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submitted 10 months ago by can@sh.itjust.works to c/theonion@midwest.social
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[-] MonkderZweite@feddit.ch 3 points 10 months ago

Alabama jails children? Some third-world country shit.

[-] can@sh.itjust.works 13 points 10 months ago
[-] init@lemmy.ml 4 points 10 months ago

Alabama literally just executed a man last week with Nitrogen despite the UN declaring it would be torture. Guy apparently writhed in pain for 20 minutes. This is third-world theocracy shit.

[-] datelmd5sum@lemmy.world 6 points 10 months ago

Source? People get killed with nitrogen all the time. It's supposed to be painless.

[-] name_NULL111653@pawb.social 16 points 10 months ago

There was no oxygen and CO2 scrubbing... Just a mask with nitrogen. The lungs exhale a mixture of oxygen and CO2, which, if not scrubbed from the chamber, will be breathed again. So in essence they asphyxiated him with his own CO2, and he died of slow CO2 poisoning as reused oxygen ran out (an extremely painful way to die). If they had done it in a hypobaric chamber and actually actively removed CO2 it would have been painless like passing out in an airplane cockpit. So yeah they somehow managed to botch a nitrogen execution with their hillbilly engineering...

[-] captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works 4 points 10 months ago

An airplane cockpit is a mildly bad example, because even at airliner cruising altitude breathing the air is better than holding your breath; it may take a minute or two to lose consciousness, and you'll get to enjoy the dizziness, disorientation, brain fog and headache for many seconds. There's also the lack of overall pressure; breathing at high altitude is a strange experience, you can feel the lower density. Especially since most people who arrive at 35,000 feet cabin altitude get there in a pressurized aircraft which accidentally loses pressure, which isn't a comfortable experience at all.

On the other hand, imagine this: you're a sailor on a big steel ship. There are void compartments in the hull that are sealed airtight. All the oxygen in the air in there is used up by the rusting steel walls, so now you've got a room that doesn't have any reason to lack oxygen, but it does. You're sent in there to do some maintenance or repair, you open up the hatch, climb inside, everything is fine, you get to the part of the compartment where you're supposed to work, it's dark so you don't notice your vision narrowing, you bend over to get a wrench out of your toolbox, you suddenly feel lightheaded, pass out, fall over and just fucking die. And so does the guy who comes in to try to help you. The air feels the same to breathe because it went from "almost all nitrogen" to "all nitrogen." The CO2 can freely leave your body and doesn't get re-breathed, so it doesn't hurt. In this "absolutely no oxygen in the air at all" environment, you actually exhale oxygen out of your bloodstream, so breathing will kill you faster than holding your breath.

Alabama basically put the guy's head in a bag with extra steps; because he could breathe his own exhaled O2 and CO2, It killed him slowly and it hurt the whole time. "Botched" is the word for it.

[-] init@lemmy.ml 6 points 10 months ago

I'm familiar with hypoxia and the difference between nitrogen and carbon dioxide, so in theory, I agree with you and the Alabama officials.

However, it is also possible to botch an execution. https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/26/us/alabama-execution-kenneth-smith-nitrogen.html

this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2024
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