By Ann Coulter
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
As described in last week's column, The New York Times
and other sanctimonious news outlets censored details about the crime that put
Clayton Lockett on death row, the better to generate revulsion at his deserved
execution. You might say they buried the facts alive.
For example, the Times neglected to mention anything
about the raping that preceded the murdering, which seems odd for a newspaper
so consumed with the "War on Women." (At least Lockett never refused
to pay for a woman's birth control pills!)
The Times also dropped the part about Lockett's dangerous
behavior while incarcerated, such as ordering hits on the witnesses against
him, his threats to kill prison guards, and the bounty of homemade weapons
seized from him in prison -- saw blades, sharpened wires, shivs and shanks.
(Old Times motto: "All the News That's Fit to Print." New Times
motto: "Nobody Likes a Rat.")
The newspaper also failed to report that Lockett had
ended up in an adult prison by the age of 16 and then was convicted of four
more felonies before committing the torture-murder of Stephanie Neiman that
sent him to death row.
No, that information might distract from the Times'
florid descriptions of Lockett's execution.
Bless their hearts, they gave it their all, but even the
Times could not make Lockett's "botched" execution sound particularly
grisly. Here is the paper's full, terrifying description:
"According to an eyewitness account by a reporter
for The Tulsa World, Mr. Lockett tried to raise himself up, mumbled the word 'man,'
and was in obvious pain. Officials hastily closed the blinds on the chamber and
told reporters that the execution had been stopped because of a 'vein failure.'
But at 7:06, the inmate was pronounced dead of a heart attack."
HE RAISED HIMSELF UP? WHAT KIND OF COUNTRY ARE WE???
Actually, I'm not that horrified. It sounds as if he
suffered a bit, which is nice, and he's dead, which was the objective of the
whole enterprise.
You want horrifying? Imagine a 2-inch baby being chopped
up with scissors. That can't feel great.
Maybe they -- and MSNBC's similarly high-minded Rachel
Maddow -- should comfort themselves by thinking of Lockett's execution as a
very, very, very late-term abortion. You know, the kind that liberal darling
Wendy Davis filibustered for 11 hours to keep legal.
Since Rachel and the Times are such big fans of
partial-birth abortion, would they mind if we took a gigantic pair of scissors,
jammed them in the back of Clayton Lockett's head and let his brain slide out?
Let's get Kermit Gosnell working again!
Or how about giving the citizens of Oklahoma the right to
choose an acid bath for condemned murderers? We'll submerge people like Lockett
in a tub filled with burning fluid until he's mostly disintegrated and can be
flushed down the toilet. (If it's low-flow, flush twice.)
Or maybe an industrial vacuum designed to tear Lockett's
body apart.
Which reminds me: Would the Times ever give as detailed a
description of an abortion as it does for the execution of a remorseless
killer? The odds are pretty high that the baby isn't even a rapist/murderer.
Opposition to the death penalty has nothing to do with
compassion. Liberals weeping for murderers have zero compassion for an innocent
baby trying to escape an abortionist's cranioclast. Their dead earnestness
about monsters like Clayton Lockett is solely designed to demonstrate how
virtuous they are.
It will come as a surprise to the sort of person who
works at the Times, but there are lots of people who don't go through life
trying to prove they're better than everyone else. They don't think to
themselves: Listen to NPR? Check. Got the kids into a fancy preschool? Check.
Now, what's that little extra for experts? ... Defend depraved murderers!
Check!
Manifestly, these death penalty hysterics do not care
about the victims of crime. But they don't really care about the killers,
either. Their only objective is to increase their self-esteem.
This is why liberal arguments against the death penalty
are always circular. It's not about logic; it's about their conception of themselves.
U.S. pharmaceutical companies won't sell lethal injection
drugs to the states because they don't want to be sued and harassed by
anti-death penalty activists. European pharmaceutical companies refuse to sell
the drugs to the U.S. because they're so deeply committed to human rights -- as
we saw around the middle of the last century.
Then they all turn around and complain when crummy
substitutes fail to produce nice, peaceful exits for heinous murderers. (You
know -- like they gave their victims.)
It's exactly like the left's complaint that the death
penalty "costs too much."
Q: Why is it so expensive?
A: Because we sue, drag the cases out forever with
endless appeals and require states to spend millions of dollars on legal costs.
How about we cut the Euros and lefty activists out of the
execution process altogether with a voluntary firing squad? It's quick, it's
effective and the whole community gets to participate!
The state could run ads in newspapers giving detailed
accounts of the condemned man's crime -- all that stuff The New York Times
frantically hides from its readers -- and then ask: "Would you be
interested in being assigned to his firing squad?"
The Supreme Court has defined "cruel and unusual
punishment" as something that offends society's "evolving sense of
decency." When we see how many people volunteer for the firing squad,
we'll at least have a back-of-the-envelope estimate on whether society's
"evolving sense of decency" is more offended by the death of Clayton
Lockett or that of Stephanie Neiman.
I know I'd volunteer. Having read the truth about what
psychopaths like Clayton Lockett have done, I'd pay for the opportunity,
especially if they promise my gun won't have a blank.
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