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Life & Mortality Quote by Janet Reno

"I was personally opposed to the death penalty, and yet I think I have probably asked for the death penalty more than most people in the United States"

About this Quote

Reno’s line lands like a confession and a dare: the kind of moral paradox only government power can manufacture. She stages a collision between private conscience ("personally opposed") and public obligation ("asked for" it), then spikes it with the blunt comparative "more than most people". That last clause is doing heavy cultural work. It rebukes the easy virtue of armchair abolitionism while admitting the uniquely compromising nature of institutional responsibility. If you want to judge, she implies, first take the job.

The intent is less to excuse than to expose. Reno isn’t claiming inconsistency; she’s naming the cost of serving a system that demands certainty, closure, and punishment even from those who doubt it. The subtext is prosecutorial: in an adversarial framework, the state’s representative doesn’t get to act only on personal ethics. You act on statutes, precedent, victims’ families, political pressure, and the fear of seeming "soft". Reno’s phrasing makes that machinery audible.

Context matters: as U.S. Attorney General in the 1990s, Reno operated in a peak tough-on-crime era, when the 1994 crime bill and a broad public appetite for harsh sentencing narrowed the space for moral hesitation. Her statement also anticipates the cynical reality that capital punishment isn’t just a philosophical debate; it’s a lever of bargaining, signaling, and institutional loyalty. The quote works because it refuses purity and forces the listener to sit with an uncomfortable question: if even the reluctant end up pulling the lever, what does that say about the lever itself?

Quote Details

TopicJustice
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Reno, Janet. (2026, January 16). I was personally opposed to the death penalty, and yet I think I have probably asked for the death penalty more than most people in the United States. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-was-personally-opposed-to-the-death-penalty-and-113064/

Chicago Style
Reno, Janet. "I was personally opposed to the death penalty, and yet I think I have probably asked for the death penalty more than most people in the United States." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-was-personally-opposed-to-the-death-penalty-and-113064/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I was personally opposed to the death penalty, and yet I think I have probably asked for the death penalty more than most people in the United States." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-was-personally-opposed-to-the-death-penalty-and-113064/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Janet Add to List
Janet Reno on Personal Opposition and Requests for Death Penalty
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About the Author

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Janet Reno (July 21, 1938 - November 7, 2016) was a Public Servant from USA.

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