I am against it. Any time the government kills a person or animal, regardless of the person or animal's "guilt", it is really just an animalistic means of releasing anger and getting back at the person for whatever their crime was. Long ago, even in biblical times, people were allowed to be stoned to death for the stupidest shit possible. If we used the death penalty for such crimes as adultery and, well, every other of the ten commandments, then we certainly would not live in a more peaceful society.. we would just live in a far less populated, and more policed one.
The point here is that we may have evolved in language, but we are still a hunter- gatherer society. The problem is, why do we not USE our understanding of our own sociological and anthropological misgivings on crime and punishment, to create a better society? As it stands we have a very neanderthalic Three Strike system, which is much akin to a fire breathing dragon of yore telling the village people that if they try to pummel it's castle (because it did something that scared them, or hurt them somehow) again, they will be more than scorched, they will be burned alive. See that doesn't make sense, because then the village people will again think- well this time, we are not just going to send this dragon away, we are going to kill it. Then you get into a whole big bloodfest, and nobody can win. Instead, all that remains are feelings of hate and aa general state of social unrest overall.
I think the whole damned system is FUBAR. Why the hell anyone could possibly think that killing someone somehow fixes or does some kind of resititution to the family of the murderer's victim, is beyond me. All it really does is cause more feelings of guilt, that people hide deep down inside, knowing full well that if it was wrong to kill one person, then it cannot be right to kill another one, at least not unless it happens during the commission of a crime, in an attempt to stop the criminal.
We have stringent rules about deadly force, which the death chamber happens to BE, and yet we do not seem to have the sensibility to apply that to "sentencing". Reee-tarrr-ded!!!
Guh!!