Pookeyhead
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In 1965, the year of the abolition of the death penalty for homicide, the murder rate was approximately 6.8 per million population, by 2001/02 this figure had doubled to 16.6 per million. What does that tell you?
I can also point out that the countries in north eastern africa that retain the death penalty also have the highest rates of homicide. So where does that leave us?
While there has been a steady rise in homicide rates since 1965, there's also been a stead decline since 2002.. a 50% reduction actually.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/9411649/Graphic-how-the-murder-rate-has-fallen.html
I don't recall us bringing the death penalty back, so clearly there's something else at play. Maybe we're just growing up as a society and becoming more educated, and most people are accepting that violence, for any reason is for dumbasses. As this takes a few generations to sink in usually, the last thing we want to do is be hurled back into the dark ages by bringing back capital and corporate punishments. The homicide rate also didn't sky rocket when we abolished capital punishment, it has been a steady, exponential rise for MUCH longer than that, and is exponentially linked to population density in cities, and poverty, NOT whether we have a death penalty or not... as certain African countries demonstrate.
Cleverer people than you or I have decreed it barbaric, unnecessary, and outdated. I agree... and thankfully those who have the power to wield such decisions agree with me. Rant all you want, we got rid f such behaviour for a good reason, and it seems that a generation or two later, the message is finally sinking in. Being a reactionary oaf that gets satisfaction from seeing people killed is just not going to help.
