We have arrived at the terminal stage of a civilisation that once prided itself on frontier justice, and now finds its highest court blocking a novel method of execution — as if the old methods were somehow less barbaric. Thursday’s ruling from the US Supreme Court, halting Alabama’s planned use of nitrogen gas to execute Kenneth Smith, has drawn applause from British human rights groups, who never miss an opportunity to tut-tut at the American experiment. And they are right to applaud, but for the wrong reasons.
Let me be clear: the issue is not whether Smith deserves to die. He was convicted of a 1988 murder-for-hire, and the evidence is sound. The issue is that the state of Alabama, in its desperation to carry out a death sentence, has resorted to a method so untested, so experimental, that it reeks of the very cruelty the Eighth Amendment forbids. Nitrogen asphyxiation — essentially suffocating the prisoner with inert gas — is not yet the stuff of serial killer fantasies, but it is close. The Court, in its 6-3 decision (along ideological lines, naturally), has merely insisted on due process: the state must demonstrate that the method is not cruel and unusual before it can be used. A sensible precaution, one might think, until one remembers that American jurisprudence has become a theatre of the absurd, where the staging of death itself must be carefully choreographed to avoid offending the delicate sensibilities of the liberal elite.
The British reaction is predictably smug. The Guardian ran a piece titled “A victory for human dignity,” as if the United Kingdom, which abolished capital punishment decades ago, had any moral standing left after its own colonial atrocities. Yet the smugness masks a deeper truth: the decline of the American death penalty mirrors the decline of American resolve. Once upon a time, a man like Smith would have been hanged from a tree in the public square, and the crowd would have gone home satisfied. Now, we must debate the pH balance of the gas, the precise nitrogen concentration, and whether the prisoner feels panic. We have turned execution into a laboratory experiment, and in doing so, we have revealed our own neurosis about death.
This is what happens when a society loses its nerve. The death penalty becomes a fetish object, studied and dissected but never truly enacted. The Supreme Court delays, the stays multiply, and the condemned man lives another decade, writing appeals and granting interviews. Alabama, a state that prides itself on its tough-on-crime reputation, is now reduced to soliciting emergency stays from a court it despises. The irony is thick enough to choke on.
And where does this leave us? With a nation that cannot decide whether it wants to kill its worst offenders or not. The pro-death penalty crowd argues that the state has a moral obligation to exact retribution, but then they tie the state’s hands with procedural hurdles. The abolitionists argue that state killing is itself a form of murder, but they overlook the fact that the state already kills through war, poverty, and neglect. The debate is a charade, a dance around the void.
As for the British applause: enjoy it while it lasts. Your own country is tearing itself apart over immigration, national identity, and the very concept of sovereignty. The United States will eventually sort out its death penalty nonsense, probably by abolishing it altogether, and then you will have one less thing to feel superior about. Until then, we are left with the spectacle of a superpower paralysed by its own conscience, too afraid to pull the trigger even when the law demands it.








