View Full Version : Woman beheaded in Saudi Arabia for practicing witchcraft
Kongo Otto
12-12-11, 09:23 PM
Woman beheaded in Saudi Arabia for "practicing witchcraft"
“The charge of sorcery has often been used in Saudi Arabia to punish people, generally after unfair trials, for exercising their right to freedom of speech or religion.”
Read more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/13/world/middleeast/saudi-arabia-woman-is-beheaded-after-being-convicted-of-witchcraft.html
My personal opinion:
Once again Islam aka "the Religion of Peace" shows its real and brutally ugly face to the world!
nikimcbee
12-12-11, 10:25 PM
Woman beheaded in Saudi Arabia for "practicing witchcraft"
Read more:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/13/world/middleeast/saudi-arabia-woman-is-beheaded-after-being-convicted-of-witchcraft.html
My personal opinion:
Once again Islam aka "the Religion of Peace" shows its real and brutally ugly face to the world!
:hmmm: I didn't know people had the "freedom of speech/ religion" in Saudia Arabia.
Learned sumptin new today.
Kongo Otto
12-12-11, 10:40 PM
:hmmm: I didn't know people had the "freedom of speech/ religion" in Saudia Arabia.
Learned sumptin new today.
Hmm did think the same when reading the article.
Me thinks that "trying to excercise their right to freedom of speech or religion" would have hit the point better.
Randomizer
12-13-11, 01:21 AM
Stupid Saudi's. Everybody knows that medieval societies burn witches, not decapitate them...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yp_l5ntikaU
Penguin
12-13-11, 01:29 AM
Finally they got hold of my Ex. :arrgh!:
Jimbuna
12-13-11, 03:34 AM
73rd execution there this year :o
Finally they got hold of my Ex. :arrgh!:
http://smilepanic.com/wp-content/uploads/shocked-cat1-520x520.jpg
kraznyi_oktjabr
12-13-11, 05:44 AM
http://smilepanic.com/wp-content/uploads/shocked-cat1-520x520.jpgThat is Penguin's ex-spouse? He has interesting taste... :hmmm:
Blood_splat
12-13-11, 09:08 AM
I stopped at Saudi Arabia.
Herr-Berbunch
12-13-11, 09:39 AM
73rd execution there this year :o
And the US has only executed 43 so far this year, still time for a couple more. :o
So by only executing 60%* of what Saudi's do is totally giving them the morally higher ground :hmmm:
Jussayin! :D
*Actually 58.9% if you must know.
mookiemookie
12-13-11, 10:24 AM
My personal opinion:
Once again Islam aka "the Religion of Peace" shows its real and brutally ugly face to the world!
I don't think this had very much to do with religion at all. It has everything to do with the Saudi Government using and co-opting religion in order to maintain its stranglehold on the people.
Schroeder
12-13-11, 12:19 PM
Maybe we should "liberate" those people.... just sayin...:down:
Jimbuna
12-13-11, 01:08 PM
I've suggested to the wife she may want to consider going to Saudi for the festive season :smug:
sidslotm
12-13-11, 01:40 PM
I alway have trouble with the death penatly. Sometimes bravado wells up over an issue I find unbearable and I yellout, "hand me the rope". But then I read stories like this one, bloodlust me thinks.
another one here.
http://www.ministryoftofu.com/2011/11/photos-the-final-12-hours-of-chinese-women-on-death-row/
the link below makes interesting listening, a special man Pierrepoint but you will need RealPlayer
http://www.bbc.co.uk/liverpool/content/articles/2006/04/27/pierrepoint_lasthangman_feature.shtml
the_tyrant
12-13-11, 10:07 PM
And the US has only executed 43 so far this year, still time for a couple more. :o
So by only executing 60%* of what Saudi's do is totally giving them the morally higher ground :hmmm:
Jussayin! :D
*Actually 58.9% if you must know.
but if we look at the ratio of executed:population
the US is much lower
I am in favor of the death penalty for drug dealers
Sailor Steve
12-13-11, 10:55 PM
And the US has only executed 43 so far this year, still time for a couple more. :o
So by only executing 60%* of what Saudi's do is totally giving them the morally higher ground :hmmm:
Jussayin! :D
*Actually 58.9% if you must know.
Of course one argument for the other side might be the difference in the reasons given for the executions and the crimes of the executed. It's been a long time since we exersized the death penalty for witchcraft.
Of course one argument for the other side might be the difference in the reasons given for the executions and the crimes of the executed. It's been a long time since we exersized the death penalty for witchcraft.
Treason is still on the books for execution in the US. The only crime on the books that does not need felony murder to be eligible.
I believe it is 743 per 100,000 is the incarceration rate here in the US. 178 per 100,000 in Saudi Arabia.
US population 323 million and change. 2.3 million inmates. .001% executed
S A population 27 million and change. 48,060 inmates. 16% executed
I was never great with #'s so if I am off please correct.
Herr-Berbunch
12-14-11, 03:19 AM
Treason is still on the books for execution in the US. The only crime on the books that does not need felony murder to be eligible.
I believe it is 743 per 100,000 is the incarceration rate here in the US. 178 per 100,000 in Saudi Arabia.
US population 323 million and change. 2.3 million inmates. .001% executed
S A population 27 million and change. 48,060 inmates. 16% executed
I was never great with #'s so if I am off please correct.
Going from you figures, I get 0.178%. I looked at those figures and did my own sums yesterday before posting, but didn't post my results - off the top of my head (cba to do it all again) and they were both in the 0.something but I thought it was even less than .001% for US.
Penguin
12-14-11, 07:20 AM
That is Penguin's ex-spouse? He has interesting taste... :hmmm:
lol
well that's one of her many manifestations :03:
Going from you figures, I get 0.178%. I looked at those figures and did my own sums yesterday before posting, but didn't post my results - off the top of my head (cba to do it all again) and they were both in the 0.something but I thought it was even less than .001% for US.
Ok, was never great with decimals, but even with your math, there is a huge discrepancy.
Herr-Berbunch
12-14-11, 10:48 AM
Ok, was never great with decimals, but even with your math, there is a huge discrepancy.
But executions are still executions, whatever the 'law' broken in the first place. My point is that the US, as a whole, cannot dictate to or look down on, or tut disapprovingly at Saudi if the US does the same for a broken law.
And your witches don't go through the judicial system - they have vigilante mobs burning down their houses and baying for blood. I've seen no end of films showing such actions, so it must be true. :O:
I'll just point out that I'm quite right-wing in my philosophy, and I'm all for death penalties under the right circumstances - I'm just pointing out the hypocracy. :yep:
joegrundman
12-14-11, 11:11 AM
But executions are still executions, whatever the 'law' broken in the first place. My point is that the US, as a whole, cannot dictate to or look down on, or tut disapprovingly at Saudi if the US does the same for a broken law.
And your witches don't go through the judicial system - they have vigilante mobs burning down their houses and baying for blood. I've seen no end of films showing such actions, so it must be true. :O:
I'll just point out that I'm quite right-wing in my philosophy, and I'm all for death penalties under the right circumstances - I'm just pointing out the hypocracy. :yep:
i do not think it to be hypocritical.
While there are strong arguments against any death penalty, it is not the case that all death penalties are thereby equal and it is just your stupidity to break the law.
There is a huge difference between having the death penalty for murder and having the death penalty for witchcraft or blasphemy.
Karle94
12-14-11, 11:23 AM
Treason is still on the books for execution in the US. The only crime on the books that does not need felony murder to be eligible.
I believe it is 743 per 100,000 is the incarceration rate here in the US. 178 per 100,000 in Saudi Arabia.
US population 323 million and change. 2.3 million inmates. .001% executed
S A population 27 million and change. 48,060 inmates. 16% executed
I was never great with #'s so if I am off please correct.
Actually, the US population is 312 million.
Since you decided to approach this problem scientifically:
http://graphjam.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/witch2.gif
Sailor Steve
12-14-11, 12:26 PM
My point is that the US, as a whole, cannot dictate to or look down on, or tut disapprovingly at Saudi if the US does the same for a broken law.
And my point was that there is a very large difference between executing someone for violently killing several innocent people and executing someone for speaking their mind, or even for the trumped up charge of 'witchcraft'.
Not that I'm for Capital Punishment, or against it. I see the arguments for both sides and waffle back and forth on the issue.
In the US, people get executed for some murders. A relatively small subset of murders, in fact. This is after trials, appeals, etc, ad nauseum.
In Saudi you are comparing the US executions for (particularly heinous) murder to execution for WITCHCRAFT. This is not even "thought crime," as there is no such thing as witchcraft. They are executing people for what is by definition nothing.
We in the US have every right to look down on them for this. In the last few years the number of executions in the US has been in the mid 40s. Call it 50 for slop.
There are over 18,000 homicides per year in the US.
Call it 15,000 killers for slop (everything I do here is increasing the US murder rates). So we bump off 50/15,000 = 0.33% of all murderers.
SA seems to execute a similar number of people, but I cannot get get stats on the number of people convicted of capital crimes (and not sure if everything gets counted), but they seem to execute 0.1% of inmates incarcerated for all crimes put together (the US stat for this is 0.000002% of all inmates (add a couple zeros to get the % of the pop at large magnitude)).
In short, the rate the US executes killers in in the same order of magnitude that SA executes people for no reason whatsoever.
Tribesman
12-14-11, 04:24 PM
This is not even "thought crime," as there is no such thing as witchcraft.
Can you remind me which nation had a political candidate not long ago making a TV appearance to reassure voters she was not really a witch?
AVGWarhawk
12-14-11, 04:32 PM
Can you remind me which nation had a political candidate not long ago making a TV appearance to reassure voters she was not really a witch?
Does not matter...there still is nothing to substantiate witch craft exists. Delusions of gradeur, wizards, warlocks only exist within the mind, in film and books. Vampires do not exist either but people like to believe they do. Some practice being a vampire. I'm not sure what practicing does for them. Maybe I will go see a viewing of Twilight.
Tribesman
12-14-11, 04:37 PM
Does not matter...there still is nothing to substantiate witch craft exists.
So its a bit like God then?:03:
AVGWarhawk
12-14-11, 04:45 PM
So its a bit like God then?:03:
You side stepping again? :hmmm:
I don't know. There are the Dead Sea Scrolls. These are quite interesting. Enough for someone to seal them and hide the containers. A lot of work for Harry Potter books of the time :hmmm: No one has found any Witchery Scrolls that I'm aware of. Perhaps the right cave has yet to be discovered. :hmmm:
Fact remains the beheading was nothing but unsubstantiated claims of witchcraft. But I guess it was all in good fun in their eyes.
Actually, the US population is 312 million.
You right, long day and my eyes were crossed. :salute:
So its a bit like God then?:03:
Yes.
The difference is what is part of the LAW, though.
In SA it is clearly against the law to practice an imaginary set of skills. The fact that morons of different religions also believe in witchcraft is unsurprising, they are after all idiots. It's the fact that it's part of a legal system that is troublesome. If some fundie moron doesn't vote for someone because they think that someone practices imaginary "arts," it is their right to do so. Arresting them for it would be another matter. Santa Fe, for example, is filled with left-wingers that believe in the healing power of crystals, various other "spiritual" new age type tripe, etc, ad nauseum. Equally stupid, but again, it's not part of state or federal law.
Regarding the US population, it's sort of meaningless. The more important stat would be the % of killers executed---which is still a vanishingly small, and statistically insignificant number. A killer in the US is more likely to die of disease than be executed.
So its a bit like God then?:03:
You are shooting in the dark and wait what comes up in the morning or getting old in the bitter way?
This will come as a surprise, but I will perhaps come to tribesman's defense here. Anyone who is religious, and has a problem with this sentence seems not sufficiently religious to me. Unless maybe they are polytheists, or Jains or something.
People seem to forget that the penalty (as supposedly handed to humans directly by god) for violating 7 of the 10 commandments is... death. Stealing, adultery, dishonoring your parents, even keeping the sabbath... all carry a death penalty. When yahoos want the 10 commandments in courtrooms, do they realize that the penalty for cheating on your spouse is death (for both parties)? Silly is silly. Sorry.
Similarly, if the very notion of witchcraft is absurd to someone that believes in magical books, raising dead people, or countless other unsubstantiated magical events in any number of holy books... all I can say is that whatever algorithm you use to find witchcraft absurd, I can apply directly to any other magical belief with virtually no changes and pronounce them just as silly.
Tribesman
12-14-11, 06:54 PM
You are shooting in the dark and wait what comes up in the morning or getting old in the bitter way?
It is applying the same reasoning that was being used.
Simple isn't it.
But I guess it was all in good fun in their eyes.
Indeed, just another example of the age old bread and circus act.
Santa Fe, for example, is filled with left-wingers that believe in the healing power of crystals, various other "spiritual" new age type tripe, etc, ad nauseum.
left wingers?????? I would have though those new age spiritualists would be against party politics and outside of any of the meaningless lefty righty babble
Santa Fe is overwhelmingly democrat, and the few that are not are probably in the green party. It's politically left of San Francisco and NYC.
I add it because the yahoos worried about witchcraft in the SE US (right?) were right wing nuts. The left can be equally enamored of fantasy in the same (religious) vein, they just sometimes pick different religions. Note also that politically in the US, apologists for muslims are almost always democrats. I know countless people on the left here that hate fundie christians, but don't hate muslim sects that have doctrines equally, or even more literalist. Hate both, or neither.
Penguin
12-14-11, 06:59 PM
In the US, people get executed for some murders. A relatively small subset of murders, in fact. This is after trials, appeals, etc, ad nauseum.
In Saudi you are comparing the US executions for (particularly heinous) murder to execution for WITCHCRAFT. This is not even "thought crime," as there is no such thing as witchcraft. They are executing people for what is by definition nothing.
We in the US have every right to look down on them for this. In the last few years the number of executions in the US has been in the mid 40s. Call it 50 for slop.
There are over 18,000 homicides per year in the US.
Call it 15,000 killers for slop (everything I do here is increasing the US murder rates). So we bump off 50/15,000 = 0.33% of all murderers.
SA seems to execute a similar number of people, but I cannot get get stats on the number of people convicted of capital crimes (and not sure if everything gets counted), but they seem to execute 0.1% of inmates incarcerated for all crimes put together (the US stat for this is 0.000002% of all inmates (add a couple zeros to get the % of the pop at large magnitude)).
In short, the rate the US executes killers in in the same order of magnitude that SA executes people for no reason whatsoever.
the hairsplitting German in me can't help but to correct ;):
To make a fair comprehension you should only use the numbers from US states which have capital punishment; the murders that fall under the jurisdiction of said states. Then you also have to put the the murder rate into the calculations: 1/100000 for SA, 5/100000 for the US. Maybe only compare Texas and Saudi Arabis, as they both have a similar population size: this would be interesting.
Oh, and there are indeed some other offenses in the US other than murder, which can let you fry: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/death-penalty-offenses-other-murder
Personally, I know in which country I'd prefer to be on trial, better a dysfunctional justice system than a system where you can get convicted by "the testimony of two male witnesses" (source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Saudi_Arabia)
PS: good to see you again on here, tater :salute:, greetings from the Penguin who thinks capital punishment in every country is barbaric, though the reasons in some are nuttier than in others.
I'm fine with getting rid of capital punishment as long as the murderer is deprived of all pleasures in life for his remaining life. Solitary. No TV, no books, just himself, and bare walls after appeals are done. before that, he can have books, etc., under the presumption he might possibly be innocent even though convicted. Once appeals are done (as speedily as possible, BTW), solitary. No parole, no getting out, except in a bag.
Do that and I'd be for abandoning the DP in civilian courts.
Platapus
12-14-11, 08:20 PM
This will come as a surprise, but I will perhaps come to tribesman's defense here. Anyone who is religious, and has a problem with this sentence seems not sufficiently religious to me. Unless maybe they are polytheists, or Jains or something.
People seem to forget that the penalty (as supposedly handed to humans directly by god) for violating 7 of the 10 commandments is... death. Stealing, adultery, dishonoring your parents, even keeping the sabbath... all carry a death penalty. When yahoos want the 10 commandments in courtrooms, do they realize that the penalty for cheating on your spouse is death (for both parties)? Silly is silly. Sorry.
Similarly, if the very notion of witchcraft is absurd to someone that believes in magical books, raising dead people, or countless other unsubstantiated magical events in any number of holy books... all I can say is that whatever algorithm you use to find witchcraft absurd, I can apply directly to any other magical belief with virtually no changes and pronounce them just as silly.
Nicely put!
My magical mystical thingy is OK, but your magical mystical thingy is wrong. :doh: You are right, it is rather silly when you think about it.
Nicely put!
My magical mystical thingy is OK, but your magical mystical thingy is wrong. :doh: You are right, it is rather silly when you think about it.
Yeas thinking can be difficult sometimes...after all they do what every average european did 1000 years ago.
No big deal.
Oh yeas.. try to compare now witch hunting to death penalty for murder...great exercise to watch.
Some small cultural difference when you think about it lol.
mookiemookie
12-14-11, 09:18 PM
I'm fine with getting rid of capital punishment as long as the murderer is deprived of all pleasures in life for his remaining life. Solitary. No TV, no books, just himself, and bare walls after appeals are done. before that, he can have books, etc., under the presumption he might possibly be innocent even though convicted. Once appeals are done (as speedily as possible, BTW), solitary. No parole, no getting out, except in a bag.
Do that and I'd be for abandoning the DP in civilian courts.
For once, tater and I agree. A Christmas miracle. :haha::up:
Though I'd take it a step further, with crime scene photos being the wallpaper to their cell.
For once, tater and I agree. A Christmas miracle. :haha::up:
Though I'd take it a step further, with crime scene photos being the wallpaper to their cell.
You hypocrites..death seems like easy way out now:haha:
the hairsplitting German in me can't help but to correct ;):
To make a fair comprehension you should only use the numbers from US states which have capital punishment; the murders that fall under the jurisdiction of said states. Then you also have to put the the murder rate into the calculations: 1/100000 for SA, 5/100000 for the US. Maybe only compare Texas and Saudi Arabis, as they both have a similar population size: this would be interesting.
Oh, and there are indeed some other offenses in the US other than murder, which can let you fry: http://www.deathpenaltyinfo.org/death-penalty-offenses-other-murder
Personally, I know in which country I'd prefer to be on trial, better a dysfunctional justice system than a system where you can get convicted by "the testimony of two male witnesses" (source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Saudi_Arabia)
PS: good to see you again on here, tater :salute:, greetings from the Penguin who thinks capital punishment in every country is barbaric, though the reasons in some are nuttier than in others.
Yeah, I'd had forgotten about the repeat child sex offender laws. Castration would be a more fitting sentence for them, and not the chemical kind.
As for life in solitary confinement, Finney v. Hutto says :
confinement in punitive isolation for more than thirty days is cruel and unusual punishment and thus impermissible
As for the amount of homicides in the US has been continually dropping annually is the good news. The bad news is the clearance rate nationwide is down to the 60% range. Compare that to 84% in the late 60's.
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