As the person who sent this to me commented: “It
isn't quite forgiveness, isn't quite mercy, but somewhere in that pornographer,
a spirit of something (I might say something Holy) seems to be at work.
6:00 AM PDT 10/17/2013
by Larry Flynt
Joseph Paul Franklin, who has confessed to
shooting Flynt in 1978 and been convicted in a series of racially motivated
murders, is set for execution in Missouri in November. Flynt writes for THR,
"I have every reason to be overjoyed with that decision, but I am anything
but."
On
March 6, 1978, as I stood on the steps of the Georgia courthouse where I was
fighting obscenity charges, a series of gunshots rang out. I remember nothing
that happened after that until I woke up in the intensive care unit. The damage
to my central nervous system was severe, and it took several weeks before
doctors could stabilize me. From then on, I was paralyzed from the waist down,
and have been confined to a wheelchair ever since.
Years
later, a white supremacist named Joseph
Paul Franklin was arrested for shooting and killing an interracial
couple. He soon began confessing to other crimes, and that’s when he admitted
to having shot me. He said he'd targeted me because of a photo spread I ran in Hustler magazine featuring a
black man and a white woman. He had bombed several synagogues. He had shot Vernon Jordan Jr., the civil rights
activist. He hated blacks, he hated Jews, he hated all minorities. He went
around the country committing all these crimes. I think somebody had to have
been financing him, but nothing ever turned up on who that somebody may have
been.
In
all the years since the shooting, I have never come face-to-face with Franklin.
I would love an hour in a room with him and a pair of wire-cutters and pliers,
so I could inflict the same damage on him that he inflicted on me. But, I do
not want to kill him, nor do I want to see him die.
Supporters
of capital punishment argue that it is a deterrent which prevents potential
murderers from committing future crimes, but research has failed to provide a
shred of valid scientific proof to that effect whatsoever. In 18th century
England, pickpocketing was a capital offense. Once a week, crowds would gather
in a public square to observe public hangings of convicted pickpockets, unaware
that their own pockets were being emptied by thieves moving among them. That’s
a true story, and, if you’re ever trying to convince somebody of why the death
penalty is not a deterrent, that’s a good example.
As
far as the severity of punishment is concerned, to me, a life spent in a
3-by-6-foot cell is far harsher than the quick release of a lethal injection.
And costs to the taxpayer? Execution has been proven to be far more expensive
for the state than a conviction of life without parole, due to the long and
complex judicial process required for capital cases.
Franklin
has been sentenced by the Missouri Supreme Court to death by legal injection on Nov.
20. I have every reason to be overjoyed with this decision, but I am not. I
have had many years in this wheelchair to think about this very topic. As I see
it, the sole motivating factor behind the death penalty is vengeance, not
justice, and I firmly believe that a government that forbids killing among its
citizens should not be in the business of killing people itself.
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