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2281: Capital Punishment: The Just Punishment for Serious Crimes
Capital Punishment: The Just Punishment for Serious Crimes Justice must be done. Capital punishment is the just punishment for serious crime offenders and must be imposed. First, the basis of a punishment must be just and fair to both the victims and the offenders, and definitely capital punishment serves this purpose by the "a life for a life" principle. Also, it is an effective crime deterent which , by simply incapacitation of the criminal, the chances of committing crimes of that criminal is eliminated. Potential serial killers could not have been serial killers if they were executed after the first murder ...
2282: To Kill A Mockingbird 4
... anyone go until enough money have been collected. The reason she is collecting money when she have the ability to work and earn her own money, is because when Tom Robinson is getting charge with crime like that, no one would hire Helen at all. 3. Why does Cal speak one way around coloured people and another way around white people?? Is she being honest or hypocritial in what she does ... to accept an individual for what he is. 3. In five or six sentences, paraphrase Atticus' summation (closing speech) to the jury. Atticus says that he feels pity for Mayella because didn't commit a crime, but in fact broken a moral code of society. She is guilty of breaking the code and trying to cover it up by accusing Tom Roninson. Tom's motive for helping Mayella was simply that ...
2283: Hedda Gabler and Phaedra: Death and the Heroine
... shown a light at the end of the tunnel by Oenone she goes along. Beside herself in her thoughts she decides to tell the truth and to vindicate Hippolytus, who is not guilty of the crime he is accused of by Oenone. At the time of her death, she wants to maintain a clean conscience even after death when judged for her crime in the underworld. She feels a sense of guilt for the acts she implied to commit, and goes to Theseus to confess. The act of taking poison which Medea brought to Greece symbolizes an attempt ...
2284: Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde
... mental picture of a beast and how Mr. Utterson must have felt the first time he saw Mr. Hyde. This novel really reminds me of the time when I was playing a game on my computer with all these monsters and images of death and hatred. I remember it being about 10:00 p.m. at night when a thunder storm broke out. I paused and felt the shivers going through my spine and out through my feet. I was horrified I immediately shut off my computer and hid under my covers. I felt like I was being attacked by some beast who had some kind of hatred for me, and took joy in it. I never played that game again, it ...
2285: Fallen Souls in "The Inferno"
... Medea and Jason A. Jason's love affair. B. Medea and the three children exiled. C. Medea's slaying of the three children and Glauce. D. Jason's penalties. III. O. J. Simpson A. His Crime. B. His Penalties in the Inferno and in life. IV. Benedict Arnold A. His Crime. B. His Penalties in Hell. V. Conclusion Cantos III, V, and XXXIV are only three of the Cantos of the fallen souls of the Inferno. The Inferno is the place we call Hell. It reeks ...
2286: Edgar Allen Poe's: "The Murders in the Rue Morgue"
... eleven eyewitnesses, a diverse mix of occupation and culture. However, they concur on one point: all heard an indistinguishable voice ("that of a foreigner") and one of an angered Frenchman at the scene of the crime. As the account of the last witness is registered, Dupin and the narrator decide to examine the apartment on the Rue Morgue for themselves. The Sherlock Holmes- like protagonist does not disappoint us. Dupin assures ... animal kingdom. He cites an orangutan as the killer, an escapee from a careless owner. This accounts for the grotesque methods of murder and the foreign "voice" that is heard at the scene of the crime. The angry Frenchman witnesses mentioned was the ape's owner, who discovered his pet's plunder after it was too late. Dupin is correct in his accusation and places an ad in the Gazette for ...
2287: Social Security
... number is no longer a symbol of adulthood, the numbers use is no longer confined to working and paying taxes. Government agencies, business and schools rely on Social Security numbers to identify people in their computer systems. Many people receive their Social Security numbers when they start their first job. It is the first step into becoming an American citizen and, to pay taxes. Since the beginning, in 1935, the Social ... there is no law prohibiting their use by business and government. Banks and other financial institutions use this number to report interest earned on accounts to the IRS. Other government agencies use these numbers in computer matching operations to stop fraud and abuse. Although you can t prevent others from asking for the number, it does not give the use the right to access you Social Security records. The privacy of ...
2288: Macbeth - Scenes 1 To 3
... to believe that Duncan is a coward for not taking part in the battle although Shakespeare conceives him as too old, not lacking vigor. Kings were believed to be god s agents. So if a crime was committed against the king, it was a crime against god. This scene also explores the theme of deception, portraying Macbeth to the audience in contrast to what he becomes later on in the play. By now it is clear that the play is ...
2289: Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple
... allowed to go off and explore the world around him. He came upon a Pentecostal congregation and joined it is known as the Gospel Tabernacle, here the members “dwelt on the fringes of the community”(crime library). After finding out how interested he was in religion. Jones decided he wanted his own temple a more powerful temple. Jim Jones and The Peoples Temple is a perfect example of a counter culture ... of Henry Holt and company, 1997. 2. Lewis, James R. Cults In America Santa Barbra; ABC-CLIO, Inc. 1998. 3. Staff Investigative Report.” The Assassination of Representative Leo J. Ryan and the Jonestown, Guyana Tragedy.”Crime Labs. http://www.icehouse.net/zodiac/report.html (15 May 1979) Outline 1. Jim Jones start of the temple A. Jim’s birth and parents and travels 1 Jim’s birth 2 Parents Problems 3 ...
2290: Humans And Their Ability To Make Mistakes
... are viewed as the ideal slaves. They work non-stop, never complain, and above all, never make mistakes. It is often said that computers don't make mistakes, that it is the person using the computer who commits errors. What is it that makes humans err, but not computers? I will prove that it is simply the way humans are built that makes us commit errors. Unlike computers, built of mechanical ... will simply mean that a human obtained a result different from the expected, correct one. Whether it in be adding two numbers, or calling someone by the wrong name, these are all errors that a computer would not make. An error can also be interpreted as being a wrong physical move. If a person is walking in the woods and trips on a branch, it is because the person erred in ...


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