"Stricter penalties" Essays and Research Papers

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    Stricter laws on Illegal Drugs Stacey Melton ENG 102 November 7th‚ 2010 Timothy Gleason Stricter laws on Illegal Drugs While illegal drug use affects families‚ the outcome can be changed with stricter laws. The war on drugs continues although law prohibits the use‚ manufacturing‚ and distribution of illegal drugs. The United States has approximately 30 illegal drug laws currently being enforced. The enforcement of these laws costs money and time‚ so without the proper funding‚ fighting

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    Immanuel Kant justifies his support for the death penalty by stating in his work Metaphysics of Morals that “if he has committed murder‚ he must die.” (Kant 1996) In Kant’s opinion‚ the death penalty is justified only when regarding murder and no other crime‚ unless it causes substantial damage to society. In Kant’s time‚ the eighteenth century‚ people seemed to believe in an eye for an eye. Do people still have the same mentality about the death penalty in modern times? According to statistics from

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    Introduction: The purpose of this paper will be to examine the extent in which capital punishment is allowed in the United States. Since early colonial America‚ the death penalty has been a major issue of debate among the public. Highly contested topics‚ beginning with the questionable morality of such a punishment and growing into more sophisticated arguments relating to the Eighth Amendment and race‚ have led to numerous United States Supreme Court cases looking to determine the extent in which

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    Coker v. Georgia‚ 433 U.S. 584 (1977)‚ held that the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbade the death penalty for the crime of rape of a woman. While serving several sentences for rape‚ kidnapping‚ one count of first degree murder‚ and aggravated assault‚ Ehrlich Anthony Coker escaped from prison. Coker broke into Allen and Elnita Carver’s home near Waycross‚ Georgia‚ raped Elnita Carver and stole the family’s vehicle. Coker was convicted of rape‚ armed robbery‚ and the other

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    Shelly Clemente #5 Oppose Capital Punishment  Be it resolved that capital punishment be legalised in Canada.  The death penalty was officially abolished in Canada in 1976 when the Canadian government held a free vote in Parliament to eradicate it from the Criminal Code and over sixty countries around the world have done the same. According to a poll conducted by Angus Reid‚ a Canadian sociologist‚ 21 percent of Canadians feel that murderers can be rehabilitated and 54 percent feel that although

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    The right against cruel and unusual punishment and the death penalty is a highly discussed matter‚ especially with the Supreme Court. The death penalty is a highly controversial topic being discussed all over the country. There are 32 out of the 50 states that consent to execution for first degree murder‚ treason‚ kidnapping‚ aggravated rape‚ the murder of a police or corrections officer‚ and murder while under a life sentence are punishable by the death sentence in some jurisdictions. Where states

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    that can be debated to be morally wrong or legally wrong. The death penalty and murder are some things that can be debated. Many argue whether the death penalty is morally right or if it should ban or if murder is worth the death penalty or a life sentence. Jail is also a cruel place that people have to go for making wrong choices; there are many different societal issues in no choirboy such as moral judgment of the death penalty‚ problems in jail and the laws of the justice system. Moral judgment

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    “For centuries the death penalty‚ often accompanied by barbarous refinements‚ has been trying to hold crime in check; yet crime persists.” This was a quote from Albert Camus; he is questioning the death penalty‚ by declaring that crime rates haven’t decreased. The death penalty is a court sentence of death by execution. To many‚ the death penalty is right because it protects people from harm. To take one’s life as capital punishment is wrong‚ we‚ America should seek new disciplinary actions to stop

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    Should capital punishment be brought back into Australia? There have only been 1435 executions since 1976. Australia should reintroduce capital punishment into the legal system to deter people from committing crimes. By bringing back the death penalty‚ it will deter people from committing crimes. Capital punishment would stop people from reoffenders in Australia. It will also help clean out dangerous criminals from our jails to help overcrowding jails. This will also be a cost effective way‚ by saving

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    Gale‚ an opponent of the death penalty‚ David Gale‚ played by Kevin Spacey‚ is on death row‚ with only a few days before his execution. He has summoned Elizabeth "Bitsey" Bloom‚ played by Kate Winslet‚ a journalist who served seven days in prison because she refused to disclose her sources for a news story‚ to hear what he has to say. As the story unfolds‚ Bitsey changes from skepticism to intense involvement with an apparently innocent victim of the death penalty. Gale was a professor of philosophy

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