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Submitted by Mike on Sat, 12/30/2006 - 8:21am.
I never cared much about Saddam Hussein. He had the same world view as Henry Kissinger, Augusto Pinochet, George Bush, and Dick Cheney - might makes right. In that sense he was delusional.
I seldom think the death penalty is a good idea. If we are called to use it as an end in the justice system, I think I would be less uncomfortable if we administered IV morphine to suppress the breathing until death occurs. There seems to be little question that such a death is among the least painful ways to go. It might take hours and if we want the public viewing of an execution, we need to have it happen quickly - like a hanging, or electrocution, or lethal injection. But I think there is little talk about IV morphine executions for another reason: there is some sense that the suffering death is part of the sentence. Nobody talks about that because it is barbaric, but I am not convinced that a suffering death is not part of the bargain. And watch as the folks with a lot of gusto for death and mayhem jump and down saying - well did Saddam give his victims a humane death? And that's true of course, he did not, but the fact that this question will be brought forward in an almost reflexive reaction to the question of a humane means for applying the death penalty tells you that retribution - a suffering death for the prisoner - is part of this whole process. It might be possible to find a little more of us standing on the middle ground with the death penalty if we would choose a humane death penalty means. I am not sure about that, I might still not feel ok about it, but the retribution aspect of a barbaric, painful, public death puts some me off. I am a believer and part of my belief system is that we will get a life review: did we do something with the gift of life? did we make the best of the spark of life, the miracle of consciousness, the burden of self-awareness? I wish Saddam well with that life review. I think he could have done better. I suspect that all of us can do better than we often do. Today is another day. Maybe we get it right today. Seems like it's off to a bad start with the news of this hanging.
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Happy Birthday Anyway
Submitted by Robert Whitlock on Sat, 12/30/2006 - 8:30am.Robert Fisk: A dictator created then destroyed by America
Consider, on the annual celebration of your birth, focusing on the positive and not dwelling (too much) on the sad events that burden human society these days.
In the Course of Events
Thanks. I have quiet day
Submitted by Mike on Sat, 12/30/2006 - 11:44am.The sub-text to Saddam's hanging after the first trial is that it headed off the second trial about the gassing of the Kurds. I think there is reason to believe that even though it is raised as a justification for his execution and proof of his monstrosity credentials, there is reason to believe that the US provided the chemical support that gave him the poison gas. Of course we probably expected him to use the gas against the Iranians, not the Kurds, and that is only one of the major misdeeds in this guy's life. I think there was no question he was a brute.
Saddam
Submitted by Rob Richards on Sat, 12/30/2006 - 12:00pm.I haven't seen actual footage of the hanging, but I'm sure it'll "leak" soon. I'm surprised FoxNews doesn't have it out already. Not saying I want to see it, the whole thing is a little sad, but I'm surprised it's not out there.
To a worm in horseradish, the world is horseradish.