gsvol
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- Aug 22, 2008
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Woodard said he chose the ballot route instead of the legislature to expedite the process: the soonest that it could become law legislatively would be in the summer of 2011, "whereas if I put it on this November ballot, it becomes law right away," ......
The only real difference (and a major one at that) is we go to great extremes to make sure those that are put to death are done so humanely. The types of things covered here are brutal and gruesome, would you agree?
definatly agree. People are so worried that people that recieve the death penatly are treated humanly. You know what, you gotta pay for what you did. If you get the death penatly, you dont deserve to die with dignity. The Romans had it right.
I'm split on the death penalty, I think in some of the most horrific cases it is morally just. I think in many cases though it has been used too often in a knee jerk reaction.
I do think it is our duty as citizens to make sure we treat those sentenced to death with dignity, we as a country should demand it of our justice system.
i dont' know how anyone could be if they actually have had children and witnessed the development first hand with sonograms and such.
I have twins that were born extremely prematurely and are now normal as the day is long. I can't imagine anyone who knows them, and especially those who fought day to day with us, ever thinking late term abortions are even remotely OK.