http://www.dispatch.com/content/stor...childhood.html
A man on Ohio's death row is asking for clemency, and his case is that he had a nightmarish, abusive childhood.
I have to admit, his childhood WAS really bad. However, I find myself agreeing with this statement made by one of the prosecuting attorneys.
I'm not a big fan of the death penalty, but it annoys me when people try to explain their bad behavior with "bad childhoods." Heck, here is a comment from one of the commentors on the news article that had me clapping.
It really is injustice to give him clemancy. I don't buy into the notion that we should give him slack because of wrongs done to him in his childhood. In fact, he should be held to a higher standard because he as experienced first hand the horror of abuse and violence and should know what his victim (s) were going through. With all that, he still went ahead and did what he did. Not an excuse.
A man on Ohio's death row is asking for clemency, and his case is that he had a nightmarish, abusive childhood.
I have to admit, his childhood WAS really bad. However, I find myself agreeing with this statement made by one of the prosecuting attorneys.
“Other people have had terrible childhoods, and they didn’t murder people,” he said.
It really is injustice to give him clemancy. I don't buy into the notion that we should give him slack because of wrongs done to him in his childhood. In fact, he should be held to a higher standard because he as experienced first hand the horror of abuse and violence and should know what his victim (s) were going through. With all that, he still went ahead and did what he did. Not an excuse.
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