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A Depraved Monster Was Deprived of Justice
Belying the fascistic tendency of which I am sometimes
accused, I am opposed to capital punishment, no matter how hideous the crime and
how hateful the criminal.
Thus, I deplore the fact that, as this column was being written, Saddam Hussein
was put to death by hanging. It was, simply, the wrong thing to do.
Despicable beast though he was, the "Butcher Of Baghdad" was entitled to a full
measure of the justice that was denied him by his sentence to the gallows.
Although he fully qualified for a Black Belt in inhumanity, snuffing out his
life was grossly unfair.
Unfair, that is to the hundreds of thousands of people he killed, the millions
he tortured, terrorized and/or otherwise mistreated, and the thousands of
Americans who would be alive and sound of limb today, were it not for his dirty
deeds.
Justice, by definition, means fairness, equity and due reward for one's
behavior, and the hangman's noose is more like an act of mercy than any of those
consequences.
Within mere moments, Hussein was separated from the ugliness he spawned during
decades of a wanton slaughter and mistreatment of his people.
Many believe that, because of his evil doings, he went straight to eternal and
indescribable hellfire; this, arguably, would be a happy ending to a dreadful
horror story. We will not, however, receive confirmation of so appropriate an
outcome in any of our lifetimes - if ever.
What we will have to live with is the knowledge that he was spared the full
measure of justice that might have been his lot for the probable remainder of
his time on earth.
That could, for example, have been a 24/7/365 lock-up in solitary confinement
with no direct human contact ever, and only enough nourishment to keep him
alive. It could have included, as diversion, only reading material and
audio-visual presentations devoted exclusively to documentation of his misdeeds,
with no stomach-turning details edited out.
This total isolation from both present and future would have forced him to focus
on the past suffering for which he was responsible, against which he had
probably insulated himself with O. J. Simpsonesque resoluteness.
He would also be tormented by his memories of great wealth, opulent living
conditions, unrestricted hedonism and unlimited power, which would be infinitely
more painful than was his brief (albeit excruciating) dance at a rope's end.
Collateral torment would be the visions of those 72 virgins reserved - in his
mind, at least - for his romantic dalliance in post-martyrdom.
To those who would say that such "cruel and inhuman punishment" might drive him
insane, I submit that - given the evidence of his past - it would be more like a
short putt.
An unpleasant by-product of the hanging will be predictable "protest
demonstrations," which will cost more innocent lives and injuries and deepen the
ethnic hatreds which were not diminished in any great measure by the monster's
demise.
Cutting off the head of one serpent does little to restore order in a snake pit,
so the notion that it will bring "closure" is pure nonsense.
Capital punishment tends to be a deterrent to further crime principally with
respect to the person executed and heaps fuel on the fiery zeal of those who
regard the termination of any life as unacceptable.
In that context, I stand apart from those who regard unlimited appeasement to be
better than violence. It is a sad-but-undeniable truth that, although killing is
the most abhorrent (and irreversible) of all crimes, it will always be a weapon
of last resort in international affairs (that is, unless and until only
smoldering ashes and cockroaches remain).
Aside: There was more wisdom than whimsy in the line from the musical "Camelot,"
positing that, "It's not the earth the meek inherit, it's the dirt." (My alleged
fascism bubbling up again?)
Stripping the worst criminals of their freedom, dignity, comfort, pride,
arrogance and access to all social contact would be a far more appropriate
administration of true justice than offering them a convenient, however briefly
uncomfortable, side exit from a life of misery.
They should be rewarded with the dubious gift of a miserable life, thereby given
time to contemplate their contemptibility during seemingly endless days and
thoroughly lonely nights, cut off from all but the barest essentials of
survival.
Saddam Hussein was richly deserving of just such a life sentence, and the fact
that he was deprived of it was a gross miscarriage of justice.
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