I have no problem with the destruction of creatures who have been proven to be inhuman. I could do it and I would sleep very well that night. I do have a big problem of giving such enormous power to the state. It is tantamount to giving up our arms. Like the libertarian presidential candidate said, "the time for the death penalty is 3:00 am at the atm".
Governments have a long history of abusing the death penalty. The government of Kampuchea perpetrated a genocide legally with their judicial system. All recipiants of the death penalty were tried and found guilty. All trials and executions were meticulously documented by government beaurocracy. No attempt was made to cover anything up, quite the opposite.
Obviously I'm not comparing our current government to the kmer rouge. But you must see that the death penalty is a tool of power too enormous to be entrusted to those who make the laws. It is an issue pertinent to the peoples freedom, of as much relevance as the right to keep arms since it really is the same principal.
I don't need to list the long number of governments who have used judicial execution as a tool to maintain power.
Now when you consider this countries frigtening trend of profiting from, and integrating into the economy, criminal activity. The prospect becomes more alarming.
The state profits from the drug trade, the state profits from human trafficking, the state profits from the penal system. Now we live in a country where 1% of the population is in prison. Anyway you slice it, there is something wrong with a country that has 1% of it's people in prison.
The war on drugs and the war on illegal immigrants is not going to go away. Quite the contrary, you will see government expansion with the pretext of combating drugs and illegals. It is not in the governments interest to win the war on drugs or illegal immigration.
And now it appears the government has noticed the growth potential of the economy of the penal system.
What happens when countries profit from criminal activity? Let's use the USSR for an example. Prisoners contributed to the economy, so what happened? They began a process of criminalization of the public to the point where basically they could imprison any given person for infractions of an ambigous and abitrary legal code.