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Politics : Long Live The Death Penalty! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill who wrote (556)1/20/2003 3:30:36 PM
From: LPS5  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 828
 
Read past the first line of the study, Bill, LOL!

In the past ten years, the number of executions in the U.S. has increased while the murder rate has declined. Some commentators have maintained that the murder rate has dropped because of the increase in executions (see, e.g., W. Tucker, "Yes, the Death Penalty Deters," Wall St. Journal, June 21, 2002). However, during this decade the murder rate in non-death penalty states has remained consistently lower than the rate in states with the death penalty. (see Chart I, below).

These figures exclude Kansas and New York, which adopted the death penalty in 1994 and 1995 respectively. If these states are included in their proper categories, the results are even more dramatic:

As executions rose, states without the death penalty fared much better than states with the death penalty in reducing their murder rates. The gap between the murder rate in death penalty states and the non-death penalty states grew larger (as shown in Chart II). In 1990, the murder rates in these two groups were 4% apart. By 2000, the murder rate in the death penalty states was 35% higher than the rate in states without the death penalty. In 2001, the gap between non-death penalty states and states with the death penalty again grew -- it now stands at 37%.


It could, of course, be a coincidence.

LPS5



To: Bill who wrote (556)1/20/2003 6:44:49 PM
From: Machaon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 828
 
<< The more murderers executed, the fewer murders they commit. >>

To not offend certain people's sensitivities, lets refer to executions as "taking the garbage out". That is the way I view getting these criminals off the Earth.

As soon as a criminal victimizes someone else, they are no longer human beings. They are garbage. What do we do with garbage?