dm92
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off topic, kinda
The Root of All Cruelty?
As a case study of misogyny, Manne considers strangulation—almost always performed by men on female intimate partners—which she describes as “a demonstration of authority and domination,” a form of torture that often leaves no marks.
The limitations of the dehumanization thesis are hardly good news. There has always been something optimistic about the idea that our worst acts of inhumanity are based on confusion. It suggests that we could make the world better simply by having a clearer grasp of reality—by deactivating those brain implants, or their ideological equivalent. The truth may be harder to accept: that our best and our worst tendencies arise precisely from seeing others as human.
(I'm wondering about the mental state and mood of BC while he engaged in killing YY. was he enraged, strategic or cold?)
FWIW, when I watched the closing arguments on Monday, Miller described BC's strangulation of YY as torture.
Also, rape/sexual assault, IIRC, is not one of the ~16 statutory aggravators listed that elevate a federal offense to death penalty eligibility. However, I know many governmental bodies/NGOs define rape as a form of torture, so I will not be surprised if the government will argue to the jury that BC tortured YY by rape and by strangulation.