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1 Congressional Record: Extension of Remarks, March 14, 1974 E 1387 (1974)

handle is hein.death/corc0001 and id is 1 raw text is: March 14, 1974

CATTLEMEN LOSING MONEY              men would have been better off if we had
never tried to control the price; if we
HON. JAMES M. COLLINS              would have let them continue all last
summer to place the cattle in the market
OF TEXAS .in an orderly manner, we would have
1N THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES       been able to maintain a more orderly
Wednesday, March 13, 1974         price ratio in the market. I am hoping
mr. COLLINS of Texas. Mr. Speaker, that the law of supply and demand will
r aencourage greater agricultural produc-
a year ago the newspapers and television  tion, so that the price of feeds will drop
wvere crowded with the news that the back to a lower, more balanced ratio.
cost of meat was pretty high. Ladies were
striking at the grocery stores. Everyone  Price control will never work. The
was complaining about it.               cause of inflation in this country is the
Now the shoe is on the other foot and  fact that we have excessive Government
the cattlemen are losing Mfoney raising  spending in Washington. The first term
beef. I was not aware of this situation  that Lyndon Johnson was President, his
as I do not have a cattle rancher in my  budget was $100 billion. Ten years later,
district and it is not publicized in the  this Congress is discussing a $304 billion
news.                                   budget. As long as Congress continues to
Last week I was talking to a rancher  overspend and to go in for excessive Gov-
and he told me about the poor financial ernment spending, we are leading this
condition that they are now in. Yester-  country into excessive inflation. We must
day, buried over in the middle of the  balance the budget and we must reduce
third section of the newspaper, I saw an-  excess.ivp1- ral spending.
other story that got more specific about
it.
In August of 1973, live cattle soared        THIS LIFE WE TAKE
record levels, with choice steer reachin.     THI.  LFE.E.      AK
a peak of $58 per hundred pounds. Thi..
same type of beef steer sold this week for,   HON. VANCE HARTKE
$41 to $42 per hundred pounds. This is0     .        OF INDIANA
a good drop in price, but where the cattle  N THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
feeders are getting caught in the middle     Wednesday, March 13, 1974
is the fact that the price of corn has gone
skyrocketing. Corn is now moving at $3   Mr. HARTKE. Mr. President, the
a bushel, and this means that feeding  Friends Committee on Legislation pub-
cattle represents a tremendous loss. I  lished an article entitled This Life We
read of an example where a man and      Take by Trevor Thomas which is a case
wife, with no hired labor, ran a 274-acre  against the death penalty. While the
farm. They are raising 300 cattle per  Senate debates the question whether to
year. Under today's present cost of feed-  reimpose the death penalty in the United
ing cattle, they are losing $114 a head. States in certain circumstances, we must
This means they are losing over $34,000  be ever cognizant of the right to life.
this year, and for a small operator, that  The interest in which this distin-
would take him completely out of the   guished body must consider whether to
market,                                take the life of another voluntarily must
When we are quick to criticize a cattle  be with an eye on the direction of civil-
rancher, we do not always stop to realize  ization. Let us all lend our support to the
that he is also caught in the middle of direction which will lead men from vio-
inflation. If lie is feeding cattle to round  lence.
them out, he must be buying a lot of corn.  I ask unanimous consent to have the
When he is paying $3 a bushel for corn, article by Mr. Thomas printed in the
it is going to cost him more per pound. Extensions of Remarks.
With the natural law of economics gov-   There being no objection, the article
erning supply and demand, the excess   was ordered to be printed in the RECORD,
cattle that are now available have forced  as follows:
the market price down.                  THIS LIFE WE TAKE-A CASE AGAINST THE
As this cycle gradually eases out we             DEATH PENALTY
will see higher beef prices, because the         (By Trevor Thomas)
inevitable inflationary influences will  (Published by the Friends Committee on
take place. An interesting phase of this             Leiso
development is the fact that we tried to             Legislation)
control the prices of beef. Control did not
work for oil, gas, or  Ernest Gowers, Chairman of the British
work, as it will not wg                 Roya Commission on Capital Punishment:
for any other conlmodity. The other      Before serving on the Royal Commission,
interesting feature is that, although cat-  I. like most other people, had given no great
tlemen were severely criticized only 7  thought to this problem. If I had been asked
months ago as being big profiteers. they  for my opinion, I should probably have said
are now, in this very short time, losing  that I was in favor of the death penalty,
more than they made last year. I have  and disposed to regard abolitionists as peo-
not heard any newslnan come forward    ple whose hearts were bigger than their
heads. Four years of close study of the sub-
and express sorrow or regret at tile   ject gradually dispelled that feeling. In the
tremendous losses that the cattlemen are  end I became convinced that the abolition-
now taking.                            ists were right in their conclusions though I
It is another example of the fact that could not agree with all their arguments
price controls will not work. The cattle-

The only moral ground on which the
State could conceivably possess the right to
destroy human life would be if this were in-
dispensable for the protection or preserva-
tion of other lives. This places the burden
of proof on those who believe that capital
pnuhhment exercises a deterrent effect on
the potential criminal. Unless they can es-
tablish that the death penalty does, in fact,
protect other lives at the expense of one,
there is no moral justification for the Stat.e
to 'take life'.
Rev. Dana McLean Grefley, Rabbi Roland
B. Gittelsohn, Rt. Rev. Monsignor Thomas
J. Riley. Members of the subcommittee of
the Massachusetts Commission to Investigate
the Advisability of Abolishing Capital Pun-
ishment.
The man sits in a cage of steel and con-
crete under a single bright light that burns
around the clock. lie has been tried by a
jury of his peers, judged and sentenced to
die. He has killed and now society, through
the anonymous machinery of the state, will
kill him. He has been brought here to keep
that appointment with death.
Two guards will watch him this last night
so that he can do no violence to himself.
Before setting down for the long night, they
offer tobacco and a variety of food for the
last hearty meal.
After an eternity of night they see the
beginning of a new day and a last break-
fast. There will be no reprieve. The time of
death, so impossible, so unimaginable, has
come. Now the warden and' the captain of
the guards move down the long corridor
toward the cell. A physician harnesses a
stethoscope across his chest, its black tube
dangling like an obscene umbilical cord.
Shoeless, he   walks--or  is carried  or
dragged-between two guards through the
green door of the octagon chamber. Inside
he is strapped to a metal chair first around
the chest, then the stomach and each arm
and leg. A guard connects the black tube.
Outside, the physician adjusts the stetho-
scope to his ears. Twelve witnesses of the
people, as required by law, watch through
thick glass windows.
.Each step of the ritual is checked and
checked again. The last guard steps from
the chamber and seals the door. The execu-
tioner makes his motions, inside liquid acid
gurgles into a well beneath the-chair. A bag
of cyanide eggs is immersed in the acid. The
combination produces deadly hydrocyanic
acid gas, sweet-smelling like peach blossoms.
The man in the metal chair gasps and
throws his weight against the straps in a
final convulsive bid for life. Minutes pass.
The head snaps back, then slumps forward.
The physician hears the pounding, straining
heart hesitate, become faint and then stop.
He notes the official time on the appropriate
charts. The man is pronounced dead.
In California, death is by gas. In Massa-
chusetts, New Jersey and Tennessee the con-
demned die by electrocution. New Hampshire,
Kansas, and Washington hang toe prisoner
by the neck until dead. In Utah he may be
shot or hanged. From 1930 through 1969,
nearly four thousand men and women were
legally executed in the United States.
Why? For many the answer is obvious-
to protect the rest of us, or to serve as a
warning and prevent repetition of the crime.
Others argue in the name of justice, or re-
venge.
Then why have some states and not others
outlawed capital punishment? Does the de-
struction of an occasional criminal protect
any of us? Is the penalty a just one? If it is
evil for us to take life as individuals, do we
compound that evil by killing in the name
of the state?

CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- Extensions of Remarks
EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS

E 1387

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