Alabama is seeking to become the first state to execute a prisoner by making him breathe pure nitrogen.

The Alabama attorney general’s office on Friday asked the state Supreme Court to set an execution date for death row inmate Kenneth Eugene Smith, 58. The court filing indicated Alabama plans to put him to death by nitrogen hypoxia, an execution method that is authorized in three states but has never been used.

Nitrogen hypoxia is caused by forcing the inmate to breathe only nitrogen, depriving them of oxygen and causing them to die. Nitrogen makes up 78% of the air inhaled by humans and is harmless when inhaled with oxygen. While proponents of the new method have theorized it would be painless, opponents have likened it to human experimentation.

  • @flossdaily@lemmy.world
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    21910 months ago

    That’s a pretty good way to go, apparently.

    But there have been an absolutely breathtaking number of death row cases that have been overturned due to new evidence that had exonerated the condemned.

    It seems pretty clear that the state is doing a very crappy job of determining guilt, and therefore shouldn’t be handing down such a permanent sentence.

    • @madcaesar@lemmy.world
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      4210 months ago

      I used to fully pro death penalty, especially for some of the sick fucks…

      But then I learned about all the false convictions, some COERCED by the fucking police, and since then I’m 100% against the death penalty.

      The satisfaction I get from a heinous killer getting killed, does not outweigh the horror I feel for even one innocent life being taken by the state.

      • @insomniac@sh.itjust.works
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        2110 months ago

        It’s also cheaper to keep people in jail forever than put them to death because of all the appeals. And despite being more careful, we still get it wrong.

        • @Agent_of_Kayos@lemm.ee
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          10 months ago

          Also, in my mind, death is a release. Keep those fuckers stuck in their filty meat suits while they rot in prison for the rest of their lives with no hope for escape. The especially heinous ones will get extra comeuppance from the other inmates

    • @TenderfootGungi@lemmy.world
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      910 months ago

      This is what changed my mind on the death penalty. I have no problem putting a murderer or pedo to death, but we keep freeing people when new evidence is found that proves their innocents. Until we can get it right 100% of the time, we should just lock them up until death.

    • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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      510 months ago

      Yeah this is one reason why I generally don’t support the death penalty. There’s no way to undo it. At least if evidence exonerates someone 50 years later, they’re still alive.

    • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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      -110 months ago

      I would argue that we need the death penalty as a way to protect society from the absolutely most dangerous criminals but it’s very frequently misapplied. I would say, for instance, that people that are serial killers, or serial rapists (or serial child molesters), people for whom there is no significant doubt that they’re guilty, and people that will reoffend if they ever manage to get out of prison, should be executed. A simple murder for hire, or a robbery? No. Ed Kemper? Absolutely.

      I think that even life sentences with no parole are overused; most people can be rehabilitated and returned to society safely, if we were willing to dramatically overhaul our criminal justice system to not be based on punishment and retribution. (But if we did that, then how would we get free prison labor…? /s)

      • https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_by_country

        All of western Europe has abolished the death oenalty completely. Many of these are countries with very low rates of serious crime.

        Meanwhile countries with the death penalty, but usually also very long prison sentences and high rates of incarcerations like the US are pretty bad with crime.

        It is impossible to justifiy the death penalty empirically. The statistics actually indicate that the death penalty is linked to more crime.

        Also the problem is, that clear cut beyond a doubt is what every judge who sentences someone to death, will claim about the case. Yet there is hundreds of cases in the US alone, where people were later exonerated. Some only after they have been murdered by the state already. There is nothing to gain, but a lot to loose with an execution. It cannot be overruled anymore.

        • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          110 months ago

          The statistics actually indicate that the death penalty is linked to more crime.

          Correlation =/= causation. C’mon, you know better than this. It’s more probable that they have lower crime to begin with. Serial killers are not uniquely American by any stretch of the imagination, but they are quite uncommon relative to the population in other developed countries.

          Read what I wrote again. I’m advocating for the death penalty in very, very limited cases, where there is no significant doubt at all, where there is no reasonable or even unreasonable belief that an offender can be rehabilitated, and the offender is extremely likely to harm more people if they ever have the opportunity.

          • Thats why i said indicate not “proof”. But again you say no significant doubt at all. But that is always the case of the people making the decision. For them there is no doubt, yet there is regularly wrong decisions.

            • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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              110 months ago

              Would you then claim that there was any significant doubt as to the guilt of John Gacy, Theodore Bundy, Edmund Kemper, Gary Ridgeway, John Geoghan, et al.? Would you agree that they would have all posed a significant risk of future harms had they managed to escape?

              No proof is 100% absolute; there is always the possibility of some error. Video evidence? Could be tampered with. Eyewitnesses? Memory is fallible. DNA? Must be from someone with near identical DNA. Confession? Those are very frequently coerced (and, seriously, confessions are a pretty terrible way of determining guilt, esp. when there’s no forensic or corroborating evidence). 29 bodies or people you were last seen with found in the crawlspace of your home with your DNA and fingerprints on them? Pure coincidence, it’s too good to be true, must be planted.

              Given that it’s impossible to know a thing with absolute certainty, how good does the evidence have to be before you would admit that there was not a significant chance of a false positive?

      • Franzia
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        310 months ago

        It’s wild you disagree with life sentences and desire rehab, but also advocate for the death penalty.

        • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          110 months ago

          I advocate for it in the case of people that can not reasonably be rehabilitated and pose an unreasonable risk to the existence of other people.

          I don’t know why that’s difficult to wrap your head around.

          You aren’t going to rehabilitate a serial killer, or a serial rapist.

          • Franzia
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            110 months ago

            Can’t know if you don’t try. Some artists have come out and said they had these urges and art is the thing anchoring them enough to keep them from doing heinous things.

            • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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              110 months ago

              keep them from doing

              …And there’s your key. Moreover, they think that art keeps them from doing it; they have no way of experimentally knowing whether or not they’d do those things in the absence of art. It seems more likely that art is their excuse and that, in the absence of art, they would find anothe,r different reason to avoid committing atrocities.

              There’s a distinction between wanting to do a thing, and actually doing the thing.

      • @Agent_of_Kayos@lemm.ee
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        110 months ago

        Prisons (at least in the US) have never been about prisoners and their reform. It’s about how much money they can bring in from the state and practically free labor. Like most things in the US it is driving by profit margins.

        …yay capitalism

        • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          110 months ago

          Eh, no. We had prisons before we used prisons as a stand-in for chattel slavery. OTOH, we used to kill a lot more people for much less severe offenses, so people didn’t usually end up in jails for very long. And there was a period of time where we believed in reform, but that was well over 100 years ago now.

            • livus
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              110 months ago

              I was beginning to wonder if breathing pure nitrogen was some kind of party trick or rite of passage for science geeks.

          • @CarterH739
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            310 months ago

            I have, sort of. I’ve worked HazMat most of my life. One of the jobs I had years ago involved neutralizing a large pit of acid. It was just a huge pit in the ground with a roof over it. From the outside, it just looked like someone had pulled the roof off of a house and set on the ground. There were only two openings, one at either end, so it was completely enclosed. The method here was to send the two youngest (and therefore invincible) guys into the pit with acid suits and full faced respirators, with buckets of soda ash, we walk around in it and stirred it up while we sprinkled the ash around. Safety standards back then were not what they are today. Anyway, the people in charge realized that there would be a reaction with gases betting released, hence the respirators, but no one considered the possibility that the gases might be heavier than oxygen. Which they were. We didn’t know what kind of acid it was but this was an old fertilizer plant, so probably nitric. Which means the gas was most likely nitrogen. Whatever the case, we got into trouble when we realized that we were both getting rather lightheaded. We tried to leave, but the only way out was up a ladder and by the time we got to it the other guy, we’ll call him Rick, could only get about half way up before he just couldn’t move anymore, which left me leaning on the ladder at the bottom, completely unable to help, as I was in the same state. Luckily, our foreman was a lunatic and he jumped in and pulled us out. You are absolutely not supposed to do that because you are just as likely to end up in the same trouble as the guys you’re trying to save.

            The experience with the gas was not unpleasant. I should have been terrified, but was mostly just mildly concerned. The only real effects I remember feeling are the lightheadedness and being really sleepy.

      • @FlowVoid@midwest.social
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        10 months ago

        Nitrogen hypoxia is a risk wherever liquid nitrogen is used. If too much boils too fast, it will displace the oxygen in the room. People in the room won’t even realize what happened until they pass out and die shortly thereafter.

        There are reports of people rushing in to rescue those who passed out, and suddenly passing out themselves and needing to be rescued as well. That’s how insidious it is. And that’s why MRI scanners (which use liquid nitrogen) have oxygen sensors in the room. You can’t trust your own body to tell you that all the oxygen is gone.

        • mememuseum
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          010 months ago

          MRI machines are cooled by liquid helium. Nitrogen is not cold enough. I’d imagine as a noble gas it has a similar effect though.

          • @becausechemistry@lemm.ee
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            610 months ago

            They are cooled by liquid helium, but also have a liquid nitrogen outer dewar as well with a vacuum insulator in between. The N2 takes the brunt of the ambient heat so you don’t have to top off the (much more expensive) helium as often.

      • angrystego
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        510 months ago

        Can you please share more of your experience? What was the occasion and the set-up? What was it like?

      • @oatscoop@midwest.social
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        10 months ago

        I’m willing to bet what you inhaled was carbon dioxide – that gives an instant feeling of suffocation. Which ironically makes it one of the safer asphyxiant gasses, as it’s heavier than air and you can detect it’s presence instantly. Inert (“noble”) gasses like helium, argon, and nitrogen don’t have that effect.

        CO2 is also cheap, readily available, non-toxic, and doesn’t cause physical damage. This makes CO2 asphyxiation somewhat popular for “stunning” or killing in places like slaughterhouses, labs working with smaller animals, or “feeder” animals for reptiles.

    • @CaptObvious@literature.cafe
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      1810 months ago

      They wouldn’t know “pro-life” if it bit them on the ass. They’re simply pro-birth. Literally everything else about the GOP platform is anti-life.

      • Vaggumon
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        1310 months ago

        Pro birth so they can supply meat to the industrial grinder and dead solders for the war machine.

    • @ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1310 months ago

      Actually the (small L) libertarians are a little split on this issue, with most seeming to agree with me that the death penalty is a stupid fucking idea from multiple standpoints. Can’t trust the govt to get a damn thing right and that is no-take-backsies so no room for fuck ups (which they definitely have fucked up and killed innocent people, only to learn someone lied after it is too latw.)

      OH you meant the republicans, who say “small government” but then through their actions prove they are just “the other side” of “big government” from the dems. Well, they’re “lying” in order to manipulate people into voting for them (tbf, I know that’s how they all get votes).

    • Roboticide
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      910 months ago

      Sure, but as long as they have the death penalty, it’s probably best they do it as humanely as possible.

      Some states are bringing back firing squads, which definitely feels like a huge step back. If they’re going to kill someone, using an actual painless option instead of lethal injection or shooting them seems like as much of a step forward as we can get up to actually not executing people.

      • @eupraxia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        210 months ago

        For the person being executed, firing squads are among the most “humane” methods. It’s fast, reliable, and simple. It’s not common because the brutality of painting someone’s brains on the wall is too clear for onlookers.

        • Roboticide
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          110 months ago

          Typically they aim for the heart. Not exactly an immediate or painless death.

          I’d rather have the nitrogen.

    • stevedidWHAT
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      410 months ago

      Yep. Which is how we end up building FUCKING concentration camps in the country and pave that road for a dictatorship to take over one of, if not the, leading super powers of the world.

      This shit needs to stop and we need to address what is happening in the south before we start having some repeats that end in mass death. Enough is enough.

  • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    9010 months ago

    FWIW, nitrogen asphyxiation is one of the methods that’s preferred by advocates of assisted suicide. Done correctly–by which I mean in a way that doesn’t allow a buildup of CO2 in your bloodstream–it’s not only painless but gives you a mild high. The proper way to do it is with something like a BiPAP, where the air that’s being piped in is pure nitrogen, and the CO2 is all being removed immediately so you aren’t breathing it back in. Without a buildup of CO2 in your bloodstream, your brain doesn’t recognize that you’re suffocating.

    Have you ever breathed in helium from a balloon and gotten lightheaded? It’s about like that.

    I’m in favor of the death penalty in very, very rare cases–and this is not one where I would support it–and this is one of the surest, least barbaric ways to execute someone.

    • Square Singer
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      2610 months ago

      When I was ~10 I attended a wedding. Me and the other kids where tasked to fill balloons with helium and we did so without supervision. Naturally, we breathed some helium in and talked in funny voices.

      I then had the bright idea to try to breathe as many of these balloons without normal air in between.

      After the third of these, I lost conciousness. To me it felt as if I was gone for maybe half an hour. I was basically dreaming weird stuff. Luckily I stayed in my seat during that time and didn’t fall over or something. Noone of the others noticed anything, so it couldn’t have been that long. Maybe a few seconds in reality.

    • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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      Let’s tighten this up a bit.

      Inert gas asphyxiation is very much a great way to go, but it’s basically symptomless until after you lose consciousness.

      You don’t get high. The “high” people get is when they are choked out. I’m not really sure on the mechanism of that, though. You don’t get lightheaded. The lightheadedness is from the blood oxygen levels increasing.

      This is why it’s very dangerous to enter enclosed spaces. You simply don’t know you’re about to die until it’s too late. Plus, people come in to try to rescue you and succumb as well.

      Anyway, lots of people have this experience. It’s a common part of training for rebreathers for use in scuba diving.

      As far as good ways to die, inert gas asphyxiation is up there with “proper” lethal injection (i.e. with a commercial euthanasia drug), opiate overdose, or just anesthetizing the being and doing whatever gets the job done.

      • @FlowVoid@midwest.social
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        Nitrogen can cause a “high” (aka nitrogen narcosis), but this effect only occurs at high pressures. So it is only a practical concern for divers, because they have to breathe high pressure air. Some divers replace the nitrogen in their tanks with other gases to avoid it.

        It is unrelated to asphyxiation, and can occur even when the lungs are properly exchanging oxygen and CO2. It is a poorly understood direct interaction between high pressure nitrogen and the brain that does not occur at atmospheric pressure.

        • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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          1010 months ago

          Correct. Extremely different thing.

          Also, despite what they say in fight club, oxygen does not get you high either.

          Nitrous oxide however…

        • @ciaocibai@lemmy.nz
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          610 months ago

          When I did my deep diving certification one of the things they got us to do was try and do maths of varying complexity (compared to previously doing it on the surface). I didn’t feel high at all, but most of us had slower response times and more errors at depth, apparently as a side effect of the increased nitrogen. Pretty wild.

      • Meldroc
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        IIRC the hypoxia “high” panic reaction is from an elevated level of CO2 - that’s the evolved mechanism by which humans detect they’re in a bad place for breathing. Not absence of O2.

        Edit: Correction: Hypoxia alone gets you high just before you keel over. It’s the CO2 buildup that activates your body’s panic reactions.

  • @alvvayson@lemmy.world
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    7910 months ago

    If ever I would need to be killed, this would be my preferred method of leaving the earth.

    Happy to see them try it, even though I am against executing people.

    With hypoxia, you get euphoria prior to death. No suffering, no pain, just a little high to send you off this earth.

  • c0mput0r
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    5810 months ago

    This is how I would want to go. Look up BBC Horizon 2008 How to Kill a Human Being. Explains everything you need to know. Seems like states don’t want to do it because people wouldn’t suffer during execution. Maybe things have changed since then.

  • JackbyDev
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    5610 months ago

    Folks who are confused by this, your body doesn’t detect when you’re low on oxygen, only when you have too much carbon dioxide. That’s why exhaling while holding your breath helps you hold your breath longer (to an extent). Nitrogen doesn’t caused the sensation of suffocating while still depriving you of oxygen.

    I disagree with capital punishment but have always wondered about this for stuff like assisted suicide.

    • @JTheDoc@lemmy.world
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      That’s the thing, we all have to compromise. I don’t support it either, but if something unethical happens, and people still want to keep supporting it, we have to at least convince them to use the “best version” of said thing so it’s at least as humane as we can make it possibly be. I’m shocked we still continue to use these complicated and ancient methods of execution that have questionable reliability or ethics when it comes to suffering.

      It’d be interesting to see how it would be used for AS for sure!

    • @lennybird@lemmy.world
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      Over this summer I’ve been trying to break my record for holding breath underwater. 2:13 was best I could muster but in my experimentation, after slow and steady initial breathing and reduced muscle usage, inhaling one giant breath at the end and holding definitely let’s me stay under longer. This is better until the CO2 saturation of my lungs equals the saturation in the blood. Then, for whatever reason, slowly trickling the air out buys a little more time. This probably helps calm and fool the brain into thinking you’re desaturating.

  • @bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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    4510 months ago

    I’m definitely against the death penalty but if they’re gonna do it anyway this seems like one of the better options

    • DopamineDeficient
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      1110 months ago

      theres actually a thing called nitrogen narcosis. while i still find states that use the death penalty abhorrent, its one of the nicer ways to go. while breathing a pure oxygen-defficient gas you also dont have a feeling that you are suffocating since you can breathe off carbon dioxide just fine. thats why exit bags are a thing in the first place

      • @droans@lemmy.world
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        410 months ago

        You can’t breathe carbon dioxide like you can breathe oxygen. Nitrogen works well because it’s soluble in the body and will replace oxygen, meaning aside from the mental effects, you don’t notice it.

        CO2 doesn’t work the same, though. It won’t replace oxygen and will produce a feeling of suffocation.

        • @brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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          510 months ago

          That’s what he’s saying. You can exhale the CO2 and breathe in the nitrogen.

          CO2 is what causes the burning sensation in the lungs when you hold your breath too long.

        • Alien Nathan Edward
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          310 months ago

          Not entirely true. CO2 won’t reabsorb but the inability to get rid of what’s already there will cause it to build up. It’s the presence of excess CO2 that causes the body’s suffocation response. This is why people sleep right through being suffocated by CO and why they theorize that nitrogen will have the same response

      • for diving it is quite different though.

        Nitrogen high starts (with normal pressurized air) at around 40m depths which means 5bar pressure or roughly 4bar partial pressure for the nitrogen. It then starts getting into your synapses partly blocking them.

        even with 100% pure nitrogen at normal pressure you just get 1bar. So you wont get high from it.

      • Franzia
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        010 months ago

        Content warning >!linking to a method of suicide!<

      • @Mdotaut801@lemmy.world
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        1210 months ago

        Right? Like why can’t the lethal injection be an overdose of fentanyl or carfentanyl? It’d be cheap and easy. I’m not advocating for the death penalty, just wondering why it isn’t that way.

        • @Spendrill@lemm.ee
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          910 months ago

          Because the cretins that believe in the death penalty, and they are cretins if they believe in the death penalty, want the process to be as horrific as it can be while not shattering the illusion (for them) that it isn’t barbaric. They don’t want it to be quick and they definitely don’t want it to be painless.

          • @30mag@lemmy.world
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            510 months ago

            They don’t want it to be quick and they definitely don’t want it to be painless.

            Then why are they pumping people full of phenobarbital? From what I understand, that isn’t a particularly unpleasant way to die.

            • @Spendrill@lemm.ee
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              AFAIK the execution protocols that use phenobarbitol also use other chemicals to actually cause fatality, which are reportedly very nasty to experience. They also use butt plugs. This is to reduce discomfort for the witnesses. As I said, the illusion of a civilised procedure is important for them.

              • Alien Nathan Edward
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                10 months ago

                the illusion of a civilized procedure

                https://youtu.be/eirR4FHY2YY?si=EUtz57QxdB_QouXa

                Jacob Geller is one of my favorite YouTubers, and he did a really insightful video about how the purpose of the death penalty has changed. It used to be pretty clearly about showing the public that if they fuck up they’ll be snatched up and killed horrifically. He supports this with both the innumerable variations people have come up with for the fairly simple task of killing someone else, and how both the execution itself and the body of the condemned were prominent in the public eye (think gibbets and things like that). He argues that now the death penalty is in this weird sort of limbo where it’s considered distasteful to make a gleeful spectacle of it but that proponents still think that the specter of being snatched up by the state and killed is important for maintaining a peaceful society so you have all these half measures and stutter steps that are ostensibly designed to be humane for the prisoner but are really there for the comfort and moral superiority of the audience. As an example he talks about the paralytic agent in the lethal injection cocktail that does nothing to relieve pain but prevents the condemned from visibly reacting to that pain. Knowingly or unknowingly, the death penalty is walking this weird line where everyone involved is allowed to pretend that they don’t want to do it but that they’re bound just as much as the condemned, there are still artifacts of the performative death penalty from days of yore left over in our processes and procedures for killing a condemned person but that proponents have recently made it soft, comfortable and hidden precisely because they recognize that continuing in the old ways will end with the abolition of the death penalty. We’ve changed as a society from “let’s pop on down to the town square after dinner to watch the hanging” to “let’s get this nasty business over with behind closed doors so as not to make people uncomfortable”.

              • @30mag@lemmy.world
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                310 months ago

                Botched executions occur when there is a breakdown in, or departure from, the “protocol” for a particular method of execution. … Botched executions are “those involving unanticipated problems or delays that caused, at least arguably, unnecessary agony for the prisoner or that reflect gross incompetence of the executioner.”

                That definition is rather broad. If you use that definition, I think the guy they are talking about executing has already been the victim of one botched execution.

                Alabama attempted to execute Smith by lethal injection last year, but called off the execution because of problems inserting an IV into his veins.

                If I am to be executed, I want a firing squad, a lit cigarette, and I don’t want anything crammed in my ass.

              • @30mag@lemmy.world
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                310 months ago

                I don’t see how anyone could possibly imagine that electricity could be a civilized way to kill someone.

                October 16, 1985. Indiana. William E. Vandiver. Electrocution. After the first administration of 2,300 volts, Vandiver was still breathing. The execution eventually took 17 minutes and five jolts of electricity.[8] Vandiver’s attorney, Herbert Shaps, witnessed the execution and observed smoke and the smell of burning. He called the execution “outrageous.” The Department of Corrections admitted the execution “did not go according to plan.”[9]

                • Meldroc
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                  310 months ago

                  Reminds me of The Green Mile, when Percy “forgets” to wet the sponge…

        • @AEsheron@lemmy.world
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          110 months ago

          Biggest reason is probably that it will be a lot easier to administer. Injection when you can’t used a medical profession is kind of a pain for everyone involved.

  • @Mowcherie@lemmy.world
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    3810 months ago

    I get that it is ‘humane,’ but I get scared when I see humans developing and organizing highly efficient ways to exterminate humans, such as gas chambers.

      • BrianTheFirst
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        2710 months ago

        Nitrogen asphyxiation does not equal suffocation. It displaces the oxygen in your lungs. Discomfort from suffocation is from build up of carbon dioxide, not lack of oxygen. For the brief period of time that you are still conscious, you can still exhale that carbon dioxide.

        • @CaptObvious@literature.cafe
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          -1910 months ago

          That seems unlikely. As @protist@mander.xyz explains further down the thread, it would likely lead to generalized pain and terror before seizures and death.

              • BrianTheFirst
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                1510 months ago

                Yes, I did. Read my post.

                They said:

                Nitrogen narcosis happens to deep sea divers breathing compressed air, this would be straight up hypoxia, aka oxygen deprivation. Here’s what it does to your brain:

                Nitrogen narcosis happens because when you are under pressure, like when underwater, gases are more easily dissolved. The nitrogen that is in your body dissolves into your tissues and basically anesthetizes you to death.

                Nitrogen asphyxiation, like what we’re talking about here, is when the nitrogen that you breathe displaces the oxygen in your lungs. This causes the oxygen levels in your blood to drop, which is what kills you.

                • @CaptObvious@literature.cafe
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                  -1710 months ago

                  You said:

                  @protist is talking about nitrogen narcosis

                  @protist@protist@mander.xyz said:

                  …this would be straight up hypoxia, aka oxygen deprivation

                  I have a scuba certification. I know what nitrogen narcosis is. @protist is clearly not talking about nitrogen narcosis. They’re describing what would actually happen in the case of being forced to breathe pure nitrogen, which is straight up suffocation.

                  suffocation
                  noun
                  death caused by not having enough oxygen, or the act of killing someone by not allowing them to have enough oxygen
                  –Cambridge Dictionary

              • neuropean
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                310 months ago

                Yes he is. Nitrogen narcosis is from breathing compressed air with a high nitrogen blend. That’s why you need trimix with helium beyond a couple hundred feet. Otherwise you end up like my buddy trying to give fish your regulator.

          • That guy is misinformed. He is talking about hypoxia which is what people commonly think of when dying from lack of oxygen, think of drowning. Hypoxia triggers the alarms in your body that cause the fear and pain you associate with suffocating due to the build up of co2 in the body.

            With inert gases like nitrogen however it is different. Check out this wiki article, in the process drop down tab is provides a pretty good explanation on the matter

            https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inert_gas_asphyxiation

            • @bemenaker@lemmy.world
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              Not misinformed, I forgot it takes.pressure.to.get narcd, but asphyxiation does cause some of the same feelings. Narcd is nitrogen asphyxiation, but it has other effects, and the feeling is more intense before reaching total asphyxiation, and therefore it is easier to recover from. It takes the pressure for the nitrogen to bind to the oxygen receptors.

      • @AndyLikesCandy@reddthat.com
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        910 months ago

        It’s really not cheaper in practice, the legal hurdles for the death penalty are more expensive to overcome than just keeping someone locked up for life.

        It might get cheaper if you’re executing in volume, like thousands of people, but then we’d be looking at a whole other sort of problems (like “how did we turn into China?”)

        • @sfgifz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          -410 months ago

          Sure sure, but the comment above wanted the person to rot in jail for the rest of their existence. Which is why I mentioned a very specified a situation where the crime is clear.

          You’re arguing for cases where an innocent person may be found guilty - which is a very valid argument. I’m trying to figure out this crowd that wants people to suffer forever while they won’t even think of that person again in their life, besides maybe pay taxes to keep them alive.

          • to rot in jail for the rest of their existence

            Because later on, if they were found to be actually innocent - the person rotting in jail can be released and compensated (to whatever extent false imprisonment can be compensated).

            If they were executed, it’s over. The injustice can’t be remediated in any way.

      • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        10 months ago

        assuming the person is truly guilty

        That’s the part where it falls to bits for me.

        Although you could allow people to choose euthanasia. Although even there it should be carried out privately rather than some ghoulish ceremony.

      • @GiddyGap@lemm.ee
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        710 months ago

        Capital punishment is government sanctioned killing. Outside of war, the government should not have the power to kill anyone.

        For these people, death is also the easy way out. Prison time is harder.

        Not to mention cost. The complexity, finality, and litigation drive cost through the roof and make it much more expensive than life in prison.

      • Roboticide
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        610 months ago

        All you have to do is look at the times the government has got it wrong on convictions of people who turned out innocent to realize maybe the government shouldn’t make the decision to kill people.

        Look up the innocence project.

      • @SuckMyKiss@lemmynsfw.com
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        210 months ago

        Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgement.

  • Alien Nathan Edward
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    3210 months ago

    Watching the murder states scramble for new ways to murder as they run out of unethical people willing to sell them murder supplies has been interesting.

  • @Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Surgical tech here… why not just use Propofol? It’s the shit we use to put people to sleep for surgery.

    It kicks in FAST - when the anesthesiologist pushes that stuff, it can literally take like 5-10 seconds for the patients to go unconscious.

    So… for the death penalty, hit em with the normal dosage to put them to sleep, then once they’re confirmed unconscious, push the rest of the bottle… or a liter of gasoline… or chuck em out the window; it doesn’t matter, as they’ll be 100% unaware of the actual method of death.

    Edit - turns out there’s a lot of good reasons we don’t just use Propofol - see comments below. Thanks for the insight, all!

    • FuglyDuck
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      10 months ago

      Because the people selling it don’t want to deal with the association with lethal injections

    • @lgmjon64@lemmy.world
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      1810 months ago

      They used to use thiopental, which is similar to propofol, with similar onset, both as an anesthesic and for lethal injection. Manufacturers stopped producing it because its use was controversial. Now it’s not even available for anesthesia. It would suck if the same thing happened to propofol.

    • @JdW@lemmy.world
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      1410 months ago

      anesthesiologist

      There you have it, qualified medical professionals refuse (and are not allowed to anyway because of the oath) to participate in executions. So the people administring whatever concoction is made are not medically trained nor usually even particularily knowledgable on the subject. And yes, this has caused a series of botched executions, to the extent that the most bloodthirsty states are looking at smimpler ways to execute. Hence this aricle.

    • @Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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      810 months ago

      Because using your drug to kill people isn’t the best way to convince the public is perfectly safe. There would be a hundred TikToks talking about how anesthesiologists want to murder you with propofol and then claim you died accidentally on the operating table. Who are you going to believe, actual “doctors” or highly qualified TikTok influencers?

      Yeah, no drug company wants to deal with that. That’s why governments have had difficulty sourcing these drugs and instead have been resorting to black market dealers.

    • @StorminNorman@lemmy.world
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      810 months ago

      They already render the prisoner unconcious when they administer the lethal injection. It’s not 100% effective though, thus the search for a method that doesn’t have the potential to horrify onlookers.

    • @vithigar@lemmy.ca
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      510 months ago

      Because the idea of it being a punishment, rather than remediation or simply mitigation, looms over all North American discussions about sentencing.

      If they aren’t miserable then it’s not a punishment.

      • livus
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        510 months ago

        In the case of Propofol they did want to use it but were basically banned by the drug company.

        • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          210 months ago

          Manson and his cronies did not exactly die in obscurity. They had, and still have, groupies.

      • BrianTheFirst
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        310 months ago

        But… the whole reason we are having this discussion is because people are trying to make the process less miserable in their final moments.

    • @dutchkimble@lemy.lol
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      310 months ago

      Just imagining the reverse, if they used propofol commonly for executions and then you go for a surgery and the doctor informs you that you’ll be getting the same stuff they use for executions, but don’t worry it’s a milder dose

      • @lgmjon64@lemmy.world
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        110 months ago

        I mean, they DO use midazolam and the same paralytics for lethal injection that are also commonly used for anesthesia, just in a lower dose.

  • @Pat12@lemmy.world
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    3010 months ago

    “Smith was one of two men paid $1,000 each to murder Elizabeth Sennett on behalf of her preacher husband, Charles Sennett Sr., who was in debt and wanted to collect life insurance money.”

    Hold on, so why is he being executed? He wasn’t the one who ordered the murder. It seems like lots of other people request murders but those people aren’t sentenced to death.

    • Roboticide
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      1510 months ago

      Because he accepted money in exchange to brutally beat and stabbed a person to death. “Just following orders,” has never been an acceptable excuse for an individual to commit a crime, but especially when it’s not an order in a military hierarchy, it’s payment and a voluntary agreement. Fuck him.

      Sennet Sr. committed suicide the moment the police started to investigate him. That’s why he’s not about to be executed.

      • @Alexstarfire@lemmy.world
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        310 months ago

        I don’t think that was the argument being made. The argument, to me, is why sentenced to death instead of some other sentence. And, were the others that are also part of this crime sentenced.

        The article doesn’t seem to say anything about what happened to the others that are involved. Focused a lot on the execution method.

        Sounds like the guy just did this for the money so I also don’t understand why he’s being sentenced to death. Should just be prison time. But, I don’t have all the facts here.

        • Roboticide
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          110 months ago

          He’s sentenced to death because he committed a capital murder in a state with the death penalty and a jury found him guilty. “I did it for money” is not exactly a legal defense. An innocent person was still killed, and arguably doing it for money is worse. Fuck him.

          The other guy involved in the killing has already been executed, over ten years ago. It’s a well documented case and took me about a minute of Googling to figure out this guy isn’t particularly being singled out for death and the other got a lighter sentence.

          I personally don’t believe in the death penalty, but also if he didn’t want to be executed for murder, he shouldn’t have committed murder in the deep south.

  • Apathy Tree
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    2610 months ago

    Ok, but bear with me here, because for real, this is how I want to go, and how I plan to put down my fowl when they get too old to live comfortably, because there’s no stress involved to taint the meat, and I can feel comfortable with myself for giving them a good life with free roam, and a good end.

    It’s incredibly humane. You feel nothing and don’t know you are suffocating. If you’ve ever breathed helium, you know what nitrogen feels like - literally nothing. This happened to multiple individuals in space because nitrogen is not flammable, and is why they now use 6% co2 in non-oxygenated spaces.

    The body does not care if it has oxygen, that’s hard to test for biologically because oxygen is highly reactive, what it does test for is buildup of co2. As long as you can breathe out the co2, your body knows nothing.

    So if they are going to kill other humans, this is the way to go. I don’t agree with doing that non-voluntarily, but if it’s going to happen this is at least humane.

    • @MBM@lemmings.world
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      10 months ago

      Something I’ve been thinking about: for the victim, does it actually matter if it’s nitrogen or a well-aimed bullet/axe/guillotine? For the onlookers, sure the nitrogen looks a lot cleaner, but instant death is painless too.

      • Apathy Tree
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        210 months ago

        I’d argue, yes it matters.

        Bullet might not be as well aimed as expected, considering some of the firing squad have blanks, and most of them probably don’t really want to be there.

        Beheadings are reported to result in animated heads… and I would assume something like a waterfall of pain as the nerves from the body are severed but the brain, where consciousness lives, goes on for a bit yet. It might be quick, but it doesn’t seem pleasant.

        Electric chairs, just look them up, same with lethal injection problems… any “justice death” is basically torture.

        At least they can’t fuck up neutral gas asphyxiation. It’s either deadly or you sleep through it and wake up with a nasty headache.

      • Apathy Tree
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        810 months ago

        No, that’s not even remotely the same thing as inert gas asphyxiation.

        When you get no oxygen at all, you pass out very quickly, you don’t suffer like you do with low levels of oxygen over extended periods.

        Don’t fear monger please.

  • Silverseren
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    2410 months ago

    Always the conservatives trying to innovate on how to kill people.

    • @mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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      1410 months ago

      because the medical companies they got their lethal injections from decided they’d rather not be associated with governmental killing.

      then the foreign countries they bought from decided the same. so now they have to get creative.

      Personally, I’d like to see a 500t press option: literally just drop a 500t weight on me from a 30’ height. By the time my brains register any sensation they’ll be strawberry jelly squishing out the sides of the press plate.

    • Franzia
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      110 months ago

      This isn’t a new innovation and is actually aware of the science. I think, however, conservative elected officials will insist on continuing Capital Punishment and the world is forced to work with or in many cases against them.