• Impound4017@sh.itjust.works
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    15 hours ago

    I love this being framed as inhumane as if lethal injection isn’t the most consistently botched method of execution and as if firing squad isn’t by far the most effective and painless. People are shocked by it, and they want to abstract away from the barbarism inherent in the taking of a human life, but no matter the method, the end result is always the same.

    Capital punishment shouldn’t exist in my opinion, not because I have any moral issues with it in principle, but because the burden of proof is simply too high to be met by the legal system as it exists now. Given that it does exist, however, I would personally choose firing squad as my way to go ten times out of ten. Better that than the paralytic working, the anesthetic not working, and feeling lava in your veins for the final minutes of your life as you can’t even scream.

    • Azal@pawb.social
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      5 hours ago

      I could be wrong but I figured the most humane was was an oxygen displacement gas seeing as how quickly a body goes unconcious without o2.

      • Ach@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        An opiate overdose would be the most humane and surefire way. It would make the entire process delightful.

    • panda_abyss@lemmy.ca
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      14 hours ago

      Is firing squad better than hanging?

      My understanding was a well planned hanging is relatively quick and efficient.

      Also, ever since I learned that firing squads mix in empty guns so the petite feel lies guilty I feel weird about it.

      • Impound4017@sh.itjust.works
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        14 hours ago

        Trigger warning: this is about to get fairly gruesome; I’ll be going in depth on botched hangings.

        But short answer: 100%. Hanging can be botched in a variety of ways. More detailed explanation below.

        Tap for spoiler

        The ways that it can go wrong tend to be fairly unpleasant as well. The ideal is that you get the perfect height relative to your weight that it breaks your neck, but if that gets messed up, you’re likely going to end up slowly suffocating instead (too short a drop) or having your head literally pulled straight from your body (too long a drop). There are (potentially apocryphal) accounts of people being hanged who weren’t actually heavy enough for it to effectively suffocate them or break the neck, so others would have to get involved and literally grab them by the legs to pull them down to add more weight. If the noose isn’t tight enough, it could come loose and wrap partially around the face instead, leading to a slow strangulation and/or severe lacerations. Skin can be fully or partially degloved as a consequence as well.

        All in all, if we’re going for classic execution methods, I’m personally going guillotine.

    • osaerisxero@kbin.melroy.org
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      14 hours ago

      I would argue that there are good reasons though, and there should be something on the books for those (hopefully rare, recently less so) cases.

        • Impound4017@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          Hit the nail on the head. I’m not proud to admit that I’m absolutely okay with execution purely for the reason of retribution in the face of truly unforgivable acts (I’m talking the Epsteins of the world; beyond any doubt guilty of years of atrocity). I acknowledge that this isn’t justice, it’s vengeance, but my ape brain admittedly doesn’t really view the two separately - a relic of our evolutionary past, I’m sure.

          However, I absolutely don’t trust the state to be the one setting the requirements for what meets the definition of unforgivable, and I certainly don’t trust them to do their due diligence, so the whole thing has to go. As it stands, capital punishment isn’t about what you did, so much as it is the state proving to you and everyone else that only they have a monopoly on violence. That they can, if they so choose, end your life and nobody can do anything about it. It’s about proving that they, at the end of the day, own you.

        • MrVilliam@sh.itjust.works
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          13 hours ago

          Not OP but thought I’d chime in. I became convinced in the past few years to never be on board with the death penalty, but the past year has me on the fence about very rarely applying it. I think that a public execution could serve as a deterrent, reserved only for those who are very plainly guilty of the very worst atrocities. I mean worse than mass shooters. I’m talking decades of willful societal damage. Mussolini level of horrible. If we could’ve gotten to Hitler before he could kill himself, imagine the public, tortured, slow execution, and really ask yourself how many people would dare to wave a Nazi flag or sieg heil after that.

          Maybe a few of these in the entire world over a century would be enough to prevent every genocide. I’m open to trying. Life in prison allows people to forget, but recorded gruesome executions are seared into memories.

          • Zombiepirate@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            If the death penalty serves as some kind of deterrent, why is murder more prevalent in States where it is performed?

            States that execute people for murder and the highest murder rate per capita by State are almost the same list.

            I think there are other, more significant factors that should be addressed first before we allow the government to kill people (a very, very good many of whom were actually innocent).

  • daannii@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    So here is some info about hangings vs guillotine.

    The only thing I can say about injections are that it’s botched all the time.

    Firing squad seems stupid. Ricochet bullets are a possibility . And it promotes violence and aggression in law enforcement individuals.

    So. Some medical info

  • ccunning@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Whenever I read about the inavailability of lethal injection drugs it reassures me that my anxiety over dying from general anesthesia must by way overblown.

  • Gordon Calhoun@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    I’m generally against execution due to the chance it could be applied to an innocent person, but if it’s going to be a thing, why the fuck can’t it be asphyxiation by nitrogen? The most painless and peaceful way to sleep yourself to death is RIGHT THERE. The body doesn’t even consciously know that it’s dying. The person just blacks out and that’s it.

    Source: Project Hail Mary

    • EdvinYazbekinstein@discuss.tchncs.de
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      12 hours ago

      Alabama executed someone with nitrogen in 2024 (I know other states have as well, but this was the first one I remember reading about), it doesn’t seem as quick and painless as one is lead to believe in writing.

      https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68085513

      A witness told the BBC that Smith thrashed violently on the gurney and the execution took around 25 minutes. … “I’ve been to four previous executions and I’ve never seen a condemned inmate thrash in the way that Kenneth Smith reacted to the nitrogen gas,” Lee Hedgepeth told the BBC’s Newsday programme.

      • Gordon Calhoun@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        Huh, guess I’m wrong. Dangit sci-fi books, you lied to me. I always thought that’s why nitrogen-rich environments were so insidiously dangerous as opposed to CO2-flooded ones, because the body is hardwired to detect and panic in response to CO2 suffocation, but there’s no such innate detection mechanism for low-O2 or high-N2 (or argon or any other inert gas) places.

        25 minutes is pretty amazing for a body to survive in a hypoxic environment. That sounds like it was a horrible experience for everyone. It would seem there’s no good way to die…

    • ExLisper@lemmy.curiana.net
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      12 hours ago

      Didn’t they try that once and the condemned was trying not to breath as long as he could, convulsing, fighting for his life till the last moment? From what I read it wasn’t peaceful at all.