OPINION

Life, the Death Penalty, and Child Abuse

Written by SJ Reidhead
Published June 28, 2008
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How can we demand an end to abortion if we constantly demand adults be put to death – to take their lives as retribution? The Lord will take care of that. We are to forgive those who do things to us the way we wish to be forgiven by our Father in Heaven.

As a survivor, I struggle to keep my life ‘together’. It is much easier today than it was fifteen years ago when I was on the point of suicide. When I was that fragile, if I’d known I was responsible for a person being executed for what happened to me – and my testimony, I would not be here today.

Allow us to survive and rebuild our lives. We cannot do this with a constant reminder of the past, and constant appeals, court cases, and interviews portraying the soon to be departed as the victim of the system. We all know you are trying to do what is right, but this time you are very, very wrong. This isn’t your fight. It is the fight of those of us who are struggling to survive every day of our lives.

Do you good people who want retribution know what a death trial will do to victims and their families? Do you even care? It seems to me you are so caught up in your own feelings of some pathetic version of guilt that you don’t actually give a damn about us. If you did, you would understand how difficult the struggle to survive is.

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SJ Reidhead is the author of two western novels, and several books about Tombstone and Wyatt Earp. She blogs at The Pink Flamingo, where she is highly critical of the influence of far right conservatives on her beloved Republican Party.  She is currently working on an article about the entangled alliances of the far right and the anti-immigration movement.
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Life, the Death Penalty, and Child Abuse
Published: June 28, 2008
Type: Opinion
Section: Politics
Filed Under: Politics: U.S., Politics: Policy, Culture: Religion, Culture: Crime and Court
Writer: SJ Reidhead
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Comments

#1 — June 28, 2008 @ 08:50AM — Dan Miller [URL]

Among the problems with this article is that it confuses "child molestation," which can take many forms, with the brutal, physically horrendous, and emotionally horrific rape of an eight year old child by her stepfather. The medical facts of the rape are graphically described in the Court's Opinion and in my article discussing it. The Court was not dealing with mere "child molestation;" it was dealing with something far worse.

You may oppose the death penalty in all cases. Many people do, and clearly that is your right. However, by failing even to mention in passing the extreme nature of the crime for which the Court rejected imposition of the death penalty, you do your cause no good. Indeed, you may well have done it harm. My suspicion is that the Court's decision here has generated very substantial support for the imposition of the death penalty, rather than the reverse. The same is true of articles such as yours.

As to the impact on the victim of participating as a witness in a criminal proceeding, I see no justification for your unarticulated basic assumption that testifying in a proceeding where the death penalty is sought is significantly different from testifying in a proceeding where the death penalty is not sought. If there is any sound basis for this assumption, it would be enlightening to have it presented. Otherwise, the logical extension of your argument is that there should be no criminal prosecution of any person who molests a small child, regardless of the circumstances, unless the child does not have to testify. Such a rule would most likely result in there being no such criminal prosecution at all, because the defendant is entitled to have the witnesses against him testify unless the witnesses are dead or otherwise completely unavailable to testify.

Dan

#2 — June 28, 2008 @ 08:55AM — Joanne Huspek [URL]

First of all, let me say I'm sorry that you or any other child has to suffer abuse.

Your article makes some very valid points. Child abusers aren't born, they are made. I would be more interested in discovering what leads a person to do this and what we can do to stop it.

The "death" penalty in this country is a misnomer. Now convicted criminals are given years of appeal opportunities, and they may be very old before the sentence is carried out. Or you could be sentenced to death in a state like California, and never be executed.

#3 — June 28, 2008 @ 15:47PM — Baronius

SJ, I consider myself pro-life as well. You noted that it's ok to take a life in self-defense. You also mentioned war, which is a type of national or world self-defense, if the war is morally justifiable. I consider capital punishment to be a type of societal self-defense.

I don't believe that every criminal should be executed; not even every murderer. But there are people who would be unsafe to even keep confined, out of risk for the guards and fellow prisoners. It's not about retribution or deterring others. It's about preventing certain individuals from causing further harm. Some sexual predators could fall into that category.

As for your personal story, I have no idea what to say. "You have my sympathy" seems shallow, but you do have my sympathy.

#4 — June 28, 2008 @ 22:10PM — why_knot

What a difficult subject to try to find consensus on! I don't think that consensus is a possiblity.
Form my own posistion, I have to question the statment that ALL abusers have been abused. I don't believe that statement is correct.
Regardless, we have now learned that child sexual abusers do not 'grow out of it' when they get old. This has been shown in the evidence of priests that abuse.
I do not believe that killing abusers is a solution.
However, I do believe that child sexual abusers should be kept seperate from society, held in secure facilities, and never allowed to be released into society again.
Much as I would like vengence, I know that it will not solve anything. That is an issue that I have to deal with and I don't think that it is the role of our legal system to enforce vengence.
I think that it is the role of our legal system to protect society from predatory indivduals who harm our most innocent.
To do that, keep the predators locked up in humane conditions and never let them out. Don't give them the opportunity to rip another life apart.

#5 — June 29, 2008 @ 00:29AM — Dr Dreadful [URL]

I have to question the statment that ALL abusers have been abused. I don't believe that statement is correct.

I've heard that a lot as well, WK, and I agree with you that it can't be literally correct. There must have been a beginning to any particular cycle of abuse, and therefore an original abuser who was not himself abused.

However, I think what is meant is that the figures are something in the very high 90 per cent range. The numbers of first generation abusers are negligible, so to all intents and purposes it is true to say that (approximately) all abusers were abused.

#6 — June 29, 2008 @ 10:34AM — bliffle

Another erroneous statement: "I consider capital punishment to be a type of societal self-defense."

Nonsense. Defense occurs when an offense is being committed.

Capital punishment is retribution. Vengeance. Nothing better.

#7 — June 29, 2008 @ 13:17PM — Baronius

Bliffle, call it "societal prevention of the need for self-defense" then. I still think self-defense is the right term if we're stopping some criminal who's on a life-long killing spree. We have every reason to believe that the most dangerous repeat offenders will keep committing crimes.

If I were interested in vengeance, I'd say kill all the murderers. I'm interested in preventing the most dangerous people from ever hurting anyone again. Maybe super-max facilities can protect the guards and fellow prisoners sufficiently that we don't need the death penalty any more. Until we're sure, the death penalty should be on the table.

#8 — July 8, 2008 @ 21:01PM — Cary Ace Bowers Jr [URL]

kill them,if you think they should live,castration would be good,lose a limb for murderers if they should live,and this is babylonian justice,no exceptions!!

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