The introduction of the death penalty is a positive punishment. In a sense, a person convicted has never committed another crime, that is, a murder. As opposed to it, as a human being, we support the assertion that we should not be responsible for judging who should die or should not. This argument is supported for moral reasons, whether religious or moral. Another argument against it is that the criminals facing the death penalty did not prevent them from continuing the murder.
In the 19th century debate on the death penalty, the religious debate of competition filled with the broad interpretation of various Bible texts is very common. Christian warnings are said to have been made for individuals, not countries. If individuals must comply with Christian rules, society will be affected equally as well.
Discussion about the death penalty is shaken among strengths and weaknesses, but the main problem is usually based on practicality: is the execution of criminals the best way to protect society? Is the death penalty fair? Is the death penalty effective for suppressing crime? Many of today's killers are professional criminals whose victims were killed by hijacking, robbery, or other profit-oriented crime. Therefore, many murderers do not kill people for revenge, and they are not malignant for individuals they kill them. Instead, they killed the calculation of cold blood. Protecting your society should make it impossible for these people to kill again.
Mass-public debate over whether to resume capital punishment is intensifying. Proponents arguing this argued that this is an effective deterrent against homicide. However, most studies in Western society conclude that the rate of murder remains steady or decreasing while reducing the use of the death penalty. Abolition and reintroduction of the death penalty did not have a significant effect on the murder rate. In the poll conducted in 2013, 63% of Canadians support the recovery of torture and 30% oppose it. Manitoba and Saskatchewan have the highest support rate (75%), Quebec's lowest approval rating (36% of respondents oppose recovery)