TEXT C Historically, execution
has served as a significant form of punishment for deviance from social norms
and criminal behavior. Capital punishment is no longer in use in Great Britain;
but King Henry VIII executed an estimated 72,000 thieves and vagabonds during
his long reign. When the American colonists came from England in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, they brought some of, but not all, the English laws
concerning punishment for capital crimes. For centuries, the
death penalty was used in North America for murder, alleged witchcraft, and a
few other crimes. Little thought was given to its justification; capital
punishment was assumed to be morally and religiously justified. The first
critical challenge to this practice came in 1821 when a study of the Louisiana
criminal code recommended repeal of the death penalty. This suggestion was not
adopted in Louisiana, but, ironically, it led to abolition of capital punishment
in several South American countries. In 1834, Pennsylvania
became the first American state to end its use of executions. Although certain
states followed Pennsylvania’s lead, the history of the death penalty in the
United States over the last 100 years has been rather uneven. As some states
abolish capital punishment, others reinstate it. Currently, 37 states, the
military, and federal statutes provide for execution for selected
crimes. The debate over the death penalty has traditionally
focused on its appropriateness as a form of punishment and its value in
deterring criminals. Viewed from the functionalist perspective of Emile
Durkheim, sanctioning of deviant acts helps to reinforce the standards of proper
behavior within a society. In this light, supporters of capital punishment
insist that fear of execution will prevent at least some criminals from
committing serious offenses. Moreover, in their view, the death penalty is
justified even if it does not serve as a deterrent, because such criminals
deserve to die for their crimes. By contrast, opponents of
capital punishment have long attacked it as "legalized murder". For example, in
the last weeks of his term as governor of New Mexico in 1986, Toney Anaya
commuted the death sentences of all five men awaiting execution in the state.
Anaya called the death penalty "inhumane, immoral, and anti-God" and added that
"my personal beliefs do not allow me to permit the execution of an individual in
the name of the state." Opponents of the death penalty point out
that a 1985 report identified 343 Americans wrongly convicted of offenses
punishable by death since 1900, 25 of whom were actually executed. For example,
in 1979 a black man was sentenced to death for the murder of a 4-year-old white
girl. He received a stay only days before his scheduled execution when the
victim’s mother implicated another person; the man’s conviction was subsequently
overturned. Critics argue that the possibility of error in the criminal justice
system in itself makes capital punishment morally offensive. They also insist
that the death penalty violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against
"cruel and unusual punishment." Thus far, they have failed to persuade the
Supreme Court that their constitutional argument is valid. In
1976, in the case of Gregg vs. Georgia, the Court held that executions can be
appropriate so long as they do not involve needless pain or suffering and are
not grossly out of proportion to the severity of the crime. This ruling and
others were especially significant, since no executions had taken place since
1967. In part, this reflected a lull in the criminal justice system as officials
waited to see how the Supreme Court would assess the constitutionality of the
death penalty. In the aftermath of the Court’s decisions, one execution took
place amidst national publicity in 1977 and another in 1979. Executions became
more common in the early 1980s; in 1987, there were 25. Moreover, there were
more inmates on "death row" in 1987 than at any other time in American
history. Which of the following is NOT-a reason suggested in the argument against death penalty
A.Death penalty is not humane. B.Death penalty cannot really deter criminals. C.Errors may occur in conviction of some offenses. D.Death penalty was used to suppress revolutionary groups.