I'm not sure whether you're saying that the death penalty serves no useful purpose, but I agree with you to some extent. I've been saying for years that I'd be glad to see Saddam Hussein killed for all the terrible things he has done (a grenade thrown into the "spider hole" where he was captured would have been fine with me, which is exactly what I said at the time). But now that he has been executed, I don't feel any joy at all. In fact, I feel empty inside when I think about it. A lot of people might be happy that justice was served (even though in my opinion this particular trial was a sham), but I really don't think it makes the world a better place. You have to ask, "What's next?" and the future for Iraq doesn't look all that great.Luis Antonio wrote:Well, honestly, he deserved it, though I see no good outcome from a death.
the fate of saddam
But the question is, would it be worse if Saddam still lives? I personally think that it's best that Saddam is dead, especially for Iraq.VonDondu wrote:I'm not sure whether you're saying that the death penalty serves no useful purpose, but I agree with you to some extent. I've been saying for years that I'd be glad to see Saddam Hussein killed for all the terrible things he has done (a grenade thrown into the "spider hole" where he was captured would have been fine with me, which is exactly what I said at the time). But now that he has been executed, I don't feel any joy at all. In fact, I feel empty inside when I think about it. A lot of people might be happy that justice was served (even though in my opinion this particular trial was a sham), but I really don't think it makes the world a better place. You have to ask, "What's next?" and the future for Iraq doesn't look all that great.
"As we all know, holy men were born during Christmas...
Like mr. Holopainen over there!"
- Marco Hietala, the bass player of Nightwish
Like mr. Holopainen over there!"
- Marco Hietala, the bass player of Nightwish
From a personal perspective, I just don't see how someone can be joyful by one's death, no matter what. It just makes me sad.
From a political perspective, I think the states would go wrong either way: Saddam had a somewhat powerful voice, which influenced many, but now he is likely to be made a martyr, which will have the same effect. Either way, the hell that the Bush started, is difficult to see an end of.
From a political perspective, I think the states would go wrong either way: Saddam had a somewhat powerful voice, which influenced many, but now he is likely to be made a martyr, which will have the same effect. Either way, the hell that the Bush started, is difficult to see an end of.
<worksoufy> man i need to eat
<Trak3r> that's "yoda" speak for "i need to eat a man"
<Trak3r> that's "yoda" speak for "i need to eat a man"
- Fiberfar
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Hm.... I wonder if it would be better to have Saddam in prison until he died of natural causes, instead of hanging him. It is after all easier to make a dead man a martyr rather than a living one.
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]ONLY RETARDED PEOPLE WRITE WITH CAPS ON. Good thing I press shift
[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
True but then you have to take into account the housing, care, and feeding of the individual for that time period. In addition, you have to consider possible chances of escape.Fiberfar wrote:Hm.... I wonder if it would be better to have Saddam in prison until he died of natural causes, instead of hanging him. It is after all easier to make a dead man a martyr rather than a living one.
In the end it is just more efficient to kill them and conserve the resources.
Great spirits have always found violent opposition from mediocre minds. The latter cannot understand it when a person does not thoughtlessly submit to hereditary prejudices but honestly and courageously uses their intelligence.
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I find this notion about efficiency troubling.DaemonJ wrote:True but then you have to take into account the housing, care, and feeding of the individual for that time period. In addition, you have to consider possible chances of escape.
In the end it is just more efficient to kill them and conserve the resources.
I don't feel that the justice was served: it looks like a speedy revenge of a rival tribe due to the mockery of the so-called trial.
They tried to make the execution very theatrical as well: Saddam was executed alone, right before the start of Eid ul-Adha, or Feast of Sacrifice, which is concluding the pilgrimage to Mecca.
Eid ul-Adha is the major Muslim Festival commemorating Ibrahim's willingness to obey Allah by sacrificing his son Ishmael (who is considered the forefather of Arabs).
Man's most valuable trait is a judicious sense of what not to believe.
-- Euripides
-- Euripides
Ah, I had wondered why it was a problem, but now I see that's quite bad taste.Lady Dragonfly wrote:I find this notion about efficiency troubling.
I don't feel that the justice was served: it looks like a speedy revenge of a rival tribe due to the mockery of the so-called trial.
They tried to make the execution very theatrical as well: Saddam was executed alone, right before the start of Eid ul-Adha, or Feast of Sacrifice, which is concluding the pilgrimage to Mecca.
Eid ul-Adha is the major Muslim Festival commemorating Ibrahim's willingness to obey Allah by sacrificing his son Ishmael (who is considered the forefather of Arabs).
- fable
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Dubya and his Iraqi government have once again stabbed themselves in the foot on this one. Watch the Saddam Legend start up, the poor boy who rose to rule a nation, who was proclaimed guilty in a trial where the judges were several times replaced, while his attorneys were repeatedly kept in ignorance of information the prosecution had to let them know, and occasionally gunned down. Saddam used religion like he used everything else, cynically to his benefit, but watch him become a religious and national martyr in the next month or two.
The Shi'ites that support the government (a declining number) will be pleased for a while, but the Sunnis are angry as can be. More than 70 Iraqis were killed today, in Shi'ite areas, and the highest number of Americans since Bush declared the war over. It's really only the beginning.
The Shi'ites that support the government (a declining number) will be pleased for a while, but the Sunnis are angry as can be. More than 70 Iraqis were killed today, in Shi'ite areas, and the highest number of Americans since Bush declared the war over. It's really only the beginning.
To the Righteous belong the fruits of violent victory. The rest of us will have to settle for warm friends, warm lovers, and a wink from a quietly supportive universe.
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As stated, the point is moot by now. But... I truly don't think the US administration wanted him alive, period. Imagine if he'd written his memoirs while in prison? No doubt those parts detailing his previously amicable dealings with Donald Rumsfeld would not have gone down especially well....Fiberfar wrote:Hm.... I wonder if it would be better to have Saddam in prison until he died of natural causes, instead of hanging him. It is after all easier to make a dead man a martyr rather than a living one.
Spoiler
testingtest12
Spoiler
testingtest12
- fable
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I think that if the trial had been conducted according to international norms, with complete transparency, and with all charges against Hussein processed, they might have escaped making a martyr of him. But throwing him to the US-implanted regime in an incredibly manipulated court, where so much was hidden and where the death sentence was carried out with remarkable haste--nobody is going to buy that. Except those in the US, UK and Iraq who want to continue believing the myth they created, that Hussein's removal would solve everything.Craig wrote:He'd still have been turned into a martyr for suffering in prison. The whole thing is a mess.
To the Righteous belong the fruits of violent victory. The rest of us will have to settle for warm friends, warm lovers, and a wink from a quietly supportive universe.
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Eh?dragon wench wrote:As stated, the point is moot by now.
I've never heard the word 'moot' before
Anyways, I don't think that execution by hanging, or any other forms for execution will solve any problems, except his existance.
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]ONLY RETARDED PEOPLE WRITE WITH CAPS ON. Good thing I press shift
[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
- fable
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I wrote after your last post:Fiberfar wrote:Eh?
He died about 12 hours ago, so the point's moot.
Something that's previously been decided.I've never heard the word 'moot' before![]()
It will certainly make things worse. The only question in my mind is whether it will be much worse, or much, much worse.Anyways, I don't think that execution by hanging, or any other forms for execution will solve any problems, except his existance.
To the Righteous belong the fruits of violent victory. The rest of us will have to settle for warm friends, warm lovers, and a wink from a quietly supportive universe.
- Fiberfar
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Ah bugger... That was a typo I made there then. I was awake when he was hanged. I wrote it like he wasn't dead yet ![Eek! :o](./images/smilies/)
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]ONLY RETARDED PEOPLE WRITE WITH CAPS ON. Good thing I press shift
[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Luis Antonio]Bah! Bunch of lamers! Ye need the lesson of the true powergamer: Play mages, name them Koffi Annan, and only use non-intervention spells! Buwahahahahah![/QUOTE]
I think that would be very naive to think that the Saddam-loyal fractions and the fractions which would simply use him as an "icon" on anti-US/West in Iraq and rest of the middle east etc, would be "content" if the trial had been conducted more .... lets just call it legit ... and act accordingly.fable wrote:I think that if the trial had been conducted according to international norms, with complete transparency, and with all charges against Hussein processed, they might have escaped making a martyr of him. But throwing him to the US-implanted regime in an incredibly manipulated court, where so much was hidden and where the death sentence was carried out with remarkable haste--nobody is going to buy that. Except those in the US, UK and Iraq who want to continue believing the myth they created, that Hussein's removal would solve everything.
There is no indication what so ever that the people in the situation in Iraq, the middle east or other fundamentalists behave rationally at pretty much any point in time, so I fail to see why any, sham or not, trial would be conceived otherwise. It would only help the "western" world in its explanation towards itself and justification for itself and actions.
The people who would make him a martyr would do so irregardless of the trial he got.
I have little doubt that a Saddam in prison (for life) would cause as many issues as a Saddam dead will.
This is also including that there are many (strong) factions and feelings in effect that wanted him death - if nothing else then for revenge for his tyranny and what effect it had on them.
These people would likely also have felt betrayed by a non-death sentence, which also could complicate progress in the area.
Also the supporters would not need to make a dead martyr out of him, but instead a living one - and thus would have the hope that he could be sprung free from prison, and presto a goal to work together on in unison despite other possible differences of ideology, which would/could mean various organizations united as it would be a seriously slap at the US.
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Saddam's death solves nothing.
"We wanted him to be executed on a special day." Iraqi National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie
The first reaction of the Muslim world:
"The timing of this execution [during the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha] is an affront to all Arabs and Muslims. It is an act of scorn against a great religion by the United States and the Iraqi government. Arab public opinion wonders who deserves to be tried and executed: Saddam Hussein who preserved the unity of Iraq, its Arab and Islamic identity and the coexistence of its different communities such as Shias and Sunnis ... or those who engulfed the country into this bloody civil war." Abdel-Bari Atwan, editor of the London-based Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper
"We wish to say that Eid is a day for happiness and reconciliation. It is not a day for revenge." President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan
"We have no sympathy with Saddam Hussein, but we will also say that he did not get justice." Liaquat Baluch, a leader of the Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal, a coalition of six religious parties in Pakistan
@Xandax
"The test of a government's commitment to human rights is measured by the way it treats its worst offenders. History will judge these actions harshly." Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch
"We wanted him to be executed on a special day." Iraqi National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie
The first reaction of the Muslim world:
"The timing of this execution [during the Muslim feast of Eid al-Adha] is an affront to all Arabs and Muslims. It is an act of scorn against a great religion by the United States and the Iraqi government. Arab public opinion wonders who deserves to be tried and executed: Saddam Hussein who preserved the unity of Iraq, its Arab and Islamic identity and the coexistence of its different communities such as Shias and Sunnis ... or those who engulfed the country into this bloody civil war." Abdel-Bari Atwan, editor of the London-based Al-Quds al-Arabi newspaper
"We wish to say that Eid is a day for happiness and reconciliation. It is not a day for revenge." President Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan
"We have no sympathy with Saddam Hussein, but we will also say that he did not get justice." Liaquat Baluch, a leader of the Mutahida Majlis-e-Amal, a coalition of six religious parties in Pakistan
@Xandax
Any trial must be fair and impartial regardless of political situation. Saddam's trial was a travesty of justice.There is no indication what so ever that the people in the situation in Iraq, the middle east or other fundamentalists behave rationally at pretty much any point in time, so I fail to see why any, sham or not, trial would be conceived otherwise. It would only help the "western" world in its explanation towards itself and justification for itself and actions.
The people who would make him a martyr would do so irregardless of the trial he got.
"The test of a government's commitment to human rights is measured by the way it treats its worst offenders. History will judge these actions harshly." Richard Dicker of Human Rights Watch
Man's most valuable trait is a judicious sense of what not to believe.
-- Euripides
-- Euripides