DYSPEPSIA GENERATION

We have seen the future, and it sucks.

;America’s Long and Gruesome History of Botched Executions’ Doesn’t Worry Me a Bit

13th May 2014

Read it.

Two weeks ago, things went horribly wrong with the execution of Clayton D. Lockett, a 38-year old Oklahoma man convicted of shooting a young woman and burying her alive.

Is he dead? Yes? Then it went absolutely right. The only way to improve it would be to shoot him and bury him alive, as he did to his victim, but of course the murder-deniers wouldn’t stand for that.

After executioners initiated what was meant to be a lethal injection, Lockett began writhing and tried to rise from the table; he died of an apparent heart attack 43 minutes after the procedure began. But we should not be surprised.

Actually, we should be surprised, because murderers are almost always treated better than their victims in these degenerate modern times.

One Response to “;America’s Long and Gruesome History of Botched Executions’ Doesn’t Worry Me a Bit”

  1. Cathy Sims Says:

    Isn’t it “funny” how the media is more worried about Lockett’s suffering than they are about the suffering of his victim? It probably took her longer than 43 minutes to die, and she had to watch him dig her grave. Where’s the “War on Women” outrage about that?