Bootsctr
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- Jul 29, 2012
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:lurk: Think about Elizabeth and Lyric every day. I'm so thankful for everyone that continues to post on their thread and keep those of us not local "in the loop." :blowkiss:
OT: I watched a documentary "Into the Abyss"
At one point a former executioner is interviewed. He talked about how many executions he had performed and he talked about his final execution, Karla Faye Tucker. He said he expected it to be just "another execution", but when Karla Faye thanked him he said something changed inside him. He walked away from his job and he has never performed another execution. The documentary is definitely food for thought. It won't change any one's mind be they pro-death penalty or against it, but it definitely made me rethink my beliefs.
Again, thanks to everyone local, Chelsea, squeeze, etc. and everyone on Elizabeth and Lyric's thread. :tyou:
OT: I watched a documentary "Into the Abyss"
German director, screenwriter, producer and actor Werner Herzog's twenty-fifth documentary which he wrote and narrated, is an American production about capital punishment which lacks the presence of Werner Herzog's characteristic voice-over. It tells the story about Michael Perry, a 28-year-old inmate on death row with eight days left to live, and his accomplice Jason Burkett who got a life sentence due to his imprisoned father's testimony. These two young men were convicted of a pointless triple homicide which occurred in Conroe, Texas in 2001. Even though the evidence against them was solid, they claimed their innocence.
Though opposed to capital punishment Werner Herzog, who has gone into more than one abyss during his impressive career, does not question the matter of guilt in this illuminating and thorough documentary which is told through a wide variety of interviews with people who were involved in the case. Werner Herzog has a profound way of depicting individuals and their surroundings, and his fascination with unadaptable, eccentric, and ill-fated people is evident in this psychological study where he gets the most out of the people he interviews and emphasizes that everyone has lead a significant life and has unique stories to tell. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1972663/
At one point a former executioner is interviewed. He talked about how many executions he had performed and he talked about his final execution, Karla Faye Tucker. He said he expected it to be just "another execution", but when Karla Faye thanked him he said something changed inside him. He walked away from his job and he has never performed another execution. The documentary is definitely food for thought. It won't change any one's mind be they pro-death penalty or against it, but it definitely made me rethink my beliefs.
Again, thanks to everyone local, Chelsea, squeeze, etc. and everyone on Elizabeth and Lyric's thread. :tyou: