Showing posts with label death penalty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label death penalty. Show all posts

Abortion Doctor Kermit Gosnell Guilty on Three Counts of First-Degree Murder (Updated)

UPDATE, MAY 14: Baby Killer Kermit Gosnell Gets Life In Prison, Not Death


Kermit Gosnell, abortionist
Kermit Gosnell - philly.com
May 13, 2013 - Abortionist Kermit Gosnell was found guilty today of three counts of first-degree murder for killing babies born alive in his clinic. He was acquitted on a fourth count. Prosecutors said they would seek the death penalty, which Gosnell is eligible for under Pennsylvania law.

House of Horrors: "Prosecutors say the 72-year-old Gosnell delivered babies alive and had their spines severed with scissors to kill them. They say the baby whose death he was cleared in let out a soft whimper before Gosnell cut its neck." (Associated Press)

Gosnell operated the Family Women's Medical Society clinic at 3801 Lancaster Ave. from 1979 to 2010, when it was closed after a federal-state drug raid.

Gosnell's House of Horrors
Gosnell was charged with four counts of first-degree murder, of babies allegedly born alive during illegal late-term abortions and killed by Gosnell or staff. Gosnell was charged with 227 counts of violating the state's 24-hour waiting period before a woman has an abortion, and also a count of third-degree murder in the 2009 death of an abortion patient allegedly overdosed on Demerol by Gosnell's untrained staff. More at Philly.com.

A Delaware woman who worked at Gosnell’s abortion clinic testified on April 9 that it was “standard procedure” to snip the necks of babies that were delivered by patients before the abortion due to labor-inducing drugs. Eight former staffers of Gosnell’s clinic have pleaded guilty to a variety of charges and are awaiting sentencing.

Also See:

Execution: Neither Cruel Nor Unusual

Lethal injection is okey-dokey, says the U.S. Supreme Court. Fine.

T. Mannis

Reuters reports today that the U.S. Supreme Court has "rejected a challenge to the lethal three-drug cocktail used in most U.S. executions, clearing the way for a resumption of executions halted since last September." (Full story...)

Some soft hearted folks will tell you that the death penalty is cruel and unusual. In fact, it is neither.

It is not cruel.
Let's make an analogy. Suppose your child takes a cookie from the jar after you've told her that she should not, and then you ground her for two weeks as punishment. Well, most of us would agree that that would be a cruel punishment, because the punishment is out of proportion to the offense. The punishment, in common parlance, does not fit the crime. Not letting the child watch her favorite TV show that evening might more more appropriate.

Let's stay with that analogy. Suppose the child stole a bag of cookies from the local convenience store and you found out about it. To ground her for two weeks would not be cruel, as most of us would agree that this punishment is appropriate.

Flash forward and suppose your child is all grown up. She murders one of your neighbors by deliberately feeding him poison-laced cookies. Would it be appropriate to ground her for two weeks? Or is something, say, more appropriate in order?

To make a person who stole property return the property or reimburse the true owner of the property for its value is not cruel. It is appropriate. To execute a murderer, who stole somebody's life and can never return it, is not cruel. It is appropriate.

Can the death penalty be cruel? Yes. It can be administered cruelly. Being drawn and quartered, for example, or being burned alive. But to administer a lethal injection - even though it can sometimes cause some discomfort - is not cruel. It is done with the humane intention of minimizing suffering, as opposed to many traditional forms of execution which are intended to maximize and prolong suffering.

It is not unusual.
This is much easier. What is the definition of "unusual"? The Cambridge Dictionary of American English defines it as "different from what is usual or expected." The Compact Oxford English Dictionary defines it as "(1) not habitually or commonly done or occurring. (2) remarkable; exceptional."

The death penalty has been a traditional form of punishment for thousands of years in most cultures around the world. For over 200 years, it has been used in the United States. Therefore, it cannot reasonably or honestly be called unusual.

This is not to say that one cannot make a reasonable argument against the death penalty, but to call it cruel or unusual is intellectually dishonest. Whereas it can be cruel, it is not necessarily cruel. Given it's widespread and common use throughout history, it simply cannot be called unusual.