Originally Posted by
kevinpate
Thunder, I won't defend the state's willingness to include the death penalty in the range of three available punishments (the other two punishments are life imprisonment without the possibility of consideration for parole, and life imprisonment with consideration for the possibility of parole.) However, you're mixing your deadly apples with poisoned oranges.
A murder is an unlawful act of taking a life. There are variations but the central point is the unlawful taking of life.
Use of the death penalty, within the confines of applicable law, is not unlawful. It is a permitted act.
Though any state, including ours, could function quite well without this particular punishment being lawful, it is simply incorrect to equate the imposition of the death penalty to the act of committing a murder.
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