Instigator / Pro
6
1484
rating
1
debates
0.0%
won
Topic
#2872

Should the US have the death penalty?

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Better arguments
0
6
Better sources
2
4
Better legibility
2
2
Better conduct
2
2

After 2 votes and with 8 points ahead, the winner is...

NunYaBusiness
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
2
Time for argument
Two days
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One week
Point system
Multiple criterions
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
14
1516
rating
1
debates
100.0%
won
Description

We'll discuss if the U.S. should have the death penalty. I'll be for the death penalty, while my interlocutor is for the opposition of the death penalty.

Round 1
Pro
#1
This house believes the death penalty should stay in the united states. Every day we put animals down and don't even think twice so why is it that when it comes to people it so different? I believe that the death penalty should stay. One reason is that most people get the death penalty is because they killed other people first. So say a person kills three people. Is it not fair to kill them because they killed three people. But when it comes to family we want them to get it. Why why is it that when a person that is in our family is killed we want them dead. The reason why is because we love our family and we want the best for them. But I still believe that it is not fair that the death penalty should go.
Con
#2
House: Against (Con)
 
This house believes that we should NOT have the death penalty.

Morality:

“As superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary, I planned and carried out that state’s only two executions in the last 54 years I used to support the death penalty. I don’t anymore… I was charged with executing two inmates on the penitentiary’’ death row, Douglas Franklin Wright and Harry Charles Moore… Regardless of their crimes, the fact that I was now to be personally involved in their executions forced me into a deeper reckoning with my feelings about capital punishment. After much contemplation, I became convinced that, on a moral level, life was either hallowed or it wasn’t. And I wanted it to be… Since I retired from corrections in 2010, my mission has been to persuade people that capital punishment is a failed policy. America should no longer accept the myth that capital punishment plays any constructive role in our criminal justice system. It will be hard to bring an end to the death penalty, but we will be a healthier society as a result.” 

-Semon Frank Thompson
Former Superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary
“What I Learned from Executing Two Men,”
nytimes.com
Sep. 15, 2016

The For (Pro) house said, "Every day we put animals down and don't even think twice so why is it that when it comes to people it so different... One reason is that most people get the death penalty is because they killed other people first. So say a person kills three people. Is it not fair to kill them because they killed three people."

Is our life value no more than an animal's? Is it morally ethical to take life as punishment for taking another's life? Would it not be more efficient to make the offender dedicate his life to paying back his debt; and if he is prone to killing again then to take the opportunity for physiological research? Are we any better than the man who took another's life? It is morally contradicting. 

Retribution (Constitutionality):

“No one can blame victims and their families for wanting revenge, including through the death penalty. In their pain and loss, they are entitled to that desire. However, laws exist to prevent individuals from pursuing vengeance and their own vision of justice. If they do anyway (if, for example, a victim kills a perpetrator) then they become perpetrators and pay the price, both legally and morally. Although we may feel empathy with such a victim seeking revenge, Nietzsche’s warning—that when fighting monsters you must take care not to become one yourself—should be remembered. Killing by the state is wrong as well, potentially even worse than killing by an individual…"

-Ivan Simonovic, PhD, LLM
Special Adviser to the United Nations Secretary-General on the Responsibility to Protect
“Introduction: An Abolitionist’s Perspective,” in Moving Away from the Death Penalty
ohchr.org
Aug. 31, 2015
  
The For (Pro) house also stated, "But when it comes to family we want them to get it. Why why is it that when a person that is in our family is killed we want them dead. The reason why is because we love our family and we want the best for them. But I still believe that it is not fair that the death penalty should go." 

Not only morally but constitutionally, it is wrong to kill a man as a form of punishment for the family's loss. "No national interest can justify human rights violations such as the death penalty or torture." (-Ivan Simonovic) Is it not hypocritical to lawfully say a family cannot take revenge and then take the man's life as a form of justice? 

Round 2
Pro
#3
Morality:

“As superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary, I planned and carried out that state’s only two executions in the last 54 years I used to support the death penalty. I don’t anymore… I was charged with executing two inmates on the penitentiary’’ death row, Douglas Franklin Wright and Harry Charles Moore… Regardless of their crimes, the fact that I was now to be personally involved in their executions forced me into a deeper reckoning with my feelings about capital punishment. After much contemplation, I became convinced that, on a moral level, life was either hallowed or it wasn’t. And I wanted it to be… Since I retired from corrections in 2010, my mission has been to persuade people that capital punishment is a failed policy. America should no longer accept the myth that capital punishment plays any constructive role in our criminal justice system. It will be hard to bring an end to the death penalty, but we will be a healthier society as a result.” 

-Semon Frank Thompson
Former Superintendent of the Oregon State Penitentiary
“What I Learned From Executing Two Men,”
nytimes.com
Sep. 15, 2016

I disagree why because, because that man had to give the two people the death penalty and had to eject them with poison he decided that it wasn't right. That guy was given two people (that had killed people) the poison that's when he decided that it wasn't right. The two people had killed people so it wasn't like they were good people. I feel like that was not right to say it was no longer right to have the death penalty because he had to give them the poison.

Retribution (Constitutionality):

“No one can blame victims and their families for wanting revenge, including through the death penalty. In their pain and loss, they are entitled to that desire. However, laws exist to prevent individuals from pursuing vengeance and their own vision of justice. If they do anyway (if, for example, a victim kills a perpetrator) then they become perpetrators and pay the price, both legally and morally. Although we may feel empathy with such a victim seeking revenge, Nietzsche’s warning—that when fighting monsters you must take care not to become one yourself—should be remembered. Killing by the state is wrong as well, potentially even worse than killing by an individual…"

-Ivan Simonovic, PhD, LLM
Special Adviser to the United Nations Secretary-General on the Responsibility to Protect
“Introduction: An Abolitionist’s Perspective,” in Moving Away from the Death Penalty
ohchr.org
Aug. 31, 2015
  
They also said, "No one can blame victims and their families for wanting revenge, including through the death penalty." That I agree with but what I don't agree with is the not next sentences but the one after that. She said, "However, laws exist to prevent individuals from pursuing vengeance and their own vision of justice." I don't think that is what people want to do. This house believes that the United States should have the death penalty. 


Con
#4
House: Against (Con)
 
This house believes that we should NOT have the death penalty.

Morality Rebuttal:

When the For (Pro) house stated, "that man had to give the two people the death penalty and had to eject them with poison..." it contradicted the For (Pro) house's earlier statement, "One reason is that most people get the death penalty is because they killed other people..." When an offender is killed for taking another's life should the man who induced the death of the offender not be put to death for taking a life as well? And the man who induces that man's death not be punished as well, and so on? Is it not an endless cycle of killing if both statements are upheld?

Retribution (Constitutionality):

"They also said, 'No one can blame victims and their families for wanting revenge, including through the death penalty.' That I agree with but what I don't agree with is the not next sentences but the one after that. She said, 'However, laws exist to prevent individuals from pursuing vengeance and their own vision of justice.' I don't think that is what people want to do." Is this argument not all opinion?

Conclusion:

  • The death penalty is morally unjust and other alternatives are ignored.
  • It is also hypocritical and contradicting.

Therefore I conclude that the U.S. should not have the death penalty.