
Listen. You can almost hear the collective national sphincter unclench this morning, can’t you? Yesterday, the Department of Justice – those gray-suited necromancers who’ve spent the last several decades trying to dress up capital punishment in the starched lab coat of medical theater, complete with IV drips and apologetic little heart monitors – has finally thrown in the towel on the whole lethal-injection charade and announced the return of the firing squad. Not as some dusty historical footnote, not as a desperate last resort for the squeamish, but as an honest-to-God, federally sanctioned option again. And if that doesn’t make every red-blooded American who still possesses a pulse want to stand up and salute with something sharper than a middle finger, then I don’t know what country you people think you’re living in.
It never should have been taken off the menu in the first place. That much is axiomatic, self-evident, carved into the same granite slab of constitutional logic that lets us keep the Second Amendment around while simultaneously pretending the death penalty needs to be administered with all the dignity of a root canal. We spent decades –decades, dear reader – watching condemned men twitch and gurgle under the fluorescent lights of some cinder-block execution chamber because some committee somewhere decided that bullets were “inhumane,” as if the humane thing to do was to pump a guy full of midazolam and pancuronium until he looked like a department-store mannequin having a quiet stroke. The ontological dishonesty of it all was grotesque. We wanted to kill them, sure, but we wanted to feel nice about it. We wanted the paperwork to look like a hospital discharge summary. We wanted the witnesses to go home without any unsightly arterial spray on their good shoes. Pathetic.
The firing squad, by contrast, is pure, unadorned American honesty. Five rifles. One blank (or so the legend goes, though let’s be real: in practice nobody much cares). A man strapped to a post, a white cloth over the heart like a bull’s-eye, and then the percussive thunderclap of synchronized justice. Boom. Done. No lingering, no “oops the drugs didn’t mix right this time,” no appeals to the governor’s merciful conscience while the poor bastard lies there vegetable-adjacent for forty-five minutes. Just the clean, final report of five government-issue rifles doing what they were built to do. There’s a dignity in that, strange as it may sound to more delicate ears – a dignity that the lethal-injection crowd could never manage because they were too busy pretending they weren’t participants in the same ancient transaction of blood-for-blood that every civilization since Hammurabi has understood as the baseline cost of keeping the social contract from dissolving into cannibalism.
And while we’re here, let’s stop mincing around the obvious next logical step…at least in yrs. truly’s wine-dark psyche.
Put them on the White House lawn.
Not metaphorically. Not in some fenced-off federal pen in Terre Haute where the only spectators are bored guards and a couple of teary-eyed, blue-haired, septum-pierced activists holding candle stubs. No. Drag the gurney or the post or the whatever-the-hell apparatus right out onto the South Lawn, under the same sky where they used to land Marine One and shake hands with visiting despots. Let the networks run it live. Hell…make it pay-per-view…I’d pay. Let the tourists get their selfies with the muzzle flash still hanging in the air like cordite perfume. Let the whole glittering spectacle of American power force the hoople-heads to confront the fact that sometimes the republic still has to do the wet work itself, in broad daylight, where the symbolism can’t be laundered through euphemism or outsourced to some pharmaceutical middleman in Indiana.
Because here’s the thing nobody wants to say out loud while clutching their pearls and their oat-milk lattes: the death penalty isn’t broken because it’s violent. It’s broken because we’ve spent half a century trying to pretend it isn’t violent. We’ve tried to sterilize it, corporatize it, make it look like a medical procedure so we could sleep at night without acknowledging that the state is still in the business of ending human life when it decides the social contract has been irreparably breached. The firing squad rips that polite fiction away. It looks you in the eye. It smells like gunpowder and inevitability. And if that makes certain sectors of the commentariat clutch their therapy dogs and start bleating about “state-sanctioned murder,” well, you can fuck right off. Get real. The state has been sanctioning murder – sorry, homicide – for centuries; it just used to have the stones to call it what it was and do it with a little theatrical flair.
So yeah. Welcome back, old friend. Welcome back, you beautiful, brutal, five-rifle symphony of finality. The DOJ finally remembered that some tools were never meant to be retired – they were just waiting for the country to stop lying to itself about what it actually is. Now somebody get the groundskeepers to hose off the lawn. We’ve got work to do.
N.P.: “Down In The Park” – Marilyn Manson




