I'm pro-death penalty and pro-choice, so at least I'm consistent.
As far as the abortion issue is, after many years of debating the issue with pro-life friends, we have discovered the chasm that separates our ways of thinking - BTW there is no middle ground for pro-lifers.
Pro-lifers are fighting for the rights/life of a baby. It's a criminal issue, murder of innocents.
"They're murdering helpless
children! I'm
never going to be in favor of that!"
Pro-choicers are fighting for the civil rights of women as people to have sovereignty over their own bodies.
"They're telling me that as a woman, I'm not a fully independent human being. That due to a biological change in my body, my rights are now gone and I'm a 2nd class citizen, the public/govt is now in charge of my body and not me. I'm
never going to be in favor of that!"
NO one is going to budge from these two stances if they believe strongly enough.
Now, the puzzling part I find is that pro-lifers tend to be contradictory. They do not approve of abortion...but if you ask them about a woman's health being the issue - having/carrying the child will kill her, she's pregnant by incest or rape, then pro-lifers - not all of them - will agree that abortion is OK in those circumstances.
This is strange IMO. Either abortion is murder or it isn't. The circumstances don't matter. To me, if one
truly believes that abortion is murder, then
regardless of the circumstances of the pregnancy, to abort the fetus is murder.
I'm not sure how pro-lifers reconcile this.
But back to the death penalty - many many good opinions and POVs. Again, it's not the money issue, the people who've been convicted of heinous crimes pretty much have it coming to them.
There is something wrong with them and nothing is going to 'fix' them. The majority are not insane because most committed their crimes, then tried to hide it. They're well aware of right and wrong...but they did it anyway.
No, I don't believe the death penalty is a deterrant. That's been proven, I believe. However, neither is the idea of a long prison sentence either. As far as the U.S. is concerned, the crime rate either stays steady or rises. Obviously very little works as a deterrant if people are determined to commit crimes.
IMO, heinous crimes need to be treated with all the shock and horror they deserve. Much ado needs to be made of prosecuting the perpetrators. Their punishment should be as draconian as allowed. It's to show how deeply a society is shocked and will bend its own standards of acceptable behavior and conduct when faced with such a reprehensible act.
It doesn't diminish us as people, any more than war or self-defense does.
As far as the executioner and his mental health...well, technology is buzzing along and soon, there won't be the need for a human one. Even so, in most death penalty cases, you can almost always find someone ready to volunteer from the friends and family members destroyed by the murderer's actions.