|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
This is an archive site only. It is no longer maintained.
You can not post comments. You can not make an account. Your email
will not be read. Please read this
page if you have questions. |
||||||||||
Not long ago, Timothy McVeigh was executed in the United States as punishment for the worst act of terrorism ever committed on American soil. However, notwithstanding President Bush's absurd claims that the execution allowed the victims' families to "begin the healing process", there is one pressing question that remains unanswered: who did this execution help? The victims are still dead. A martyr has been made. An accomplice may have gone free. And, on Tuesday, June 12, the day after McVeigh's execution, Sarah Kinsey, age 14, died in an Oklahoma City hospital for want of a new liver. |
|||
McVeigh's death and subsequent cremation was not only a misguided act of justice, but also a missed opporunity to save a life. There were 183 executions in the United States in 1999 and 2000, and the vast majority did nothing more productive than temporarily sate the bloodthirsty urges of the citizens of the United States of America. Many of these prisoners had perfectly viable hearts, livers, kidneys, and corneas that could have been used to save or significantly improve the lives of others through the modern miracle of organ transplantation. With demand for organ donors vastly exceeding supply, how many hundreds of lives have been squandered since the United States ended its moratorium on the death penalty in 1976? It has recently been announced that the People's Republic of China has been pioneering the practice of using the organs of the condemned to help the living. For years, with the help of new and innovative execution methods, kidneys, skin, and corneas have successfully been harvested from dead criminals and used to better the lives of those in need. In China, capital punishment is no longer an animal lashing-out against the enemies of society, but a wholesome, constructive act of giving new life. Now that China has demonstrated beyond the shadow of a doubt the feasibility of harvesting organs from condemned criminals, the obvious next step for the United States is to do the same - but passive harvesting is only a start. The United States executed 98 people in 1999. China, with five times the population, executed at least 1,263 prisoners during the same time period, and almost certainly more. That's more than twice as many executions per capita. This remarkable accomplishment, achieved through strict penalties for violent crime, drug trafficking, and government corruption, provides many more organs to those in need, as well as the additional benefits of low rates of criminal behavior and drug abuse (especially compared to certain other nations). There is no reason that the United States cannot step up its death penalty convictions to match Chinese levels and achieve the same benefits -- but this won't happen without your help. Write your elected representatives and let them know what you think about the tremendous waste represented by the death penalty as it is used in the United States today. Inform them that you support capital punishment for drug traffickers, a mandatory death penalty for violent criminals, and research on transplant-friendly means of execution. But please also remember that this is about more than activism and statistics. This is about real people. This is about Timothy McVeigh, about poor Sarah Kinsey, and about how, as different as they were, they shared two things: a time of death -- and a blood type. |