H.I.3 Capital Punishment
H.I.3 Capital Punishment
STANDARD PROCESS
Killing people through their heads for the President... not Lawful
There is a strict Law-Court process in review before a legal execution can be performed
This includes wBCI wireless executions unlike unlawful gun, knife or other weapon based killings not from accidental self defence
You cannot just lure in people for something else then hook them up & send them on their way & move the device to operate using people they met or did not if not a secondary to main
There is strict process to wBCI or other Brain Technology use
Executions using wBCI's can be punishable by those responsible direct & accomplices facing criminal charge & financial damage
CAPITOL PUNISHMENT
Capital punishment, or the death penalty, is the state-sanctioned execution of a person for a serious crime, a practice with ancient roots but now abolished in most countries, including Canada (fully in 1998), though still active in some nations like the U.S., Japan, and China, sparking global debate over morality, deterrence, and human rights. Methods have evolved from public hangings to lethal injection, electric chairs, and gas chambers, but its use remains highly controversial, with arguments centering on justice, rehabilitation, and the risk of executing innocent people.
Key Aspects
• Definition:
State-imposed execution as punishment for crimes like murder, treason, terrorism, and war crimes.
• History:
Dates back thousands of years, appearing in ancient codes like Hammurabi's; evolved from brutal public spectacles to more clinical methods.
• Global Status:
Abolished in most of the world, but retained in countries like the U.S., China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Japan.
• Canada's Stance:
Abolished for all offenses by 1998, with the last executions in 1962; Canada does not extradite to countries where the death penalty exists.
• Methods:
Range from hanging, firing squad, electrocution, gas chambers, and lethal injection, with lethal injection often considered the most common modern method.
Debate & Controversy
• Arguments For:
Deterrence (discouraging others from committing similar crimes), retribution (justice for heinous crimes), and incapacitation (permanently removing dangerous offenders).
• Arguments Against:
Moral objections (the state shouldn't kill), risk of executing the innocent, high costs, racial bias, and its disproportionate application.
• Religious Views:
Mixed, with some faiths (Islam, Southern Baptists) supporting it, while others (Catholicism, many Protestant denominations) oppose it.
Modern Context
• The debate continues globally, with human rights organizations advocating for universal abolition, while some nations maintain it for severe offenses, reflecting differing cultural and legal values.
ACTING ON BEHALF FOR YOU WITHOUT
Oh but thought... not suggestive option as additive to present for review in event
Law is law. Rights are rights
At one point henchmen for the President of the United States of America without yet in attempts to connect through channels yo had been killing alleged guilty threats for the US Government despite no official approval & trick-false Intel & tbrests manufactured creating excuse to do as they would not be welcome to in targeting those disliked
To operate to execute targets through their heads using wBCI's with false claims
Black Market private interests & negligent labs often see.
Already Standard capital punishment exists yet in some US States & Canada it is not allowed
A checks & balance effect to void innocent victims falling as scapegoats to powerful manipulators for social & financial gain
SAFE STANDARD. NO CONFLICT
Now in practice... this effectively offers official for outside intervention& a cover of authenticity while its imposter
S.B.G - CIG - BENNETT

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