26 prill 2010

Legitimized Murder

It happens often in this country. It happens everyday in the world. Government killing in the name of its citizens. Legitimized murder, to borrow Camus's term.

Utah is being more gory and morbid about it. A prisoner on death row has opted for the firing squad—perhaps to make the last point he can make against this brutal practice—against lethal injection. Utah is gladly obliging with four bullets to his heart.

These are the times when I am reminded why literature is important:

Have you ever seen a man shot by a firing-squad? No, of course not; the spectators are hand-picked and it's like a private party, you need an invitation. The result is that you've gleaned your ideas about it from books and pictures. A post, a blindfolded man, some soldiers in the offing. But the real thing isn't a bit like that. Do you know that the firing-squad stands only a yard and a half from the condemned man? Do you know that if the victim took two steps forward his chest would touch the rifles? Do you know that, at this short range, the soldiers concentrate their fire on the region of the heart and their bullets make a hole into which you could thrust your fist? No, you didn't know all that; those are things that are never spoken of. For the plague-stricken their peace of mind is more important than a human life. Decent folks must be allowed to sleep easy o' nights, mustn't they? Really it would be shockingly bad taste to linger on such details, that's common knowledge. But personally I've never been able to sleep well since then. The bad taste remained in my mouth and I've kept lingering on the details, brooding over them.

Tarrou in The Plague by Albert CAMUS

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