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  • #16
    The death penalty
    I'm not buying BtS until Firaxis impliments the "contiguous cultural border negates colony tax" concept.

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    • #17
      Life without parole is known as "Death by Oprah" among convicts..

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      • #18
        I don't see any votes for drawn and quartered.
        Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
        "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
        He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

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        • #19
          I choose death via sexual exhaustion. I'll need a bevy a fine chicas to help assist me on my way.
          Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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          • #20
            Chair is what Virginia uses.

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            • #21
              Guillotine.
              Smile
              For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
              But he would think of something

              "Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker

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              • #22
                If we are going to kill people, we might as well make use of them to appease the gods. I say bring back human sacrifice, MezoAmerican style.
                If you don't like reality, change it! me
                "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
                "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
                "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

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                • #23
                  Definitely the execution portrayed in Monty Python's Meaning of Life.
                  Unbelievable!

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                  • #24
                    Originally posted by TCO
                    Chair is what Virginia uses.
                    Chair has problems. It's a case of trying to remove men from the equation. Remember when you were whining about the nuclear navy never having a serious accident whereas civilian reactors have all sorts of ****ups because they try to automate everything? Same thing here.

                    KISS

                    I'll take a bullet in the brain any day of the week. Or, pop, pop two in the brain. Less chance of error.
                    12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                    Stadtluft Macht Frei
                    Killing it is the new killing it
                    Ultima Ratio Regum

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Drogue
                      Guillotine.
                      Are you serious? I guess I'd pick it over the chair, maybe the gas chamber, but that's about it.
                      Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
                      "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
                      He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Originally posted by Aeson
                        Another humane (and cheaper) way would be asphixiation with straight nitrogen. (IIRC it knocks you out very quickly...)
                        Funny, I just came across this concept. It sounds alright, if you could take a Xanax first to get rid of any jitters. Here's a cool article about nitrogen asphyxiation:

                        Killing with kindness - capital punishment by nitrogen asphyxiation
                        National Review, Sept 11, 1995 by Stuart A. Creque

                        Capital punishment needn't be cruel or unusual -- especially if you use nitrogen asphyxiation to put people to sleep.

                        LAST October, Judge Marilyn Hall Patel of the 9th U.S. District Court ruled that execution in California's gas chamber is a form of cruel and unusual punishment, the first ruling ever by a state or federal judge to invalidate a method of execution on Eighth Amendment grounds. She noted that the evidence showed that the condemned man might remain conscious for several minutes, experiencing the emotions of `anxiety, panic, terror,' as well as `exquisitely painful muscle spasms' and `intense visceral pain.'

                        On its face, Judge Patel's ruling applies only to the gas chamber, but every method of execution in current use involves toxic chemicals or physical trauma to induce death -- and every method can go awry. An ideal hanging snaps the condemned man's neck cleanly; a botched one either strangles him slowly or severs the head entirely from the body. A firing squad that misses its mark leaves the condemned man conscious as he bleeds to death. In the electric chair, according to eyewitness accounts, some condemned men have literally been cooked until their flesh was charred and loosened from the bone; some had sparks and flame emanating from their cranial-cap electrodes.

                        Besides society's concern for the condemned man's physical suffering, all of these methods implicitly require an executioner to inflict some degree of trauma upon the condemned. Concern for the executioner's conscience drives such customs as loading one of the guns for a firing squad with a blank cartridge, so that each member of the squad can imagine that his will be the non-lethal shot. And with lethal injection, the executioner's use of skills and procedures normally devoted to life-saving poses ethical questions for medical caregivers.

                        Given these defects, abolitionists will presumably press to have each of these methods declared `cruel and unusual.' The intended result of these efforts is to make the death penalty unconstitutional in practice, even if it remains constitutional in theory.

                        It is in fact possible to conceive of a method of execution that would cause neither pain nor physical trauma, require no medical procedure (other than pronouncing death), and use no hazardous chemicals. A case of accidental death suggests such a method.

                        Early in the Space Shuttle program, a worker at Kennedy Space Center walked into an external fuel tank (a vessel nearly as big inside as a Boeing 737) to inspect it. He was not aware that it had been purged with pure nitrogen gas to prevent oxygen in the air from corroding its interior. Since nitrogen is the major component of ordinary air, pure nitrogen has no distinctive feel, smell, or taste; the worker had no indication that anything was out of the ordinary. After walking a short distance into the tank, he lost consciousness and collapsed. A co-worker, not realizing that his collapse had an external cause, ran in to aid him and succumbed also. By the time other workers realized what was happening, the two men were dead.

                        More recently, a bizarre accident involving nitrogen killed two people in the Bay Area. They had stolen from a hospital a gas cylinder containing what they thought was laughing gas. However, the cylinder contained not the anaesthetic nitrous oxide but pure nitrogen. When the two men stopped their car to partake of their booty, the nitrogen gas displaced the air in the car, leaving them without oxygen. Had they had any indication of the problem, they could have saved their lives simply by opening the car doors.

                        These deaths were similar in cause to a relatively common drowning accident known as shallow-water blackout, mentioned specifically in certification classes for recreational scuba diving. When a person is skin diving (that is, without scuba gear), his bottom time is limited by how long he can hold his breath. Occasionally, a skin diver will attempt to lengthen the time he can stay under by hyperventilating before a dive. Unfortunately, this can lead to his losing consciousness underwater, sometimes only a few feet before reaching the surface.

                        THE connection between nitrogen asphyxiation and shallow-water blackout lies in human respiratory physiology. When you hold your breath, you begin to develop a powerful urge to breathe. This is caused not by the depletion of oxygen from your body, but by the buildup of carbon dioxide in your bloodstream, which changes the pH of the blood. The ambitious skin diver "blows off" most of the carbon dioxide in his bloodstream when he hyperventilates; as a result, he notices the urge to breathe much later than he normally would, at a point when his blood oxygen is dangerously low. If his blood oxygen falls too low before he reaches the surface, he blacks out and drowns. Because the Kennedy Space Center workers continued to exhale carbon dioxide with each breath, neither of them noticed an unusual urge to breathe, even though they were completely deprived of oxygen.


                        I also highly recommend the documentary Mr. Death: The Rise and Fall of Fred A. Leuchter Jr. Leuchter was an execution specialist who tried to make CP more humane, but lost credibility when he decided that the Holocaust couldn't have happened because the stones of the gas chambers didn't show the chemical residue he thought it should had the Holocaust happened. Just an all around fascinating documentary, and you get to see old footage of Tom Edison electrocuting an elephant.
                        Last edited by ajbera; December 28, 2006, 00:53.

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                        • #27
                          Originally posted by SlowwHand
                          Are you serious? I guess I'd pick it over the chair, maybe the gas chamber, but that's about it.
                          Why? A sharp guillotine is the safest and quickest death possible. Is it the distress before?
                          "The world is too small in Vorarlberg". Austrian ex-vice-chancellor Hubert Gorbach in a letter to Alistar [sic] Darling, looking for a job...
                          "Let me break this down for you, fresh from algebra II. A 95% chance to win 5 times means a (95*5) chance to win = 475% chance to win." Wiglaf, Court jester or hayseed, you judge.

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                          • #28
                            Originally posted by KrazyHorse


                            Chair has problems. It's a case of trying to remove men from the equation. Remember when you were whining about the nuclear navy never having a serious accident whereas civilian reactors have all sorts of ****ups because they try to automate everything? Same thing here.

                            KISS

                            I'll take a bullet in the brain any day of the week. Or, pop, pop two in the brain. Less chance of error.
                            I wasn't whining. I was whinging.

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                            • #29
                              Wait...is this what we want used on ourselves or on others? Golden Rule does not apply this far...

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                              • #30
                                Originally posted by SlowwHand
                                Are you serious? I guess I'd pick it over the chair, maybe the gas chamber, but that's about it.
                                Yep. It's quicker than drowning, lethal injection, the chair, or pretty much anything except for a bullet to the head. And I love dying in the same way as Marie Antionette
                                Smile
                                For though he was master of the world, he was not quite sure what to do next
                                But he would think of something

                                "Hm. I suppose I should get my waffle a santa hat." - Kuciwalker

                                Comment

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