Friday, May 19, 2017

A634.9.4.RB_AReflectionofOurLearning_LouBeldotti

A634.9.4.RB
A Reflection of Our Learning

            This has been the third ethics course that I have taken since pursuing higher education and I must say it has been my favorite.  The previous took courses were more in tune with business but ethics is ethics.

            LaFollete’s (2007) text was very informative.  Everything I read evoked great thought on my part.  It gave me great drive to do addition research. In Part Four: Autonomy, Responsibility, and Risk, LaFollette discusses the death penalty in chapter 11.  What I read truly motivated me to do more research on the Death Penalty.  This was my findings:

RESEARCH

            The Colonies of America from 1608 until 1776 and the United States from 1776 until 2002 have executed 15,269 citizens according to a 32 year study conducted by M. Watt Espy, Jr. and John Ortiz Smykla (Espy & Smykla, 2016).  According to the US Department of Justice (USDOJ), there have been 1,188 executions carried out in the United States from 1977 to 2009 (USDOJ, 2010).

            There have been many methods of execution of the past 400 years.  Some would be considered very inhumane.  The methods have been:

  • Asphyxiation – Gas chamber
  • Bludgeoned/Broken on a wheel
  • Burned
  • Electrocuted
  • Gibbeted
  • Hanged
  • Lethal injection
  • Pressing
  • Shot – Firing squad
(Espy and Smykla, 2016)

            I believe that most would say that being bludgeoned to death, burned, gibbeted, and crushed to death under heavy weight (pressing) are indeed cruel and unusual means of execution.  During my research, I discovered there was only one recorded execution by pressing.  According to Heather Snyder (Snyder, 2001), Giles Corey was executed by pressing in Essex County, Massachusetts on September 18, 1692, accused of witchcraft.   The death penalty is controversial enough – image if these execution methods were still in use today?

            Upon further investigation, I also discovered that execution was most widely used from 1930 – 1939, lethal injection is the most common method used, 20 – 29 is the age range of the majority of executions, there has been 365 females between 1608 and 2002, and there have been 14,753 males executed in that same time frame (Espy & Smykla, 2016).

            I believe the most controversial topic regarding the death penalty if the race of the person executed.  Those against capital punishment make the argument that most people executed are minorities.  Below is the execution demographic of those executed from 1608 – 2002:

Asian               Black               Hispanic                      Native American                     White
147                  7353                    349                                     362                               6344

            Separately, it would seem that white (41.5%) and black (48.2%) people are the largest groups who are executed.  However, when the term minority is used it usually encompasses all persons considered to be a minority.  With the above mentioned examples, it would appear that 8211 (53.8%) minorities were executed and 6344 (41.5%) white were executed. 

            Now let’s look at executions from 1977 to 2009:

Asian               Black               Hispanic                      Native American                     White
   6                   411                     91                                        8                                    672

            Collectively, 516 (43.4%) minorities were executed during this time while 672 (56.6%) white were executed.  There is twenty-two years of overlap but the indication here is that being a minority has nothing to do with who is executed.  I submit that what truly affects these numbers is socio-economics.  I’d elaborate but think that this discussion is for another time (USDOJ, 2010)

            According to the 2010 US Census, there were 223,745,538 white people living in the US while there were 107,013,359 minority people living in the US.  Based on data from 1997 to 2009, less than one percent (0.00048218) of minorities were executed based on their demographic and less than one percent (0.00030034) white were executed based on their demographic (U.S. Census Bureau, 2011).

            But why do people commit capital crimes?  Are the responsible for their crimes if they are young, have learning disabilities, and have diminished mental capacities? What is our responsibility as a society?  Do we consider their upbringing (socio-economics)?  Should the punishment fit the crime?  Who should be put to death and why? 

            A recent case in the state of Florida actually answers many of these questions.  Markeith Lloyd has been charged with the murder of his pregnant ex-girlfriend, Sade Dixon (the un-born child died also) on December 13, 2016 and then murders Orlando Police Department Lieutenant Debra Clayton just 27 days later on January 9, 2017.  In a strange twist, State Attorney, Aramis Ayala, made a public statement stating that she would not be seeking the death penalty in Lloyd’s case.  Her publicly stated reasoning is, "I have given this issue extensive, painstaking thought and consideration.  What has become abundantly clear through this process is that while I currently do have discretion to pursue death sentences, I have determined that doing so is not in the best interests of this community or in the best interests of justice. After careful review and consideration of the new statute, under my administration I will not be seeking the death penalty." (Cordieiro, 2017).  This caused public outrage and Governor Rick Scott removed her from the case and asked for her recusal.  I believe that her statement is based on personal conviction and has nothing to do with justice.

            Lloyd was found fit to stand trial and even requested to represent himself.  He is of an age to be aware of right and wrong.  He does come from an oppressed upbringing.  Being a supporter of capital punishment, he should be put to death.  His crimes were so heinous and done in cold blood that this is the correct course of action.  It isn’t up to the prosecutor to determine his punishment but up to a jury of his peers.

            The next lesson that spoke volumes to me is found in Part Three: Life and Death.  In chapter 9, LaFollette discusses Slippery Slope Arguments.  According to LaFollette (2007, pg. 130), “The moral roads on which we travel are slippery.  Our individual and collective actions inevitably affect others, ourselves, and our institutions.  They shape the people we become and the kind of world we inhabit.  They increase or decrease the likelihood, however slight, that certain futures will occur.  Sometimes those consequences are positive, a giant leap for moral humankind.  Other times they are detrimental or morally regressive.”  Essentially, if you do that then this will happen.  So basically, don’t do that.

            Until I did some research for this discussion, I thought that the term slippery slope stood on its own with a general understanding.  However, according to Logically Fallacious (2017), Slippery Slope is “also known as absurd extrapolation, thin edge of the wedge, camel's nose, domino fallacy.”  If someone had used one of these terms previous to this knowledge, I probably would have had no idea what they were talking about.

            I, for one, do my best to avoid the slippery slope.  However, I see it affect students, every day.  I have kids who violate dress code, attendance, and tardiness habitually.  Once they get into a rhythm, they continue to slide until they reach a point that they are suspended or their grades suffer.  I talk to them until I am blue in the face but they just don’t get it. 

            Finally, Part Six: The Demands on Morality, chapter 18, Egoism: Psychology and Moral really got my brain to bubbling.   According to Stephen O. Sullivan and Philip A. Pecorino (2002), “Ethical egoism is a normative theory.  As previously indicated, it recommends, favors, praises a certain type of action or motivation, and decries another type of motivation. It has two versions: individual ethical egoism and universal ethical egoism. In the first version one ought to look out for one's own interests. I ought to be concerned about others only to the extent that this also contributes to my own interests.  In the second version, everybody ought to act in their own best interest, and they ought to be concerned about others only to the extent that this also contributes to their own interests.”  I believe that egoism goes hand and hand with narcissism.  Self-absorption is another descriptive term for the egotist.  Egoism has no position in the workplace.  It becomes a hindrance and a distraction.  

            Over the course of my 27-year Army career, I met many egotistical people.  These people were so self-centered and self-absorbed.  Always talking about themselves and what they could do for the organization.  When I was promoted to Sergeant First Class and put in-charge of a Recruiting Station I placed a sign on my desk and it read…“Check your ego at the door”.   However, my Recruiters did not always do this.  An example of how ego would get in the way of ethical decision is when a Recruiter is a “Super Star” but suddenly starts failing.  Now the Recruiter starts cutting corners, omitting disqualifying information, and fabricating things to get his or her numbers up to continue appearing as a Super Star.  A tangled web.  A tangled web, indeed.

            In LaFollette’s text (2007, pg. 272), egoism is regarded two ways.  Psychological egoism and ethical egoism.  LaFollette states that psychological egoism “seems to fit ordinary observations about what motivates people…If we reflect on our own lives and the lives of our friends, we are no different.  Doing what we want often makes us happy, while we are usually dissatisfied if we cannot do what we want”.  I see this often and find it to be very selfish.  Not just selfish but juvenile.  I can equate this to children on the playground.  Billy wants to play on the teeter totter but Susy wants to play on the swings.  Billy throws a tantrum to get his way. 

            Although not the polar opposite, ethical egoists are different from their psychological egoist brethren.  According to LaFollette (2007, pg. 281), “An ethical egoist is not an immoralist.  The immoralist says there is no such thing as morality.  Such a view is untenable, for, according to the theory, others would not act wrongly if they killed or assaulted her…The ethical egoist is not vulnerable to such quick dismissals.  She claims there is one moral standard: namely, that each of us should act in ways that maximize our own self-interest.”  It is not wrong if it is important to the individual.  As long as it betters what they wish to attain.  This is similar to the race car driver that notices that his opponent has a bubble in his tire.  The bubble can cause a blow-out and multiple wrecks on the track but gives the ethical egoist an advantage if this happens.  The ethical egoist knows that his opponent probably will not be hurt so it is worth the risk.

            Finally, from my Army experience, I do believe that “rank has its privileges”.  Leaders have climbed the corporate ladder and should receive benefits that others do not.  When I worked for Northrop Grumman, I had a private inner office.  However, my director had a much bigger private outer office with windows.  She had earned her position and was entitled to her office.  This motivated me to want the same thing.  I’m sure that if I hadn’t been laid off, I would have had that window office by now.  I guess I am a bit of an egoist.

References

Espy, M. W. and Smykla, J. O. (2016, December 9). US Executions from 1608 – 2002. Retrieved from http://deathpenalty.procon.org/view.resource.php?resourceID=004087

US Department of Justice (USDOJ) US Bureau of Justice Statistics (USBJS) , "Capital Punishment, 2009 - Statistical Tables - Number of Persons Executed by Race, Hispanic Origin, and Method, 1977-2009," Dec. 2, 2010

LaFollette, H. (2007). The practice of ethics. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing
Snyder, H. (2001, Spring). Giles Corey. Retrieved from http://salem.lib.virginia.edu/people?group.num=&mbio.num=mb6

U.S. Census Bureau. (2011, March). Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010. Retrieved from https://www.census.gov/prod/cen2010/briefs/c2010br-02.pdf

Cordiero, M. (2017, March 13). State Attorney Aramis Ayala won't pursue the death penalty during her term. Retrieved from http://www.orlandoweekly.com/Blogs/archives/2017/03/16/state-attorney-aramis-ayala-wont-pursue-the-death-penalty-during-her-term

Logically Fallacious. (2017). Slippery Slope. Retrieved from https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/tools/lp/Bo/LogicalFallacies/162/Slippery_Slope

Sullivan, S. O. and Pecorino, P. A. (2002). Ethical egoism.  Retrieved from http://www.qcc.cuny.edu/SocialSciences/ppecorino/ETHICS_TEXT/Chapter_5_Teleological_Theories_Egoism/Ethical_Egoism.htm



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