It is better 100 guilty Persons should escape than that one innocent person should suffer.”
Founding father and Declaration of Independence signatory, Dr. Benjamin Rush, who was also vocal in his opposition to capital punishment, stated, “The Supreme Being alone possesses a power to take away human life, and that we rebel against his laws whenever we undertake to execute death in any way whatever upon any of his creatures.” Marquis de Lafayette, a key figure in the American revolution, also viewed capital punishment with disdain and exclaimed, “I shall ask for the abolition of the Penalty of Death until I have the infallibility of human judgment demonstrated to me.”
George Washington was likely well-versed in Beccaria’s philosophies as well, and, as a general, Washington even pleaded with congress to limit capital crimes on multiple occasions. Even though Washington begrudgingly signed death warrants in his day, he said, “We should not introduce Capital executions too frequently.”
He was known for pardoning the guilty and granting clemency as a general and even into his presidency. Thomas Jefferson, who was known for frugality and limited government early in his political career, drafted legislation to limit executions at the state level in Virginia. He even remarked that the notion of “eye for an eye” was a “revolting principle.”
The lack of viable alternatives to the death penalty in early American history likely sparked some of the ambivalent support for capital punishment from certain founders. State and federal prisons capable of indefinitely housing inmates were practically nonexistent at the founding of the United States. The very first American penitentiary did not open until after the Constitution was ratified. Therefore, some founders believed that capital punishment was necessary because an infrastructure to support life-without-parole didn’t yet exist in America. Today, state and federal prisons are ubiquitous and life without the possibility of release is not only a viable option but also a cheaper alternative.
http://dailycaller.com/2014/12/01/what-did-the-founding-fathers-think-of-the-death-penalty/