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Death penalty weakens democratic justice

“Can we expect a decent society if society is allowed to kill its own citizens?” – Coretta Scott King

Photo Courtesy of fity.club

Almost every European country has abolished capital punishment. Belarus remains the lone exception, hardly a model of democratic governance. That reality leaves the United States aligned with nations such as: China, Iran, and Russia, countries frequently criticized for their human rights records. The comparison raises a fundamental question: what does the continued use of the death penalty say about a society’s values?

At its core, the death penalty is the state-sanctioned execution of a person convicted of specific crimes, most often first-degree murder. In some jurisdictions, it may also apply to treason, or the killing of state officials such as police, or prison guards. These crimes are defined by premeditation; the deliberate planning and intentional taking of a life.

Execution methods have varied across time and place, reflecting both technological change and cultural attitudes toward punishment. Today, lethal injection is most common in the United States, though alternatives such as the electric chair and firing squad persist in some regions. Historically, methods were far more brutal: burning, hanging, or dismemberment among them. The evolution of these practices does not erase their central purpose: the deliberate ending of a human life by the state.

Supporters of capital punishment often ground their arguments in deterrence and retribution. The logic is straightforward: if murder is the ultimate crime, then the ultimate punishment is justified. Embedded in this reasoning is a long-standing moral idea that justice requires balance, often expressed through the principle of “an eye for an eye.” Without severe consequences, the argument goes, society risks descending into lawlessness.

Yet this logic raises difficult ethical questions. If killing is wrong, can it be justified when carried out by the state? Does execution uphold justice, or does it mirror the very act it condemns?

Opponents of capital punishment argue that the practice is inherently flawed, not only morally, but practically. Death row itself constitutes a severe punishment: years, sometimes decades, spent awaiting execution under intense psychological strain. During that time, appeals and investigations occasionally uncover wrongful convictions. In some cases, individuals sentenced to death have later been exonerated, exposing irreversible failures in the justice system.

The possibility of executing an innocent person is documented. This risk alone has fueled global movements to abolish capital punishment. Advocates argue that no legal system, however advanced, is immune to error. When the punishment is death, the margin for error is zero.

Political considerations further complicate the issue. Elected officials often hesitate to oppose capital punishment for fear of appearing “soft on crime.” This dynamic can overshadow deeper philosophical questions about the nature and purpose of justice. Is justice meant to punish, deter, rehabilitate, or some combination of the three?

Prominent thinkers have long challenged the moral foundation of the death penalty. Albert Camus argued that capital punishment is the most premeditated of murders, emphasizing the calculated nature of state execution. Coretta Scott King posed a broader societal question “Can we expect a decent society if society is allowed to kill its own citizens?”

These critiques shift the focus from the individual crime to the character of the society responding to it. A justice system, they suggest, should reflect restraint, not vengeance. Punishment driven by retribution risks eroding the very principles it seeks to defend.

The emotional weight of capital punishment extends beyond the condemned. Families of victims may seek closure, while families of the accused face their own form of loss. Communities, too, are affected, especially when the application of the death penalty reveals patterns of bias or inequality.

What is clear is that capital punishment forces societies to confront uncomfortable questions about power, morality, and the limits of justice. In the end, the issue is not only whether individuals deserve to die for their crimes. It is whether the state should hold and exercise the power to decide that they must.

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