Capital Punishment Issues
The inconsistency and discrimination issues related to capital punishment are that, first, it is unevenly applied to all persons and, second, it is more commonly supported by Whites than it is by African-Americans (Unnever, Cullen, 2007). The concept that criminal justice and capital punishment are a good fit for one another is not a concept that African-Americans tend to promote; yet the underlying cause of their lack of support is rooted in their view of the criminal justice system itself -- which is generally regarded among them as being more unjust than just, especially with respect to African-American lives. For Whites, on the other hand, capital punishment is viewed as a legitimate form of punishment within the system -- one that works and one that should be doled out to those who deserve in order to maintain society's integrity.
Yet, the problem of capital punishment is that it tends to be unevenly distributed among convicts -- or, at least, the African-American community feels that it is targeted more than other communities -- namely, White ones (Unnever, Cullen, 2007). The inconsistency with which it is given as a punishment, moreover, does not even need to be assessed in racial terms -- it can be assessed in terms of the crime committed. In some cases,...
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