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Prison overcrowding has little to do with capital punishment. It is a result of at least two other factors. The most significant is that we sentence non violent drug offenders to long terms in prison. Secondly, a large percentage of prisoners suffer from serious and chronic mental illness. In the 1970's, states across the nation began closing mental insitutions with the intention of making community based services available to people with mental illness. That did not come to pass. As a result, many people who would previously have been identified and helped were not and have ended up in prisons.

2007-11-26 02:27:43 · answer #1 · answered by Susan S 7 · 0 0

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2016-06-12 04:20:38 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Sure! Hey, let's have capital punishment for illegal parking too, and we can eliminate city overcrowding! I think we should have capital punishment for talking in movie theaters. In fact there've been a few people I'd be willing to take out myself!

Dude, there are guys sentenced to death who have been on death row for 20-30 years! It MUCH costs more to execute a prisoner than to keep him in prison for life without parole.

The only way capital punishment would reduce prison overcrowding would be if we did it like they do in China. First they have capital punishment for any crime worse than shoplifting. Then, right after the trial they take the guy out behind the courthouse and put a bullet behind his ear. And they send his family a bill for the bullet!

2007-11-25 18:22:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The ratio of death row inmates is miniscule compared to the general population in prison. This is the kind of argument hard core death penalty advocates use to justify their position. It's pretty ridiculous in fact. Prisons are overcrowded for many reasons. Sick society to some extent. But Courts are straddled with mandatory sentences in cases where the person should not be incarcerated. People are arrested and sentenced to jail for simple possession of pot or other crimes that simply should not warrant incarceration. Decriminilization of certain crimes would help make room for the people who DO belong there.

It's an issue that has to be addressed. The cost of long term incarceration has to be weighed against the benefit to society. Studies indicate that the balance is in favor of less incarceration, not more prisons.

2007-11-25 18:27:11 · answer #4 · answered by Toodeemo 7 · 0 0

No, not really.

There's 2.5 million prisoners in US Prisons and Jails, and since the US re-instated the death penalty in 1976 there's been about 1100 people executed - that;s less than 0.05% of *1 years* prisoners, over a *30 year* period.

Only a TINY percentage of the people in jail and prison are in for capital crimes. Even executing all of them would make no measurable difference to the prison population.

Richard

2007-11-25 18:17:10 · answer #5 · answered by rickinnocal 7 · 0 0

Legalize maurijauna. that would launch a brilliant chew of prisoners, help close value variety gaps, and only sell a greater unfastened society. Weed has a ways fewer unfavourable impacts on human beings than alcohol and tobacco. (i've got by no potential tried it, by employing the way....yet i do no longer drink the two) **I only appeared into it greater, and evidently like marijauna clientele account for decrease than 2% of prisoners, so i assume that on my own won't clean up the concern. Crime is likewise generally proportionate to the disparity of earnings between the better and decrease classes in society. So greater wealth equality (which does no longer recommend take and supply...only giving equivalent possibilities to anyone and making confident the equipment rewards for hard artwork suitable) will help alleviate crime customarily.

2016-09-30 04:32:40 · answer #6 · answered by delsignore 4 · 0 0

It could if we sentenced all violent criminals to death and then carried out the execution in a timely manner.

2007-11-26 02:34:01 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

A complete overhaul of our legal system would. Or, how about capitol punishment for all attorneys? ;)

2007-11-25 20:09:35 · answer #8 · answered by fremont033 1 · 0 1

so could indiscriminate execution of everyone in prison. is that a question?

2007-11-26 06:57:22 · answer #9 · answered by qb 4 · 0 0

whatever you say, captain kangaroo.

2007-11-25 18:17:40 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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