I don’t think beatings should be a form of punishment. You could cause permanent harm. It is a degrading form of punishment that belittles the victim. It shows a lack of respect for the victim.…
Jeff Jacoby a columnist for the Boston Globe published an essay “Bring Back Flogging”, on the op-ed page on February 20, 1997. Jacoby states that flogging people is better than “Locking them up in cages.” (para. 4) He goes on to say that flogging will teach people moral and educational values, while “Prison is a graduate school of criminal studies.” (para. 7) In the seventeenth century flogging was very famous among the Boston’s Puritans it was a punishment for people that were convicted of blasphemy, adultery, and other thing they felt was immortal and illegal. Jacoby then…
In his essay, “Bring Back Flogging,” Jeff Jacoby, believes that criminals who commit crimes should be flogged publically instead of being thrown in prison. Jacoby believes that prison has become society’s punishment for almost every offense in the criminal code. He insisted instead of putting people in prison for minor offences, he believes that they should be flogged publically to teach them a lesson. Jacoby believes that this form of punishment was used effectively in the 1600’s by the puritans. I cannot fully accept Jacoby’s thesis because, although he makes valid points about the weaknesses in our prison system, he does not give strong enough arguments about how his plan will solve these problems.…
It is important to consider that flogging was prescribed in England as punishment the same as in New South Wales. Masters were not allowed to beat the convicts themselves, only a court could inflict a flogging. The convict’s subordination was the result of a sentence handed down from a court, specifying the nature and duration of the convict’s punishment. Sometimes punishments would take a long time to be handed down, masters saw that in some cases the threat of corporal punishment didn’t guarantee high productivity and quality of…
Jacoby 's claim in simple is he believes that flogging should be brought back to replace the more standard conventional method of the imprisonment of violent and non-violent offenders.…
Certainly, having grown up in a culture that there process of discipline and training in the most family was by flogging whip, palm fronds spank, spank with a tree switch, beating with a bamboo stick, backs slap, slapping butt, face slapping, punching or twisting ears, and hands beating. In the same way, all these beaten are not seen as an element of abuse by virtue of the pain it gives the individual. It is a measure of tutoring a child showing the gravity of his or her action was not acceptable to the family, kindred, and community. Having seen these corporal punishments, my career as a social worker will advocate for a positive change in child parenting.…
"Sure, I guess so, but isn't whipping still a little too serious of a punishment?" "Too serious?! Do murderers not receive the death penalty? Thieves jail time? And even loiterers fines?…
In his article “Bring Back Flogging,” Jeff Jacoby advocates flogging as an excellent means of corporal punishment. Even though flogging has been “out of fashion for at least 150 years” he insists that flogging should be brought back to replace the more conventional method of imprisonment (193). In addition, Jacoby is convinced that flogging offenders after their first conviction can deter them from going into a professional criminal career and has more educational value than putting criminals behind bars. Furthermore, he insists that “sentencing at least some criminals say, thieves and drunk drivers to a public whipping” (194) will encourage offenders to change their behavior after being flogged. Although Jacoby tries to present flogging as a more effective alternative than putting criminals in jail, his faulty assumptions and misconceptions fail to persuade readers that flogging is a better alternative.…
Jeff Jacoby states that flogging would be a better corporal punishment for young punks and minor wrongdoers because exposing them to prison is far more dangerous to their life. In his article he articulately expresses where he stands and gives supporting facts as to why he supports the idea and how it can be effective. He makes it clear that he strongly feels imprisonment should not be our go-to-punishment anymore because it is costly and not effective in stopping young punks committing crimes after they are out. The only effect it has is turning them into real criminals.…
Being fined was an easy punishment for Puritans, punishments ranged from a scolding to execution. Similar to Hester Prynne’s punishment in Hawthorne’s The Scarlet letter, “The unhappy culprit sustained herself as best a woman might, under the heavy weight of a thousand unrelenting eyes, all fastened upon her, and concentrated at her bosom.” (Hawthorne 40), lucky adulterers were forced to wear a scarlet “A”; others were executed. Public whippings and stockades located in the public town square were other humiliating punishments for those who did not follow God’s law.…
First, to support my claim I clearly believe that flogging is actually a harsh way to punish a prisoner. Do you know what is flogging? Well, to those who do not know what flogging means here it goes, flogging refers to beating with a whip or strap or rope as a form of punishment. I don’t think so by being harsh to a prisoner will make him or her realize what his mistake was. It gives them pain and I am sure it may affect them to have the mentality of not being bothered of changing their attitude. Their mind voice would say, “I am being punished and I am going through this pain. What is the purpose of changing myself?”…
According to Steinbuch, 2014, Controlling behavior through strict discipline has remained critical to the management of penal institutions while corporal punishment has seen major reforms in the last century, the increased use of…
“Corporal punishment remains a widely used discipline technique in most American families, but it has also been a subject of controversy within the child development and psychological communities.” (Gershoff) Corporal punishment is not only spanking your child but it is the effects that hitting your child can have. Studies have shown multiple outcomes of corporal punishment, some which have not resulted to be positive. There is so much behind disciplining a child stemming from emotions, force, and frequency. A child should not be disciplined to the severity where it will in turn affect them for the rest of their lives. Corporal punishment is severely damaging physically, mentally, emotionally, and socially to children and should not be allowed in any home.…
"The fundamental need of American education is to find ways of engaging today's children in the thrill of learning. Fear of pain has no place in that process." - The Christian Science Monitor. Because Ms. Peña and I are in compliance with this statement, we have decided to bring to the attention of the community, the corporal punishment of Sinton High School. There are many effective ways of properly punishing a disobedient student, but there are also limits to certain disciplinary measures. Grant it that a student from Sinton High School may now choose their own punishment, with consent from the parents, it is up to the administrator to keep in compliance, and with in the limits. Bruises, cuts, and/or broken skin should not occur in the process of administering corporal punishment. The eight constitutional amendment clearly states that "no cruel or unusual punishment should be inflicted." If markings are found on a student, the boundaries and law have been broken. Rupturing these boundaries surfaces the question, "Just exactly WHY are we administering the corporal punishment to students, to hurt them?" "...the use of corporal punishment in schools is intrinsically related to child maltreatment. It contributes to a climate of violence, it implies that society approves of the physical violation of children, it establishes an unhealthy norm...Its outright abolition throughout the nation must occur immediately." - U.S. Advisory Board on Child Abuse and Neglect.…
Bring Back Flogging This Bring Back Flogging essay seems to hit a real strong point in the fact that prisons are over populated and it costs so much to take care of each and every one of them. The most outstanding question is, should we bring back flogging? The answer is so complex and complicated that no one person can come up with the best answer. Some seem to think that flogging should be brought back in some form because we could better control the prison systems and the overpopulation problem that is haunting the system today. Population is a serious problem in prisons today because there is no room for the criminals of today. So the courts are turning criminals away that need punishment for the crimes that they have committed or they are receiving shorter terms for the crimes. Thus the only thing that they have learned is do the crime and spend less time. So if the courts would bring back flogging then this would make the criminals think twice about doing the things that they do. Then the population problem would easily take care of its self in just a short time. The cost to keep a criminal behind bars is approximately 25,000 to 30,000 dollars a year and it cost almost 3,000 dollars to have the same person on parole and about 1,500 for that person to be on probation per year and that is the tax payer’s dollars hard at work. Repeat offenders are on the rise and the cost to take care of them is also on the rise. If flogging was…