Essay sample library > In Defense of Flogging, by Peter Moskos

In Defense of Flogging, by Peter Moskos

2023-11-28 16:29:07

What is the best way to punish people? For centuries, humans have been searching for ways to criticize criminals. As seed, we allow you to develop punishment with us. From sanitary punishment or from what one might call whaling to imprisonment, humans were looking for the most effective way to punish people. Over time, imprisonment has become the mainstay of all our crimes and violations. With this in mind, many writers have argued that they will review the corporal punishment.

Peter Moss's new book "Preventing Whipping" has been discussed by many people in the past few weeks. Basically, Moscow asks the reader to think whether the whip is more inhumane than the present barbaric situation of our imprisoned people. America (especially those detained for nonviolent crime) Moscows believes that choosing a time to accept a whiplash or to spend in prison for a person committing a crime is actually more humanitarian It is. You should read this book yourself to learn more about Moskos' paper. I am reading this book this week, but I have not finished it yet. This gives me a lot of thinking about food, this is for sure

At the same time, Peter Moss's "defense abortion" believes that the system to replace the prison with a whip is more efficient, compassionate and effective than the current one blocked for decades with nonviolence . Like a criminal Drucker, his book relies on an extended analogy that is hard to expand in summary form. Law professor in Moscow (and not by chance, but formerly Baltimore police) means his "whipping case" - he thinks the system is much more rotten than collecting cats That's it. He really did not want to whip the prisoner's evil. He wants to get rid of the indifference of the rest of us.

You may think about it, but Moscow does not include whipping as part of the 'increasingly demanding criminal' campaign. Indeed, Moscow teaching at the John Jay Criminal Justice School does not think that the justice system is too weak for criminals, but vice versa. Therefore, before I condemn him to advertise cruel and unusual form of punishment to him, he reminds me that 2.3 million prisoners in the United States are being held by barbarians. American prisons are rough, violent and sexually assaulted