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Death Therapy
It’s truly a mad world.

Dave Shiflett is coauthor of Christianity on Trial.
March 20, 2002 8:20 a.m.

 

hose who oppose the death penalty are naturally relieved that Andrea Yates, the former mother of five, will do 40 years to life. They argue that only a crazy woman would kill her children, and that the crazed should be off limits to the headman. They are no doubt further relieved that she will be given lots of therapy during her stay, which one report said would run about $50,000 per year, in hopes that one day she will be "cured" of the problems supposedly responsible for her terrible crime.

Others of us, meantime, are left to our various reflections, beginning with the idea that a parent who kills five of her children might reasonably earn a trip to the death chamber simply on the merits of the offense. There seems little justice in sending a multiple murderer off to prison, where she'll likely spend years in a deep drug-grog, perhaps later meeting a significant other and earning a law degree or developing expertise in comparative literature or the making of pottery. She might indeed get better, and this will make her therapists happy as well, but the children are still dead.

Nonetheless, what's done is done and if nothing else this trial reminded us that well-meaning people come to totally opposite conclusions on matters such as what it means to be crazy, and what the proper response to that very imprecise designation should be. Shrinks for the prosecution and defense bombard each other with conjecture, theory, and no small amount of voodoo. They attempted to climb into her mind to see what was going on in there when the grisly deed was done. Did she know what she was doing, and that it was wrong? In Yates's case it seems clear she knew exactly what she wanted to do, she did it very methodically, she knew she had done wrong, which is why she called the authorities to confess. In my book that should be enough to get one hanged with a wet rope.

But that is the view from a study far distant from the Texas courtroom where the legal drama took place. Any of us might decide differently were our hands truly in charge of positioning the rope. And it is impossible not to agree that this woman was sick.

Then again, there are a lot of sick people in this world. Weren't those Texans who dragged that poor fellow to death a few years back sick as well? You do have to be profoundly warped to chain a human being to your bumper and drive off into the sunset. One doesn't recall nearly as much sympathy for them as for Mrs. Yates. Perhaps if they had dragged five people to death, the response would have been: Poor devils. They were clearly crazy. Let's check them in for 40 years and see if we can clear up their issues.

By some estimations, anyone who would slit a person's throat and then cut off his head is way off the farm. Interestingly enough, when one considers the likely motive for that crime, it appears somewhat associated with the motive that inspired Andrea Yates. Our adversaries, like Mrs. Yates, are clearly haunted by the idea of eternal damnation.

In her case, it is reported that she killed her children in order to keep them from Satan's clutches. One assumes that she believed that the longer they lived in this fallen world, the better their chances of being corrupted and as such making themselves candidates for eternal damnation. For many people, avoiding that state of affairs is Job One.

We are currently at war with people-and probably a very large group of people — who believe that our way of life is an abomination and that our presence on earth is a corrupting one, to the point of leading countless people to perdition. Ergo, we must be destroyed. One assumes the killers of Daniel Pearl fit into this category. Indeed, these people assume that if they kill us, they not only rid the world of a problem, but earn themselves a ticket to Nirvana. A more formidable foe can hardly be imagined.

The president calls our adversaries evil, which is a word with vast theological overtones. Another way of looking at the problem is that these people were raised from infancy to hate us, and to delight in our murder even if they must die in its commission. You could argue that these people are crazed — by design, but crazed nonetheless. Thankfully, they are being treated with what the movie What About Bob called Death Therapy.

 
 

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