Move follows Alabama’s recent killing of death row inmate Kenneth Smith using previously untested method

Three of the largest manufacturers of medical-grade nitrogen gas in the US have barred their products from being used in executions, following Alabama’s recent killing of the death row inmate Kenneth Smith using a previously untested method known as nitrogen hypoxia.

The three companies have confirmed to the Guardian that they have put in place mechanisms that will prevent their nitrogen cylinders falling into the hands of departments of correction in death penalty states. The move by the trio marks the first signs of corporate action to stop medical nitrogen, which is designed to preserve life, being used for the exact opposite – killing people.

The green shoots of a corporate blockade for nitrogen echoes the almost total boycott that is now in place for medical drugs used in lethal injections. That boycott has made it so difficult for death penalty states to procure drugs such as pentobarbital and midazolam that a growing number are turning to nitrogen as an alternative killing technique.

Now, nitrogen producers are engaging in their own efforts to prevent the abuse of their products. The march has been led by Airgas, which is owned by the French multinational Air Liquide.

  • NobodyElse@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    Nitrogen hypoxia sounds like one of the best ways to die, without pain or panic, but I completely understand why no company wants to be the supplier of the means of executing people. Small volume, small profits, extreme controversy. What’s to want there?

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      Sure. If it was done correctly and we could trust the justice system to not kill innocent people. However they figured out the cruelest way to do it and SCOTUS ruled we have to kill innocent people even if all the evidence says they’re innocent because it might hurt the court’s reputation of they back down.

      • Blumpkinhead@lemmy.world
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        SCOTUS ruled we have to kill innocent people even if all the evidence says they’re innocent because it might hurt the court’s reputation of they back down.

        I’m not familiar with this. Is this something that actually happened?

        • joel_feila@lemmy.world
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          yes more then once. Most recently the supreme court ruled you can’t bring new evidence to an areal. Why? because it would undermine the state right to be sure of their decision. Also note that the most successful way to win an appeal on a criminal case was to bring new evidence that showed your defense did not do their job or the prosecution withheld evidence that showed your innocence.

        • lemon_space@thelemmy.club
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          I believe they’re referencing this:

          The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday that state prisoners have no constitutional right to present new evidence in federal court to support their claims that they were represented at trial and on appeal in state courts by unqualified or otherwise deficient lawyers. The vote was 6-to-3, along ideological lines.

          . . .

          On Monday Thomas wrote the majority decision hollowing out that 2012 ruling on behalf of the court’s new six-justice conservative super majority.

          He said that federal courts may not hear “new evidence” obtained after conviction to show how deficient the trial or appellate lawyer in state court was. To allow such evidence to be presented in federal court, he said, “encourages prisoners to sandbag state courts,” depriving the states of “the finality that is essential to both the retributive and deterrent function of criminal law.”

          . . .

          Writing for the three dissenters, Justice Sonia Sotomayor called the decision “perverse,” and “illogical.” The Sixth Amendment “guarantees criminal defendants the right to effective assistance of counsel at trial,” she said. “Today, however, the court hamstrings the federal courts’ authority to safeguard that right.”

          NPR Source

          This is so from 2022.

        • Natanael@slrpnk.net
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          It’s called “finality”.

          The idea that it’s more Important that the process is followed and then stops at some point than that justice is achieved.

          Same reason they barred introduction of new evidence when appealing from state court to federal, giving potentially corrupt state courts full power to block exculpatory evidence to deny someone justice because the federal courts must uphold the verdict if the evidence which was accepted indicates guilt under the state law. Same thing if the prosecutor knows of evidence of innocence and withholds or, or if the evidence only turns up after the trial. You get only one chance and then you’re screwed.

        • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          Shinn V Ramirez, 2022.

          They were arguing ineffective counsel post conviction because evidence wasn’t submitted that could have shown Ramirez was innocent. Lower courts agreed, citing previous SCOTUS rulings. SCOTUS decided federal courts must be bound by the original evidence only.

          Money Quote -

          Two of those costs are particularly relevant here. First, a federal order to retry or release a state prisoner overrides the State’s sovereign power to enforce “societal norms through criminal law.” Calderon v. Thompson, 523 U. S. 538, 556.

          Second, federal intervention imposes significant costs on state criminal justice systems. See, e.g., Wainwright v. Sykes, 433 U. S. 72, 90. Pp. 6–8.

          (Separated for clarity)

          Personally I love how they say we need to respect a state’s right to enforce social norms. With the death penalty. Because those are equivalent things. Betty doesn’t like to mow her lawn. She likes to let her neighbor Lucy do it. Off to the chair for her! Okay jokes aside what they mean is their power to make laws, enforce laws, and have a court system.

          And then it’s too expensive? Really? I’m not going to be surprised when we end up with the purge only instead of being everywhere it’s actually when the air raid siren goes off during yard time at the prison.

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        Because they did in the worst way possible. All Alabama had to do was flood a sealed room with nitrogen and the execution would have been fairly “unremarkable”. Instead they forced a has mask on Smith that required his cooperation to function properly, didn’t have a one-way valve to remove exhaled gas, causing CO2 to build up in the tiny mask.

        A haircut is also a painless and quick procedure, but that doesn’t mean your barber can’t be incompetent and totally fuck up your scalp.

        • homura1650@lemm.ee
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          Especially if the American Barber Association has a rule that none of its members may participate in the haircut; and scissor manufacturers all refuse to sell to you. So you end up having it done by a random person who doesn’t mind ignoring what every barber says, using a pair of rusty scissors the sherrif was able to find at a garage sale.

          • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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            That’s the thing and something I bring up with other engineers all the time. The medical community decided to not help and the result is the government can’t do it very well making it harder and harder to justify the practice. Engineers however continue to work on military tech.

            We need to organize and blacklist those that help make weapons.

        • AggressivelyPassive@feddit.de
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          Is there some reasoning behind that? As far as I know, there are at least some gas chambers in the US. And even if Alabama happens not to have one, it doesn’t seem too complicated to build one.

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          Why do people be such a hard on for asphyxiation executions. This is the same shit the said about the first gas chamber. What about the added adrenaline from the body and mind knowing the are in a death situation? What is the person beings to hyperventilate? Even the persons level of muscle mass can effect how fast it takes or when the body switches over to known O2 sources of energy to contract muscles in an attempt to keep the heart pumping. Probably the Cedar like conversions we saw from the first person they tried this on. This will inevitably be found to be an on sound way execute people and outlaw, the only question is how many people will be tortured to death before people wake up!

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            I take it you failed aviation physiology class?

            I didn’t. Then I earned a flight instructor certificate and taught it for a few years. And I’ve flown unpressurized airplanes to their service ceilings. Lemme tell ya: Hypoxia is some serious shit.

            What about the added adrenaline from the body and mind knowing the are in a death situation?

            The brain needs oxygen to live. No oxygen, brain die. I wonder how much adrenaline was in the systems of all them cave divers who ran out of air over the years.

            What is the person beings to hyperventilate?

            Done correctly, the condemned won’t live long enough for hyperventilation to be a factor. But go ahead and try; it’ll only kill you faster.

            Harken back to 9th grade health class and recall that mammalian lungs function by diffusion. Oxygen enters your blood only because chemicals want to pass from areas of relatively high concentration to relatively low concentration. Blood that has entered the lungs from the body doesn’t have much oxygen in it; some but less than fresh air. So oxygen flows in, and CO2 flows out. The reason putting your head in a bag sucks so much is because CO2 quickly builds up in the bag, and then it stops flowing out of your blood. Your body has the ability to feel too much CO2, and that sensation sucks a lot. If you’re in a big room full of nothing but nitrogen, your body can get rid of the CO2, and it will actually get rid of oxygen too. The blood in your veins, returning from your body to your lungs, that doesn’t have much oxygen in it, does have some. And if the air in your lungs has absolutely no oxygen in it, that “some” oxygen in your blood will diffuse out.

            In normal air, hyperventilation sucks because you actually remove too much CO2 and that messes with your body’s natural ability to regulate your breathing. But, it doesn’t take many lungfuls of zero oxygen air before you lose consciousness.

            That feeling of panic you get when holding your breath, or breathing with your head in a bag, where you’re breathing in your own old breath, and it hurts and sucks? That feeling happens because there’s too much CO2. In a low oxygen environment with plenty of air for you to exhale in, that doesn’t happen. You just get a little dizzy, you get a little lightheaded, you fall over and just fucking die before you realize what the problem is. Happens to sailors sometimes; there are compartments of big steel ships that are usually sealed, the walls use up all the oxygen in there by rusting, then a sailor has to go in there to maintain something. They open a door, climb in, take a few steps, and fall over and just fucking die.

            That’s how you would describe it if you were his buddy at the door watching him. “He was fine, then he fell over and just fucking died.” Because the air around your face outside the door is safe to breathe, the air 6 feet away on the other side of the door killed your friend in less than a minute and it’ll kill you too if you try to climb in and help him.

            And the scariest thing is it doesn’t hurt. It doesn’t smell, it doesn’t taste, it doesn’t feel. It breathes like normal air because normal air is mostly nitrogen. We breathe it all the time; most of the gas in your lungs right now is nitrogen.

            Even the persons level of muscle mass can effect how fast it takes or when the body switches over to known O2 sources of energy to contract muscles in an attempt to keep the heart pumping.

            And Commander Adama might set his light saber to warp drive. Have you considered that?

            List of the human body’s “known 02 sources:”

            • The lungs.

            That’s it. Your body doesn’t have any spare oxygen saved up in your bones or whatever. No oxygen go in mouth and nose, no oxygen go in blood, no oxygen go in brain, brain die.

            The heart can pump all it wants, if the heart pumps blood with no oxygen to the brain, the brain dies. That’s the fundamental principle we’re working with here.

            I had to go through fairly extensive training so that I didn’t kill myself and several other people this way by accident, yet Alabama couldn’t manage it properly on purpose.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Yeah you need to be in a chamber where your exhaled co2 is so immediately diluted that you get no feedback from it. I believe the current attempts used normal medical masks

    • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.world
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      If “right to die” laws become more of a thing, this would be the most compassionate way of doing a home suicide kit. I wonder if the manufacturers would oppose that as well, or only executions.

      Like you said, there’s not much in it for them either way.

    • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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      It sounds like a reasonable way to die when the individual doesn’t know what’s going on or is accepting/willing. As an execution method it’s shit.

      • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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        Well, disregarding the normal fear of death that would be there regardless of the method, I think the issue is the mask. It would be much better to just fill the room with N2. You can do this easilly enough by evaporating liquid N2. Of course, this would not be “medical grade” so people would complain just to complain.

        • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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          We could also just not kill people. Kinda seems to be at the root of this problem.

          • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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            I could not agree more. People should stop murdering people so there is no need for the death penalty.

            Keep in mind this guy thought it was fine to kill someone for $1000. Not any hatred or psychological issue or ideology. Just a bit of cash.

            • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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              Or we could just not retaliate with execution. We could follow the evidence that execution doesn’t reduce crime rate or severity and to not make murderers of the state

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                Its this flawed argument on repeat. You just start assuming that killing a murderer (“life for a life”) is somehow automatically wrong and then use it to show death penalty is wrong.

                Why is “life for a life” somehow unfair demand for the premeditated murderers? What is this based on? Or just repeating it because you heard it so often.

                • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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                  Youre Right I’m just parroting the idea that killing is bad. Definitely not from a belief that punitive justice is ineffective at reducing crime, that we as a society must be better than our worst people, and a deep terror informed by history at the idea of a government having the power to decide to kill its own citizens.

                  Like seriously this is fucking gas chambers in Alabama and some people aren’t just horrified by where that might go?

            • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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              “Why do we kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong?”

              -Holly Near

            • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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              this guy thought it was fine to kill someone for $1000

              And we have the capacity to be better than that.

              There was no compelling need to execute him. If such a compelling need did exist, it would have presented itself in the past 36 years where he was in custody but not executed. But it didn’t, so the state just waited until some arbitrary time to tick a box that didn’t need to be ticked.

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                My fundamental issue is with the “better than that”. I really don’t see why letting a cold blooded murderer off lightly would be the better way.

                • Moobythegoldensock@lemm.ee
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                  What do you mean by “off lightly?” They’re still getting punished while serving a life sentence. The punishment stops when the lights go out.

                • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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                  Well prison for decades doesn’t seem very light to me. I have never been granted but from those that have I have heard most wouldn’t recommend it.

              • quindraco@lemm.ee
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                Same (faulty) logic used to tell the oppressed not rise up against their oppressors. If you’re going to conflate all killing with murder, be prepared to get into weeds like self defense and right to die. If you’re willing to admit killing humans is more nuanced than that, then and only then we can have a real discussion.

                • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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                  There is a difference between reacting to a situation vs creating a new situation.

                  Very few people would argue against having to use violence to stop someone else from using it, in the moment where other options don’t present themselves. However a murdered container in prison is no longer a threat. The state has the luxury of just keeping them there until time and nature does her thing.

                  Basically the rules for a crisis are not the rules for a non-crisis. Additionally, if it is required to use violence to stop violence at least the hope is something bad won’t happen. Not the case for someone in jail. The bad thing already happened.

                  More broadly Ukraine has the right to defend herself. She does not have the right to burn down parts of Russia 40 years from now when the war is long over.

                • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  Sure. I can say that self defense (only in cases where there is an immediate threat of death) is fine due to it being a life or death situation. I can also agree to right to die being okay since there is consent, so long as the person is considered to be in a mentally healthy state.

                  Not sure about the rising up thing, though, but that is very nuanced. I believe in democracy, but most of the time, corruption makes it so that true democracy becomes impossible. Overthrowing a government is also a difficult topic, since often times, it is a movement that gets coopted by the powerful or by those who seek power instead of those who seek the government to serve all of its people.

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                If you bake bread, you are a bread baker. If you play football, you are a football player. If you murder someone, you are a murderer.

                If you don’t commit the crime of murder, you are not a murderer. Murder is a legal term. Administering a death penalty is not murder, since it is not a crime.

                No matter how much batman says otherwise, there is nothing inherently not ok about death penalty for murderers. Of course, you can dislike it all you want. But don’t go slandering people that disagree with you.

                Arguably, the opposite is true: If I decide I really want to kill you, what should be the minimal punishment? Is it ok to just pay a fine? Is it ok to be in prison for a month? How about a year? What if I decide the slap on the wrist punishment is worth it? Why should the punishment be less than paying with my own life in kind? Why is your life worth less than mine when I am the murderer in this hypothetical?

                • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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                  If you don’t commit the crime of murder, you are not a murderer. Murder is a legal term. Administering a death penalty is not murder, since it is not a crime.

                  The same way that the Holocaust was legal…

                • Refurbished Refurbisher@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  An eye for an eye leaves everyone blind.

                  If I decide I really want to kill you, what should be the minimal punishment?

                  Life in prison.

                  Murder is a legal term. Administering a death penalty is not murder, since it is not a crime.

                  Murder is not exclusively a legal term; it is also used in ethical/moral discussions, like how I used it. A government can decide legallity, but it cannot decide if something is moral or not, although most governments attempt to do so. What is moral or not is also not universal, and can vary across different cultures and time periods.

                  But don’t go slandering people that disagree with you.

                  You mean like what you just did with this comment?

                  Keep in mind, in the US, there is a ~4% false conviction rate for the death penalty. That means that ~4% of people who get the death penalty are innocent.

                  Source: https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1306417111

            • quindraco@lemm.ee
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              People should stop murdering people so there is no need for the death penalty.

              What need is that, exactly?

              Keep in mind this guy thought it was fine to kill someone for $1000. Not any hatred or psychological issue or ideology. Just a bit of cash.

              You don’t know that. You think that, and there’s evidence to support it, but you don’t know it.

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                As I wrote in a different thread, yes, I agree we should not have death penalty due to the high possibility (inevitability?) of executing innocent people.

                I just don’t see any moral issue with executing actual murderers with N2, just the practical issue of not being able to precisely determine who the murderers are.

            • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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              Why do you even care which way they kill people then? Trying to take the moral high ground, when you’re just as blood thirsty as the condemned.

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                That’s a ridiculous argument. If I believe a bank robber should be stopped from robbing a bank using force, can’t I also demand the force is not excessive?

                Thinking death is an appropriate punishment and torture isn’t is not contradictory.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              Still not enough. I have had the same stance for a long time. The death penalty should only be used, if ever, for crimes so bad that to not use it is to say thr crime was as bad as regular murder. Warlords who commit genocide level.

        • Gork@lemm.ee
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          Yeah the mask and timing is what caused that one prisoner to be in so much suffering since he knew it was going to happen imminently so he held his breath.

          If it were done gradually over a period of like 30 minutes, he likely wouldn’t have noticed and just drifted into unconsciousness.

            • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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              A lot more difficult to do without him noticing and the “feared” mask on his face and potential to vomit into the mask would still be an issue.

              • Gork@lemm.ee
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                Yeah the room option is better in that regard.

                It would need to have some hardware interlocks engineered though for safety reasons. After turning on the gas, you won’t be able to physically open the door until the ventilation system removes the nitrogen after the execution.

                • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                  You could do that although N2 gas is not that dangerous. Just opening a door to a well ventilated room will get rid of the gas. It is not poisonous or anything. Its not like you are doing this every week that you get lax about procedure.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            …No, you’d notice. When you’re in that “not quite enough oxygen in the room” scenario, you get tingles and headaches and such. It kinda sucks. Though I think I’d rather die that way than those gas station lethal injections they’ve been doing.

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          Just not true! The execution method requires a willing or unconscious victim. Why do people think any type of asphyxiation will be nice and peaceful regardless of the gas used? (yes I understand the “science” behind using this gas.) but what if the person holds their breath, or account for the added adrenaline, or the person hyperventilating. I can go on. It’s not medically sound way to execute people. Honestly, this is the same lies they pushed about previous humane execution methods. “it’s painless, the science is sound.” I promise you, after about 5 more “botched” executions using this N2 method it’ll be abandoned.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            “What if the person holds their breath?”

            Then it’ll take maybe a minute longer, and their last words are gonna be “BUH! Huh! Huh! Huh! …huh.”

            “or account for the added adrenaline”

            No oxygen in brain, brain die. I think you lied about understanding the science.

            “or the person is hyperventilating”

            Yeah, what if they breathe no oxygen faster?

          • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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            Is there a medically sound way? What does “medically sound” even mean? Theere is no patient who is supposed to survive.

            It is the best way of execution I can think of short of explosives near brain.

            • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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              That’s the point you pull out and try to focus on? “Humane” executions always had a medical backing for why it world work.

              Then the you try to say “is the best way of execution I can think of short of explosives near the brain.” oh really that’s the best you can think of? Shows how flawed and warped your understanding of this is. If you honestly want to make it as quick and painless in pretty sure the French figured that out back in 1789. But Ya let’s blow up people’s heads with c4.

              • DreamlandLividity@lemmy.world
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                Your brain can function without oxygen for over 30 seconds. I see no reason why it wouldn’t in a detached head.

                The guillotine suffer from the same issue most execution methods used until now, they only seem “quick and painless”. Nitrogen gas actually is painless.

                • NatakuNox@lemmy.world
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                  Nitrogen gas will be found to be unsuitable for execution. I just hope people wake up to this before more people are tortured to death.

              • Scubus@sh.itjust.works
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                Ah yes, the ole “let’s bring back the guillotine that left you alive and semi conscious for up to 30 seconds while your head rolls around” argument. Such humane, much wow

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      Maybe also the moral and ethical questions that come with it, you know, besides just money?

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        Haha yeah, I’m sure that got an entire slide in the PowerPoint at the board meeting. I’m sure plenty of people there morally object. I also think that a steady and sizeable stream of income would instantly cure those objections though. But as the person above said already there is only a trickle of pennies in it for them.

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    AirGas, Air Products, and Matheson are the manufacturers, for anyone interested.

    My job’s vendor is also mentioned:

    Other manufacturers of medical nitrogen in the US were more circumspect. Linde, a global multinational founded in Germany and headquartered in the UK, would not say whether it was willing to sell its product for use in US death chambers and declined to comment.

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        Just got the optics I would really avoid “execution gas chambers” being on my product applications sheet if I were a German company.

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    I wonder which tactic Republicans will take when it inevitably turns out they’re buying it from China- lie that they’re doing it or insist that they have to due to the evil liberal elite?

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      I mean, they buy trumps shirty merch that’s made in china.

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        Isn’t his daughter’s clothing line all sourced from China? I remember she was even given a Tariff Exemption.

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        2016 Democratic Party platform:

        We will abolish the death penalty, which has proven to be a cruel and unusual form of punishment. It has no place in the United States of America. The application of the death penalty is arbitrary and unjust. The cost to taxpayers far exceeds those of life imprisonment. It does not deter crime. And, exonerations show a dangerous lack of reliability for what is an irreversible punishment.

        (They reiterated this in 2020.)

        2016 Republican party platform:

        The constitutionality of the death penalty is firmly settled by its explicit mention in the Fifth Amendment. With the murder rate soaring in our great cities, we condemn the Supreme Court’s erosion of the right of the people to enact capital punishment in their states.

        (They re-adopted the 2016 platform in 2020.)

        https://deathpenaltyinfo.org/facts-and-research/public-opinion-polls/political-party-platforms-and-the-death-penalty

        Sorry, it’s political whether you like it or not.

  • Melatonin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    This is an honest question. In the US we probably put down thousands of household pets each month. Many of them have their owners right there beside them holding their paw. It isn’t tramatic for the pet or the owner.

    How can it be this difficult for us to humanely execute a human?

    • BreakDecks@lemmy.ml
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      Because we’re kill our pets out of love, and we kill inmates out of hate. Humane treatment isn’t difficult, the cruelty is intentional.

      So long as were still using the barbaric practice of state-sanctioned murder, the practice itself will remain barbaric. The only solution is to eliminate the death penalty like the rest of the civilized western world.

    • I_poop_from_there@lemmy.world
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      There are plenty of options to ‘put down’ a human as well, but most of those require medical expertise to administer.

      Medical personnel generally frown upon the whole idea of putting people down, so they’re not really an option

    • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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      That was explained in the post: drug manufacturers are careful who they sell to and they do their best to prevent their products from being used in executions.

    • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      If a human chooses euthanasia because of endless and needless suffering, say stage 4 cancer, that sort of thing, I’ll sit right next to them, hold their hand too.

      When we execute a human, it’s a different story and as I wrote this I wonder if I really have to explain the difference between euthanasia and an execution…?

      • Worx@lemmynsfw.com
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        You’re missing the point. The question was, “how is it medically different” rather than, “how is it morally different”

        • Zanothis@lemm.ee
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          The moral question is still the issue, though. The original question was asking how is it so difficult to humanely execute a human.

          It’s difficult only because of the difference between execution and euthanasia. The drug companies argue that execution is inhumane and euthanasia is humane.

          As a result, they have made it harder to execute people while making the process of euthanasia as painless as possible.

        • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          You asked how it’s different to kill a human than a pet. Medically speaking there isn’t, really, so you get the moral answer

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        I’m sorry I really don’t understand what your point is.

        The question is why does execution have to be so awful, and your answer is because it’s an execution. But that doesn’t really answer the question, is execution of punishment or is it just a method to get rid of dangerous individuals? If it’s a method to get rid of dangerous individuals then there’s no reason for it to be unpleasant.

        If it’s a punishment then wouldn’t the great a punishment be life in prison. Where they have to deal with it every day, rather than getting out early?

        • phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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          there is no reason for it to be unpleasant

          If you find killing humans not unpleasant just because those human beings are bad then you might want to get a psychiatric checkup

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          is execution of punishment or is it just a method to get rid of dangerous individuals?

          It’s neither. The dangerous individuals have already been removed from society so killing them is unnecessary. And, as you’ve pointed out, a life sentence is a much better punishment so executions aren’t about punishment. It’s not a deterrent, as some advocates suggest, since the homicide rate is higher in states with the death penalty than those without.

          Ultimately, the purpose of executions seems to be revenge. I think there’s more nuance than that but every time I attempt to express it I discover that I can’t do so succinctly. I sincerely apologize to anyone that might read this and feel like I’m misrepresenting their position.

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    Nitrogen is almost 80% of air so it’s hardly in short supply. Also why would you need medical grade? This is like alcohol swabs at the IV insertion site for lethal injection. They just don’t want the bad publicity of being associated, but it’s not going to stop anything.

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      Yeah. It is one thing when the state needs a controlled substance like execution drugs. In that case, there are only a handfull of places to get it, and they are all required to vet their purchasers anyway.

      For Nitrogen, anyone who wants some can just order a canister off of Amazon and get it delivered no questions asked. Or, for a few thousand, have their own N2 generator.

      Would defense lawyers raise hell about non-medical N2 being used? Sure, but they raise hell about everything; its their job. You would delay all executions for a few years while the appeals process plays out. Then end up with a final ruling saying that consumer grade N2 is good enough.

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      You don’t need medical grade for any practical reason. It is just something people who are against death penalty to complain about and there may be legal technicalities that would require it.

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    I think the death penalty should just go away but if you’re going to have it I don’t understand why prisons are so gong-ho about all these complicated execution methods.

    Why don’t they just shoot people? That would work. It simple, it’s quick, and it involves cool guns, which shouldn’t really be a consideration but it’s the US so it is.

  • rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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    Nitrogen generators are relatively cheap and compact these days, so I don’t see this having a huge impact if a prison really wants to go this route

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    Seems sensible enough. Even if you agreed that there should be a death penalty and nitrogen is a humane way to do it the tiny amount of money you could potentially make supplying it would not be worth the potential PR hit.

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    “Okay folks, it’s execution day and you know what that means… Everybody pass around the Fart Bag.”

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    I mean, I’m glad, but at the same time, I can’t help but wonder why these corporations care, when they’re killing people in so many other ways outside of prisons.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        And they care about selling product in Canada and maybe Europe, and they would probably not be able to if they complied with the request to aid in executions.

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      ES&G (Environmental, Social, & Governance) policies are starting to become a common thing. They seem to have started at large corporations and they, in turn, drive their smaller partners to adopt similar policies. They want to present a face of sustainable and accountable practices, free from corruption, blah blah blah.

      I work for a medium to small company and it has become part of my job to ask awkward questions of our vendors. Our corporate customers are pressing us on our practices, and we press our vendors as part of a “sustainable and ethical supply chain”. Not all companies are well prepared to answer these questions, but some are. In general, the US lags behind Asia and Europe when it comes to this. At least in my industry. So that’s a big caveat.

      How do we know they’re not lying? One tool is that independent third party auditors can assess a company and gauge its strengths and weaknesses. (Ecovadis is a name I’ve seen many times during these discussions, but there are others.) These auditors live or die by their reputations, so they have an interest in staying honest.

      In the case of these nitrogen vendors (one of which is used by my employer), this is an easy ES&G win. The amount of nitrogen sold to executioners is vanishingly small, whereas we buy it by the tanker. It’s definitely on the short list of awkward questions I would ask them.

      The term ‘greenwashing’ will come up. And trust me, because I’m a cynical bitch with a hair-trigger bullshit meter, I’ve used it myself. But I’m cautiously optimistic that questions like this can move companies in a better direction. Part of that has to do with the look of confusion and horror when I visit vendors in deep red states and start asking questions about labor, safety, and the environmental impact of their operations. They don’t want to do waste or emissions remediation, but they also don’t want to lose our business. (I’m honestly enjoying this new direction my work is taking.)

      • RainfallSonata@lemmy.world
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        How do you get a job asking awkward questions? It sounds like my calling, and I’d prefer not to live in constant fear of being fired!

        • ArtieShaw@kbin.social
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          For me, it was an accident. I had a degree in a hard science, but realized that academia would drive me mad. My first job was in a relatively small industry and I just kept on with it until I knew the requirements to making a safe and quality product.

          The fear of being fired exists, but you have to know when and where to ask those questions. I ask our vendors whether their employees have a right to form a union if they want one, for example. I also know that our plant managers are deeply opposed to our own employees having that option.

          Eventually that question is going to come up. It’ll probably come from a consultant that we hire to evaluate us. It won’t be me unless there’s a situation where it would be awkward not to ask about it. For example, if an HR rep is dumb enough to tell us we’re perfectly free in that regard, I’d be sorely tempted to ask when that policy changed.

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    I hate headlines.

    Spent many long seconds trying to figure out which US bar would have nitrogen manufacturers.

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      I thought they spoiled the punchline a bit too much by using the word “bar” to describe tanks of compressed gas.

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        The only reason I opened this past the title was because I put that comment in there. The headline didn’t interest me even after I figured out what the garden path sentence meant, lol

        Nobody reads every post and every link that pops up in their feed.

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    Is it their say though? It’s not a lease, once someone else owns it they can do what they want with it.

    • Ross_audio@lemmy.world
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      For a fun example to talk about look at Deadmau5’s Purrari.

      The Nyan cat wrapped Ferrari.

      Legally Ferrari had little they could do. There was some things to do with putting a modified badge they could stop. While on finance they could recall the loan due to the modifications affecting the equity in the car.

      But any seller of any product has the backstop that they can ban further purchases and refuse future services. Or even potentially be required to buy their home nation.

      Why would Nitrogen gas suppliers not want this?

      As a global company, do you want to risk losing a major market by supplying a product for executions.

      If you sell your product for executions you are officially selling a poison.

      Do you want the regulation involved to have to background check every customer to ensure they are not using it for lethal purposes?

      Do you want the additional import and export controls on your product?

      Are you held liable in any way if someone deliberately uses your product for euthanasia or suicide? Potentially. That’s why several countries have limits on the volume of paracetamol an individual can purchase.

      The Terms of Service is a sticking plaster, probably not even enforceable, but the bare minimum to avoid further regulations on the industry. But it’s certainly worth nitrogen gas suppliers trying to avoid themselves being dragged into a hornets nest of politics, morality, and costly regulation.

      Banning a small customer, in prisons, from buying your product could save you a lot of money in the long run.

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      Only for direct sales. Prisons could still just go buy through an intermediary, unless the first party sale contract also forbids that. Even then, it’s questionably not enforceable. It’d be like me selling my car, but doing so with a contract stipulating that the buyer can’t re-sell the car to someone that may use it for a particular (and legal) purpose.

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        What will happen if these states violate these contracts? The companies will sue them in the very same courts that ruled the death penalties?

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    How about two deathrow inmates are put together in a room with a whole bunch of things that look like door knobs but are actually one way gas knobs. You open and they don’t close. The gas part is easy just go to a welding shop. Tell them it’s for “welding”. They’ll understand.

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      The detail about having two inmates in the same chamber… I don’t know, I think one would help the other think about escaping by trying the next knob cuz the previous one didn’t do anything. You probably want some loud music or a mixing fan to mask gas hissing.