Kdawg2018
Still here...
- Nov 10, 2018
- 272
There is more to this story. He asked a judge to kill him soon because he was ready and they approved it and then didn't do it. So he had to kill himself. I couldn't believe this. I was just watching the part about him being approved by the judge, I couldn't believe it when he ctb. I was pissed originally that a death row inmate could ctb faster and humane and I felt angry I didn't have the same right being a free citizen. But in the end they didn't honor his faster death wish and he took matters into his own hands, just like the rest of us
Well put. Consider for the most part very few people in this country die as peaceful death as lethal injection recipients. The more vocal or seemingly "repressed" portion of the population will have more advocates. By the very nature of suicidal people we've given up on help and don't fight for our own rights. I'm guilty of this to, I've been through enough and it's just to much work, if I have to buy a rope and practice hanging so be it. It's beats the hell out of trying to convince everyone else your sane and this is a logical decision.
Well put. Consider for the most part very few people in this country die as peaceful death as lethal injection recipients. The more vocal or seemingly "repressed" portion of the population will have more advocates.
I'm not sure what you're getting at with this part, but the discussion about how those sentenced to death somehow have it cushy compared to those who wish to ctb has been done on here before, and tbh l really struggle with the idea that those sentenced to death are to be envied due to the assumed peacefulness of their passing.
I think you may have missed what my point was, I do not envy death row inmates but the fact of it is that they have people protesting and putting pressure to ensure they have a peaceful death, suicidal people don't have that benefit. I'm not saying it would be preferable just simply drawing a comparison between how we treat convicted criminal vs. how we deal with mental health.
Yeah, fair enough, but tbh l bristle at any comparison between death penalty and ctb whenever it's drawn on here, principally because I'm very much opposed to the death penalty and see it as a barbaric and ghoulish spectacle. It absolutely stands to reason that there are people who are going to take up a position which ensures state murder is at least delivered humanely imo, whatever their crime these people are paying the ultimate price and are significantly dehumanised in the process. I also don't consider this position to be at all hypocritical; we are all at liberty to take our own lives via a method of our choosing, if the reason why this hasn't occurred is because there aren't enough advocates fighting for peaceful voluntary euthanasia then frankly, the individual isn't ready to ctb, and that is absolutely fair enough.
On your other points we will have to agree to disagree in my view they dehumanized themselves with lack of compassion and moral aptitude that separates us from animals.
Indeed, it does look like we'll have to agree to disagree; but l must take issue with the notion that compassion is an inherently human trait. Man has been killing man since the dawn of time and this has not been bred out of us as a species. Consider how much the USA spends on sophisticated weapons of war compared to how much it devotes to, say, universally free healthcare, for example. Despicable deeds are very much a part of us as a species sadly, and the death penalty is an example of inhumanity rather than a deterrent from it.
What do we do with people who condone and participate in such behavior? When do we hit the point that someone has absolutely no benefit to society or themselves and are frequently incapable of feeling remorse? Of course rehabilitation should always be the first option and should be pursued vigorously. But sometimes it's just a option.
I get that people are often pieces of shit. I even consider that some people may be further beyond redemption than others, though l haven't talked about "rehabilitation", which is way too flexible a word and has many definitions, depending on which politician happens to be using it at the time. I'm just talking about, like, not literally killing people to satisfy vengeful bloodlust and pretending that doing so is somehow of some greater societal benefit in 2019.
Btw, the talk of lethal injection being a nice way to go, which has occasionally been mentioned here, is way wide of the mark. The most "humane" form of execution was the long drop hanging perfected by Pierrepoint in the UK. Absolutely painless, over in a split second, and without the nauseating drama which surrounds US executions. Even then, the UK rightly abolished it in 1965 whilst the US are causing seriously agonising deaths with their lethal injections to this day.