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SpiritMeadow
Guest
I agree wholeheartedly. What is worse, is that we have volumes of evidence that our criminal justice system is flawed to the point that hundreds of people are imprisoned for crimes that they did not commit. In Texas that great bastion of state murder, 17 men have been released after serving sometimes as much as 20 years after it was discovered that the Dallas prosecutor there had systematically held back and hidden exculpatory evidence from defendents. When innocents are executed because of a faulty system, the blood is on everyone’s hands.The Holy Father stood on our country’s soil and called for an end to the death penalty. This is the stance that I agree with. Ban it. Now.
Others call for a continuation or even an increase in the death penalty in America. That is their right. I stand with the Pope and the American bishops in calling for it to be abolished.
You wrote of those who claim that criminals will take over the justice system if we heed the call of our Catholic leaders and abolish the death penalty. History, fact, and logic do not support them. The European Union provides an excellent example. Dozens of other countries have banned the death penalty, and I know of none of them in which the result has been criminals taking over the justice system.
One seldom hears of any inmate murdering a guard. I’m sure it can and does happen, but I also rather suspect that it happens seldom enough that one has a greater chance of being killed randomly on the outside. The Pope’s stance was clear: there must be no way to effectively protect the citizenry, and he pointed out that most penal systems today cannot make that claim. They are secure, especially so for those that are the most heinous criminals.