*First off, I would like to wish good luck and a great debate to xaos, good luck!* (737 words)
The death penalty is a necessary action that has a positive effect on society today. It is an effective deterent of crime as well as a
safeguard forsociety. It also helps to keep order in our cities. Furthermore, I feel it is a just and effective punishment for those who have
commited crimes cruel enough to deserve death. The death penalty is not a new idea in our world. Its origins date back over 3,700 years to the
Babylonian civilization, where it was prescribed for a variety of crimes. It was also greatly used in the Greek and Roman empires. It continued into
England during the Middle Ages, and then to the American colonies where it exists still today. In the American colonies, death was a prescribed
punishment for crimes such as: murder, rape, arson, and perjury. In the world today, the main crime deserving death is obviously murder.
The death penalty truly does deter crimes and murder. This is a simple answer to a problem at the heart of a heated political controversy
over the punishment. Opposers to the death penalty say no because of the large amount of people on death row today. They also say that states that
have the death penalty have a higher crime rate than those that do not, and therefore it is not effective and somewhat contributes to the problem. I
must point out though that states that have the death penalty are usually highly urbanized areas that most likely will have high crime rates because
of the large population. Rather, in rural states there is no need for the death penalty because the population is most likely low and scattered
throughout the region. States that practice capital punishment do so because of high crime rates, not vice versa. Abolitionists also state that the
death penalty is a racist punishment, and only given to African Americans. In the May 11, 1998 issue of JET magazine it stated that over 50% of all
blacks favor the death penalty. According to a U.S. Dept. Of Justice press release on December 13, 1998, Of those executed were all males: 45 whites,
27 blacks, 1 Asian, and 1 American Indian. Five were hispanics...At the end of last year, 34 states and the federal prison system held 3,335 men and
women (44 females) on death row: 1876 whites, 1406 blacks, 28 American Indians, 17 Asians, and 8 of other races. There were 283 Hispanic prisoners...
Also a 1985 University of North Carolina study by economist Stephen K. Layson states that, every execution of a murderer deters, on average, 18
murders. This further verifies that without the death penalty our murder rate would be immense. For example in Utah on June 10, 1988 Arthur Gary
Bishop was executed for sodomizing and then killing a group of young boys. In the first half of the year (January-June) there were 26 murders in
Utah. In the second half (July-December) there were only 21 murders, an almost 20% drop in the murder rate.
Capital punishment is truly a safeguard to society because, It is the finality of the death penalty which instils fear into the heart of
every murderer, and it is this fear of punishment which protects society. An example of this is England practiced capital punishment throughout the
early 20th century, and had a lower crime rate than that of any large US city. Since England has abolished the death penalty in 1968, their murder
rate has risen over 100%, and 75 English citizens have been murdered by released killers. This proves not only is it a safeguard but it also helps
deter crime because in the hundreds of years before England had one of the lowest murder rates in the world. The death penalty is the most effective
means of crime detterent as you can see. It not only punishes those who commit the crimes, but also prevents future crimes by scaring the would-be
murderer with the consequence he would pay for his actions. It has proven effective throughout history, and will hold strong through the ages as long
as people continue to be corrupt and commit crimes in this world.

