Goethestein posted:the state should be allowed to murder its own citizens assuming that those citizens can be reasonably proven to have done something deserving it
In which the state is the one which reasonably proves to itself they deserve it. Great thinking.
Goethestein posted:actually, what constitutes "deserving it" is decided by society and morality. the state merely attempts to prove that the person is guilty
agreed, sentencing should be decided by an American Idol style phone poll
Goethestein posted:actually, what constitutes "deserving it" is decided by society and morality. the state merely attempts to prove that the person is guilty
I mean if we're living in Candy Land, sure. But in real united states world morality is decided by the state and distributed to the people, and "society" is just the sick LARPing adventures of mindless slaves play-acting the roles the government has demanded of them.
Goethestein posted:morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
Oh yeah? Then where does it come from?
gyrofry posted:steven spielberg
Statist propagandist if there ever was one.
Goethestein posted:morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
no it was decided by a variety of European states throughout history.
Paradol posted:Goethestein posted:morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
Oh yeah? Then where does it come from?
public consensus
Goethestein posted:Paradol posted:Goethestein posted:morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
Oh yeah? Then where does it come from?
public consensus
Well, that's adorable.
Goethestein posted:Paradol posted:
Goethestein posted:
morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
Oh yeah? Then where does it come from?
public consensus
how is this consensus interpreted and codified
Goethestein posted:just a reminder that of the hundreds of people executed over the last, say, two decades, not one of them has been demonstrated to be innocent! what good odds
what about osama bin laden
Ironicwarcriminal posted:Goethestein posted:Paradol posted:
Goethestein posted:
morality isnt decided by the state in the usa
Oh yeah? Then where does it come from?
public consensushow is this consensus interpreted and codified
How demmocracy formed. How country get governmant
deadken posted:the death penalty is fine but the way its carried out in 'civilised' nations is repulsive. they sterilise the needle before lethal injections, they carry them out in antiseptic white rooms, it's utterly obscene. if you are going to kill a man, kill a man; shoot him in the heart. don't turn death into a medical procedure. bring back hanging.
i, too, am deeply concerned about the aesthetics of execution
nah, the current ways are plenty brutal, often enough:
http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/some-examples-post-furman-botched-executions
deadken posted:however prolonged or brutal an execution, the man dies at the end. dead men don't care. the aesthetics of the thing remains
Sept. 15, 2009. Ohio. Romell Broom. Lethal Injection. Efforts to find a suitable vein and to execute Mr. Broom were terminated after more than two hours when the executioners were unable to find a useable vein in Mr. Broom’s arms or legs. During the failed efforts, Mr. Broom winced and grimaced with pain. After the first hour’s lack of success, on several occasions Broom tried to help the executioners find a good vein. “At one point, he covered his face with both hands and appeared to be sobbing, his stomach heaving. Finally, Ohio Governor Ted Strickland ordered the execution to stop, and announced plans to attempt the execution anew after a one-week delay so that physicians could be consulted for advice on how the man could be killed more efficiently. The executioners blamed the problems on Mr. Broom’s history of intravenous drug use. As of Oct. 1, 2010, Mr. Broom remained on Ohio’s death row.
VoxNihili posted:deadken posted:however prolonged or brutal an execution, the man dies at the end. dead men don't care. the aesthetics of the thing remains
Sept. 15, 2009. Ohio. Romell Broom. Lethal Injection. Efforts to find a suitable vein and to execute Mr. Broom were terminated after more than two hours when the executioners were unable to find a useable vein in Mr. Broom’s arms or legs. During the failed efforts, Mr. Broom winced and grimaced with pain. After the first hour’s lack of success, on several occasions Broom tried to help the executioners find a good vein. “At one point, he covered his face with both hands and appeared to be sobbing, his stomach heaving. Finally, Ohio Governor Ted Strickland ordered the execution to stop, and announced plans to attempt the execution anew after a one-week delay so that physicians could be consulted for advice on how the man could be killed more efficiently. The executioners blamed the problems on Mr. Broom’s history of intravenous drug use. As of Oct. 1, 2010, Mr. Broom remained on Ohio’s death row.
the fact that nobody during those two hours could have shot mr broom through his head and ended his suffering is proof of how criminally dissolute & anaesthetic contemporary society has become. mr broom lol
Goethestein posted:
deadken posted:what does 502 bad gateway mean. surely as the gateway is a mechanism for the control of flows the designation 'bad' needs to be problematised, spatialised, historicised.... bad for whom? a gateway that is entirely open signals an illusory disinhibition while continuing to insist on a distinction between Inside and Outside, it is a laceration in the fragile membrane of the State that by its openness only reinforces its autonomy.... or, taking the opposite example, a gateway entirely closed projects a metaphysical openness that, while failing to be re-presented in actuality, nonetheless expresses a hauntological trace of the open gate, a locus for the formation of radical critiques..... we must pay especial atention to the language of error and transgression, because it is when the forums are down that their true nature is revealed. goey pls institute a programme of deconstructive web coding. ty
deadken posted:
about two years back some Utah guy on death row insisted through a few legal manoeuvres and loopholes to get the firing squad which was pretty cool
Belarus still does the old school shot to the back of the head
the true test of a society is how it kills its criminals. to not do it all is kinda symptomatic of the metamodern age's really weird neuroses about mortality but to medicalise the procedure shows a remarkable lack of respect for both life and death imo
deadken posted:yeah i remember reading about that, and how angsty everyone got about having to give the man a dignified death instead of strapping him to an antiseptic table and having a doctor give him an injection to turn his veins into plasticine or w/e.
the true test of a society is how it kills its criminals. to not do it all is kinda symptomatic of the metamodern age's really weird neuroses about mortality but to medicalise the procedure shows a remarkable lack of respect for both life and death imo
Watch into the abyss if you haven’t already. The interview the former executioner in particular is intense
Ironicwarcriminal posted:i watched Rules of Engagement recently and was gobsmacked. Waco is one of those things from the hazy memories of my early childhood and i had no idea about the sheer malevolence of the government's actions
(watched RoE last nite; shocking stuff)
deadken posted:VoxNihili posted:deadken posted:however prolonged or brutal an execution, the man dies at the end. dead men don't care. the aesthetics of the thing remains
Sept. 15, 2009. Ohio. Romell Broom. Lethal Injection. Efforts to find a suitable vein and to execute Mr. Broom were terminated after more than two hours when the executioners were unable to find a useable vein in Mr. Broom’s arms or legs. During the failed efforts, Mr. Broom winced and grimaced with pain. After the first hour’s lack of success, on several occasions Broom tried to help the executioners find a good vein. “At one point, he covered his face with both hands and appeared to be sobbing, his stomach heaving. Finally, Ohio Governor Ted Strickland ordered the execution to stop, and announced plans to attempt the execution anew after a one-week delay so that physicians could be consulted for advice on how the man could be killed more efficiently. The executioners blamed the problems on Mr. Broom’s history of intravenous drug use. As of Oct. 1, 2010, Mr. Broom remained on Ohio’s death row.
the fact that nobody during those two hours could have shot mr broom through his head and ended his suffering is proof of how criminally dissolute & anaesthetic contemporary society has become. mr broom lol
you are coming at it backwards. it is now all about the aesthetic of the narrative. our culture can't act very rationally or ethically about capital punishment (or much else) because it is mesmerized by the aesthetic purity of the tragedies and comedies and parables and metaphors the current system generates. we see that they're so appropriate to the system, the endemic problems, they are representative of larger trends, mirrors to society, and all that shit, and we think we can perceive the whole majesty through the lens of Mr. Broom, and its just all.. so... poignant.....
- hanging
- shooting (firing squad or pistol to back of head)
- guillotine
- Spanish garrote
- electric chair
- nitrogen chamber (doesn't cause convulsions like cyanide u just go to sleep)
- breaking on the wheel
- that thing with the flies and the milk and the honey
- gladiatorial combat
- ejection into the vacuum of space
- death by mau mau