RE: virus: The Berg Execution

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Thu May 13 2004 - 02:53:53 MDT

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    [Blunderov] This article is especially interesting if one bears in mind
    that, historically, torture has often been execution's ugly sister.
     
    Best Regards

    http://college.hmco.com/psychology/resources/students/shelves/shelves_200205
    04.html
    <q>
    Why Do People Want To Be Executioners? A Review of 'The Last Face You'll
    Ever See' by Ivan Solotaroff
    <q>
    By Elaine Cassel

    Did you ever wonder what kind of person wants to be a public executioner-the
    prison employee who carries out the death sentence? Ivan Solotaroff wanted
    to know. He talked to several of them and wrote about their reasons in The
    Last Face You'll Ever See (Harper Collins, 2001).
    In the 1960s, Stanley Milgrim conducted a now-famous laboratory experiment
    in order to study obedience. After recruiting male volunteers, he set up a
    task in which someone called a "teacher" would administer electric shocks to
    a "learner" in order, ostensibly, to help them learn a list of words. When a
    "learner" missed a word, the "teacher" would administer an electric shock.
    An experimenter was in the booth with the "teacher," and would encourage the
    "teacher" to push the volt-delivering button when the "teacher" expressed
    reluctance. In fact, the experimenters would tell the "teachers" that they
    had no choice but to deliver the shocks.

    In Milgrim's experiment, no shocks were actually delivered. The "learners"
    were confederates of the experimenter. But the "teachers" thought that they
    were delivering shocks. And more than 65 % of the teachers were willing to
    administer the maximum voltage, in spite of the cries of pain and screams
    for mercy.

    The death penalty, the ultimate form of punishment for crimes, is alive and
    well in the United States today. Even though it is under attack on several
    fronts for the unfairness in its administration and its effect (virtually
    all, with the noted exception of Timothy McVeigh, who receive the death
    penalty were poor and had poorly performing court-appointed attorneys who
    gave their clients an inadequate defense), 65 % of the country (like 65 % of
    Migram's "teachers") believe in the death penalty.

    Whether or not they would want to be the person who pushes the button (in
    states where electrocution is used) or inserting the lethal cocktail into
    the arm of the condemned person (in most states, lethal injection is the
    preferred form of execution), is another matter. But some people are
    willing-some gleeful-to be the executioner.

    Author Ivan Solotaroff, who has studied many aspects of executions, decided
    to study the executioner. In The Last Face You'll Ever See, he does not
    delve into the controversy of whether the death penalty is right or wrong.
    He simply wants to know why individual executioners want the job.

    He found several different motives. Some say that they do it because they
    like the machinery of death, especially the electric chair. They take pride
    in their work and are disturbed when the machine malfunctions and they must
    make another effort to end a prisoner's life. These people deny have any
    emotional attachment to the death process either way-to them, they are just
    operating a machine. Robert Elliott, an executioner at Sing Sing, has
    assisted in killing, or killed, more than 500 people. He admits to liking
    the power that is associated with the chair and he says he is doing no more
    than what society has asked him to do.

    Thomas Berry Bruce, an executioner for the state of Mississippi, is a
    perfectionist. He does not like to see his victims burned; he wants them to
    "look good" when they are buried. But he is also distanced from the process.
    It may come as a surprise to many Americans that when the coroner fills out
    the death certificate of an executed person, the cause of death is listed as
    "homicide." Bruce, whose wife did not know for many years that he was an
    executioner (she thought he marketed fruit and vegetables to grocery stores)
    <!>( Bl.), says that the term "homicide" has no more emotional significance
    to him than the words "pesticide" or "herbicide."

    Readers will likely--and probably rightly-suggest that Elliot and Bruce are
    employing the defense mechanisms of denial and rationalization and engaging
    in emotional distancing. These men would deny any such psychological
    processes.

    But another Mississippi executioner, Donald Hocutt, does not particularly
    enjoy his work. He wishes that society would execute people in public, as
    was long the custom. He says the secrecy of it makes him feel like it is
    "dirty." <!>(Bl.) Hocutt's comments suggest that he feels like society's
    "shame" of the execution process (his explanation for why it is not carried
    out in public) is transferred to him.

    Solotaroff also interviewed condemned men. Inmates at Louisiana's Angola
    State Prison came up with a mythical-religious explanation of the execution
    process, in which the executioner is merely doing what society wishes it
    could do-kill the condemned man himself. They said that American society
    wants the death penalty because it wants to kill undesirable people. The
    executioner kills in their names. The inmates said that treating the
    prisoner kindly on his last day and preparing whatever foods he wants for a
    last meal is like, in Biblical terms, fattening the sacrificial animal for
    slaughter. <!>(Bl.)

    It appears that these condemned men have engaged in psychological distancing
    from and rationalization about the process in which they will be victims. By
    also seeing themselves as players in a larger drama, they also enhance their
    role in the process, much as Robert Elliott does, who see himself as
    carrying out the will of the state. The prisoners see themselves as being
    sacrificed in the name of the state.

    Solotaroff interviewed only one executioner who gave up the job. Don Cabana,
    also from Mississippi, quit after it took 15 minutes for one man to die from
    death by lethal injection. Now he travels around the country speaking out
    against the death penalty.

    Examination of the personality characteristics of participants in Milgram's
    experiments did not indicate that they were maladjusted antisocial
    individuals. They were otherwise decent people who were willing to engage in
    hurtful behavior in order to obey authority. People who like to identify
    with authority are often said to have the personality trait of
    authoritarianism. People in law enforcement and corrections typically score
    high on personality scales that assess authoritarianism. The executioners
    may also be internalizing authoritarianism. Except for Cabana, they were
    happy to be identified with the execution process, in which society carries
    out the ultimate power against one of its citizens.

    Psychology studies human behavior and thinking within social and political
    contexts. And even though the subject matter is grim, psychology students
    reading The Last Face You'll Ever See can learn not just about the men who
    carry out executions, but something about themselves as well. Individual
    responses to the men's stories allows us into our own feelings about the
    death penalty, one of the most controversial social and political issues of
    our time.

    Elaine Cassel, Marymount University and Lord Fairfax Community College
    </q>
     

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