A “Yes” vote on Prop 34 abolishes the death penalty in CA and
replaces it with life in prison with no possibility of parole.
Yes on Prop 34 will:
1) Ensure that no innocent person is ever executed by the State of CA
2) Re-sentence current death-row inmates to life without parole and move them out of very expensive incarceration on death row and into the general prison population
3) Save taxpayers $100 million per year in court costs and incarceration costs
4) Re-direct some of those savings into unsolved rape and homicide investigations
We all know that liberals want to abolish the death penalty
because they secretly want deranged sociopaths wandering the streets. But what about conservatives? Are there reasons why they might want to end
the death penalty? One, of course is
money. Plain and simple, it turns out it
is just cheaper for taxpayers to keep someone in prison for life than to kill them. But the core argument for conservatives, I
believe, is this: why would you give the government you distrust --the power-grabbing
corrupt bureaucracy that can’t do anything right-- the power of life and death
over it’s own citizens? Talk about
government over-reach!
Since the death penalty was re-instated in California 1978,
14 people have been executed and 83 have died in prison before they could be
executed. Currently there are 725
prisoners on death row. The last
execution was in 2006. So clearly we are not executing very many prisoners in
California. Prisoners sit on death row
for decades due to an extensive appeals process and a cash-strapped,
back-logged court system. In spite of
all these appeals, innocent people are still occasionally executed in the U.S. though
perhaps not in California so far. Case-in-point is Cameron Todd Willingham who
was executed in Texas for killing his three children in a fire which everyone
now agrees was not arson but rather an accident caused by a space heater.
Keeping all these prisoners that we will probably never get
around to executing on death row and processing all these appeals is really
expensive - $100 million per year according to the impartial Legislative
Analyst. Meanwhile police departments
around the state are under-funded and just under half of all murders go
unsolved leaving the perpetrators at large.
Prop 34 meets my criteria for reasonable use of the
initiative process because for politicians, voting against any form of
punishment, no matter how sensible or fiscally responsible is a sure way to
loose the next election in the sound-bite wars. Some of the people who put the initiative on the ballot in 1978 to bring back the death penalty now want to abolish it
because it is too expensive and it is not working. I am voting to abolish the death penalty
because I think it is a waste of taxpayer’s money and because I have always
been uncomfortable with giving the government the power to kill people that
have already been captured and locked-up.
How about a comprimise: "Life in prison with no food"?
ReplyDelete--Horemheb