Editor's
Choice
11th June 2001 - Execution Is Not The Solution!
American
Media Empire-network CNN.com
reported the following on June 11th, 2001:
Remaining silent and showing no emotion, Oklahoma City
bomber Timothy McVeigh was executed Monday morning.
McVeigh died by lethal injection at 7:14 a.m. (8:14
a.m. EDT) at the Federal Penitentiary in Terre Haute,
Indiana.
McVeigh was executed for the April 19, 1995, attack
in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people and wounded
hundreds more. The bombing was the deadliest terrorism
act ever on U.S. soil. McVeigh's death was the first
federal execution since 1963.
The 33-year-old Gulf War veteran did not say a word
in the final minutes before his execution. Media witnesses
said McVeigh lifted his head and looked at them and
then looked at the ceiling. He died with his eyes open.
McVeigh left a handwritten statement quoting Invictus,
a 19th century poem by British poet William Ernest Henley.
It ends with the lines "I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul."
Of course my sympathies go out to the families of the
assassined victims of the Oklahomo Bombing, but execution
is not the solution to deal with criminals like McVeigh!
CUADP vows for alternatives and calls the McVeigh case
a media circus:
"Constitutional protections must prevail even
for the lowest and most hated individuals, because if
they do not, then we are all at greater risk for abuse
within the criminal justice system. The fact that Americans
are being forced to swallow the bitter realization that
the humans within the system can and do make mistakes
can only be seen as a positive development. If they
can bungle a case with such intense media scrutiny as
McVeigh's, what's happening in the cases where nobody
is watching? Should we allow executions to continue
in the face of a system so fraught with error and official
misconduct? If we do, are any of us really safe?"
Read CUADP's
opinion at their website.
By the way, while you are at it, think about Hiroshima,
Lockerby, Israel-Palestinia and the Balkan territory
too and put things in perspective, please!?
Feel free to react. This is not, in any way, an attack
against the American government. This is just raising
the conscience of people who still believe in the death
penalty.
--Astrid Appels
info@eurodressage.com
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