Killing another seems very unjustifiable, which might be the case but when someone takes another 's life and sent to prison, death row or capital punishment is needed to put that person were they belong. People like that deserve to die because of their mistake of killing another and it deters other people to not kill others, showing them what would happen. In the case of Capital Punishment, Hunting for Sport, or George and Lennie, killing is a justifiable act. In the case of capital punishment killing is justified and needs to be done. For example, “Some crimes are so inherently evil they demand strict penalties up to and including death”(McClatchy). This shows that some crimes are so terrible that the person committing said crimes doesn …show more content…
George 's act of killing Lennie was justified because George didn 't want Lennie to suffer and did what he thought was right. When Candy was talking to George he said this “you don 't know that Curley. Curley gon’ta wanta get’im lynched. Curley’ll get’im killed” (Steinbeck 94). This proves that Candy knows what would happen to Lennie if he was not killed by George and knew that George didn 't want Lennie to die that way. After George kills Lennie Slim says this to George, “ You hadda, George. I swear you hadda. Come with me’ He led George into the entrance of the trail and up toward the highway” (Steinbeck). Slim knew George didn 't want to kill Lennie but it had to end that way so he tried to comfort George. To conclude, killing is justified because it helps more than hurts with the hunting and the death sentence and George was only doing what was right. Criminals are put down and and money keeps going to the conservations do to killing and it is justified do to that reason. Even if killing is wrong with murder but that is a innocent and with no cause and shouldn’t happen these killing are justified. Populations of animals will grow and become better and criminal activity will decrease in the future but it will
In the book, Of Mice and Men, George kills Lennie. But before this happens, Slim encourages George to kill Lennie. He should have not done this. This would be difficult for George to live through because Lennie is George's best friend, mentally disabled, and Georges muscle.
George thought he was doing the right thing by killing Lennie, but he only did it in self-interest. He didn't want to face repercussions or consequences for the things Lennie had done. Even though George says continuously throughout the story that he would look out for Lennie, he still ended up betraying him. George expressed his want to distance himself from Lennies crime after him and Candy found Curley’s wife’s body in the barn on pg. 95 when he states, “O.K. give me a couple of minutes then, and you come runnin’out an’ tell like you jus’ found her.
He decides the best way to ultimately separate each other would be by means of actually killing Lennie. George shoots Lennie in the back of the neck, understanding that this would be the quickest and least painful method as demonstrated earlier with Candy’s dog. Even in his final hour, Lennie’s needs are the most important in George’s point of view. After the incident, Slim attempts to comfort him by saying “‘You hadda, George. I swear you hadda’”
In the novel, Lennie accidentally kills a young woman who is the wife of the boss's son, Curley. Once Curley figures out that Lennie did this he says he’ll shoot him in his guts which is a very painful and slow death. George says that he won’t let anyone hurt him around the same time that Curley said this. Later when Slim, the jerkline skinner, asks George where Lennie would’ve went, he says Lennie would’ve gone South even though he would’ve gone North.
George would protect Lennie at all costs even from himself. After Lennie kills a young woman, George decides it is better for Lennie to be dead rather than to be tortured and kept in a cell or a mental asylum. The decision of killing Lennie hit George like a train, but he knew it was something that was in Lennie’s own good. Knowing he could have an easier life without Lennie, George still kept him around because he needed George and George needed Lennie. George tells Slim “Course Lennie’s a God damn nuisance most of the time, but you get used to goin’ around with a guy an’ you can’t get rid of him.”
He uses Slim to convey his feelings of grim realization. Steinbeck also chooses Slim to convey his feelings of compassion and his viewpoint on Lennie’s death. “Come on George. Me an’ you’ll go in an’ get a drink. You hadda, George.
This quote shows that George loved Lennie, so he helped him escape from Weed. George hid with Lennie for a day in a irrigation ditch, this shows the devotion George has for Lennie. Others may think that George only did this to save himself, and that he doesn’t care about Lennie. However, this quote show the love George has for his friend, Lennie. “He been doin’ nice thing for you alla time.
“Lennie said, “George.” “Yeah?” “Ain’t you gonna give me hell?” “Give ya hell?” “Sure, like you always done before.
Some people might think in the opposite side that George should not killed Lennie because Lennie did not mean to anything. He has done it without knowing how strong of himself. Lennie made many troubles this might be because of his disability, but this is the reason that he deserves to live. He has done many thing that make George get into trouble and It is better if Lennie has to die because of George shoot him not the other. "All the time he coulda had such a good time if it was not for you” (Steinbeck).
In the novella, Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, George’s decision to kill Lennie at the end of the novel was justified. George and Lennie were best friends, and have been since they were little. They got ran out of Weed(the old farm they used to work at) for harassing a girl and not letting her go. He was just scared from her screaming and kicking. He didn’t mean to harm, or scare her.
Another reason is the ranchers would’ve killed him no matter what so this way George ensured it was fast and painless. On the other hand, this was condemned because George had been saying how his life would be so much better without Lennie and this allowed him to be able to live that life. George's decision to kill Lennie was justified because Lennie was going to be killed no matter what. After all of the ranchers find out that Lennie killed Curley’s wife, Curley states that he is going to kill Lennie, "I'm gonna get him.
It is clear that George did not have the right to end Lennie 's life in such a selfish way. George always talks to Lennie about how fabulous they are when they are together at their own ranch and from day to day I end up with their life in a very cruel way. In conclusion, it can be said that George 's reasons for ending George 's life were enough to do so since Lennie was a very dependent person and could not stand alone. George tried to help him at all times as far as he could, but still Lennie was still in serious trouble, that 's precisely the reason why George wanted to prevent Lennie suffering in the future because he realized that he could not live alone.
George’s decision to kill Lennie was ultimately for his benefit. “The hand shook violently, but his (George) face set and his hand steadied. He pulled the trigger” (Steinbeck 106). The quote which states how Lennie dies also shows that George was nervous and hesitant in killing Lennie. Scarseth explains in the article, “Friendship.
Why death penalty must end ‘’An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind,’’ said Mahatma Gandhi. The execution of someone who has possibly done a crime is an inhuman act. Death penalty is hypocritical and flawed. If killing is wrong, why do we kill when a criminal has done the crime of killing someone? In this essay, I will write why death penalty should end by writing about the violation of human rights, execution of innocent people, the fact that it does not deter crime and money.
Death Penalty According to the 2010 Gallup Poll, 64% of the United State of America are supporting the death penalty, I as an American am part of that 36% that is against it. I do not believe that we as human being should determine whether another person should live or die. A second reason that I am against the death penalty is for the reason that the accused person could be innocent and normally the accused person only has one court presentation and is only judged by the judge not a jury of their peer, and is sent to death row where they pay for a crime that they haven’t done. My final reason that i do not believe that the death penalty should count as a punishment for the American people is because, a person that has done a massive massacre shouldn’t just be able to leave the world just like that without paying and suffering for what they have done, Or should the death punishment continue as it is for it has a great benefit to us as citizens of the United States.