357. Better Angels

Being a nerd I sometimes open an encyclopedia at random and start reading.  I always learn something interesting, like that some scholars believe the biblical Ten Commandments, rather than having been given to Moses on top of mount Sinai, evolved from ancient Hebrew cooking rules.

Regardless of where they came from, though, the Ten Commandments provide a time-honored blueprint for moral living.  One need not be religious to appreciate a moral code that teaches that lying, stealing and killing are wrong.  The Ten Commandments are particularly revered by conservatives, and more than once stone renderings of them have been erected in front of Southern courthouses and on other government property (much to the chagrin of those who support the separation of Church and State).

Given conservative’s regard for the Ten Commandments it’s always puzzled me why they are so supportive of the death penalty – after all, it would seem to be explicitly forbidden by “Thou shalt not kill.”  But reason and belief have always been uneasy bedfellows and many religiously sincere people have no problem rationalizing the State killing people in their name.

Traditionally executions have been great crowd pleasers.  As recently as the late 1800s public executions drew large crowds – including families with children.  And though executions are now done in private, when Nebraska resumed executions in the 1990s large crowds gathered outside the penitentiary in Lincoln, drinking and shouting for blood.  This so alarmed officials that executions were soon moved from midnight to morning when those who celebrate killing would hopefully be at work.

Politicians understand that many Nebraskans seem to have a deep attachment to capital punishment — for decades state senator Ernie Chambers sought the repeal of the death penalty without success.  So it came as a great surprise when the Legislature did, in fact, repeal it in 2015 with enough support to override Governor Ricketts’ veto.

Ricketts, who comes from a very wealthy family, sidestepped his responsibility to enforce the will of the Legislature by helping fund a ballot initiative to reinstate capital punishment – an initiative that will appear on the ballot this November.

Anti-death penalty advocates have swayed many conservatives by pointing out that it costs Nebraska far too much money – over $14 million a year by one recent estimate – to litigate the seemingly endless appeals the death penalty creates (underscoring the degree to which conservative ideology is influenced by money).

Yes, cost is a valid reason to end executions, as is the increasing evidence that innocent people are sometimes convicted of capital crimes.  But ultimately state-sponsored killing is a moral issue – those who truly believe killing is wrong (except as a last resort to save one’s life or the life of another) understand that executing people is wrong as well.

I suspect that most of us have reacted emotionally to news of heinous crimes by wanting to hurt the perpetrator (I know I have).  But moral codes were developed precisely for these situations – they steer us away from our darker impulses.

Evidence indicates that the death penalty does not deter violent crime, and arguments based on “an eye for an eye” – a fundamental aspect of Islamic Sharia law — should not shape modern Western society.  Yet ironically many of the same voices who warn against Sharia law are staunch supporters of this medieval approach to justice.

With Nebraskans having an important choice to make this November regarding capital punishment, one can only hope the better angels of our nature guide our decision…

Comments

  1. Virginia Shultz-Charette Said,

    Very powerful statement. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if that 14 million, times however many are on death row, was put toward mental health initiatives that might prevent some of the murders in the first place?

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