I agree with it in theory, but I remember in school we watched this documentary called Deadline that showed how many people had been found innocent after they were executed and how many more were exonerated from death row. Plus, there was some law in Indiana or something in the 70s that wouldn't let the state pardon people from death row even though they found possible proof of innocence or something. That, aside with the fact that it costs like 10 times more to kill prisoners than to keep them in jail, makes me disagree with it, at least the way it's carried out here in the states.
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