A thirty-three year old white male kidnaps and rapes two unsuspecting sisters, one ten years old and the other thirteen. The man then brutally murders the two sisters, letting one watch as the other one was killed. The man leaves the bloody and beaten girls dead on their front porch for their parents to find. Does this man deserve to die? In this case capital punishment would serve its purpose in getting justice for his crime. So is Capital Punishment a solution for our crime-ridden country? Capital punishment is a controversial topic, but it is an effective punishment for serious crimes.Death Penalty opponents routinely remind us that killing a murderer will not bring his victims back to life. According to Jeff Jacoby from the Jewish World View, the purpose of Capital Punishment is not to undo the crime but to serve justice to the victims family (paragraph 8). The families of the victims do not stop mourning when the killer is executed, but there is a relief in knowing that the killer who destroyed their loved ones will never kill again (paragraph 9). Supporters can argue that the death penalty is a suitable and necessary form of retribution for the serious crimes committed in our country. Opponents complain that Capital Punishment is racist because they believe that blacks are more likely than whites to be sentenced to death. According to the Anti-Capital Punishment Death Penalty Information Center, the U.S. population is made up of twelve percent of blacks, but account for more than forty percent of prison inmates. In accordance with FBI statistics, blacks are seven times more likely to commit murder than whites. Since 1976 blacks have made up thirty-six percent of executions, while whites have made up fifty-five percent. Statistics prove there is no evidence of racism when violent criminals are given the death penalty (Bronson, paragraph 6).According to Michael Bradburys article, The Death Penalty Is an Affirmation of the Sanctit...