• admiralteal@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Oh, alright then. The guy didn’t spend 20+ minutes gasping for air and struggling on a gurney, then, because industrial accidents are the exact same as what happened here. And the euthanasia researchers that have actually researched N2 asphyxiation and said the Al process would likely be torture are all just… less knowledgeable than you.

    • testfactor@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      You’re actively mischaracterizing what the experts are saying though. They are saying that testing novel execution methods on a person is torture definitionally. They are asserting that it’s torture even if the method is absolutely painless.

      And I absolutely don’t disagree that the man was thrashing and gasping for 20+ minutes. But I think it’s very germaine to point out that he was thrashing and gasping for 20+ minutes the last time they tried to execute him, and they didn’t even get a needle in his arm.

      I’m sorry my dude, but I really think you’re trying to put a spin on the facts. I’m not even arguing that it’s not torture. You’re literally killing the guy, right? It doesn’t mean that it’s not painless (physically, not mentally, obviously.) And just because you assert that that is what the experts are saying simply doesn’t make it true.

      • admiralteal@kbin.social
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        10 months ago

        Literally no experts have said they are confident the method is painless, though.

        Just wikipedia PhDs talking about industrial accidents in vastly different circumstances, where victims were caught entirely unaware.

        You’re basically asking me to prove the negative - so let’s put the shoe on the other foot. Find me medical experts testifying that this execution method would definitely be painless, because it’s really easy to find medical organizations and medical experts saying their concerned the process could be torturous.

        Dr. Philip Nitschke, a much-interviewed expert on euthanasia that shows up in a lot of these articles and who specifically studied use of N2 asphyxiation, expressed great concerns about how this was being administered. The only way this can even conceivably be administered painlessly is if you either catch someone by surprise or have their full cooperation. If they’re an unwilling participant you are torturing them to death using a technique that has an indefinite amount of time to work properly. The setup of how Alabama was going to be doing this would be slow and ineffective, and all of that delay is going to be torturous.

        And if you can’t find that testimony that this process is definitely humane maybe you should stop assuming it is.

        It’s true, it’s pretty inconceivable that any execution method isn’t torturing someone to death. Hard to come up with any theoretical framework for that other than taking a gun to the head in your sleep. But these pseudo-scientific techniques that simply refuse to think through the practicality of administration are entirely designed to make the execution more pleasant to watch for the onlookers and that is particularly heinous.

        Stop thinking about the methos you would want used on you if you had to be executed. That line of thinking isn’t analogous or reasonable. Think about the technique you use on someone who doesn’t want to be executed. Because that’s an entirely different thing and the practicality of administering is part of how you make it more humane if that’s really your goal - and to be clear I’m sure that that’s not anyone’s goal here.

        The goal of the using this technique is being fulfilled perfectly by you, since it was to fool people into believing there is such a possibility as a more humane execution ( that was still reasonable for onlookers).

        • testfactor@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Honestly, I heavily considered going and hunting out case studies on hypoxia, and everything, but honestly, I don’t care enough. I’ve invested too much emotional effort into this already, tbh.

          I will point out that Philip Nitschke is actively in favor of execution by nitrogen asphyxiation, and has even personally worked on the design of a containment chamber for that exact purpose. His only complaint was with the Alabama methodology, not the idea itself.

          And I disagree with you’re assessment that the point is the cruelty, but obviously neither of us will ever convince the other on that score.

          Regardless my man, I hope the weekend is treating you well, and you’re getting some good rest and finding peace where you’re at. I’mma go touch grass, lol. Peace. :)