Wednesday Editor in chief: Jack Clifford Managing Editor: Jessica Blanchard Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: ode@oregon.uoregon.edu EDITORIAL EDITOR: MICHAEL J. KLECKNER opededitor@journalist.com ny discussion about the death penalty is almost certain to make people angry. Emotions run high, probably because the con versation is about life and death, and the government. The Emerald editorial board is not going to argue whether the death penalty is right or wrong. But in the case of Timothy McVeigh, who will (with 99 per cent certainty) be executed by the federal government sometime in the future, we have an opinion: The execution should be tele vised. Initially, government officials discussed allowing TV cameras to film McVeigh’s execution, but once it was denied, no one seemed to care. We think it’s im portant, however, that a federal execution be open to broadcast ers. Except for C-SPAN, no station need be obligated to show it, and given the content of the proceed ings, some broadcasters probably would not. UUI LiltJ UtJdLII JJtJlldll V lb 111 credibly controversial and tax payer money is being spent. Tax payers must be given the opportunity to witness the most final and godlike act a govern ment can perform. In our editorial board meeting, we had five people with five dif ferent opinions about the death penalty. We were finally able to make a decision on the question of televising it, but only after much argument, and we were left with some concerns. The immediate question, per haps, is why would anyone want to watch an execution? That’s not the point. None of us wants to watch McVeigh die. But our money is being spent to kill, no matter the righteousness of the act. An ABC News/Washington Post poll released May 2 found 45 percent of Americans would choose life imprisonment with out parole instead of the death penalty, and 46 percent would choose the death penalty. With that close of a split, we all ought to have the right to witness our government in action. But wait, citizens don’t get to witness every government action. This is certainly true, but we are shown a substantial amount of government proceedings, docu ments and acts. Bills, laws, leg islative sessions, budgets, con tracts, purchase orders, plans, wars as they happen and the most minute details of our affairs with regard to presidents’ sex lives are made public, and with good rea son. The government is not repre senting the people (our legislators do that); the government is the people. If inconsequential matters are available without a fuss, then so should McVeigh’s execution. There needs to be sufficient and necessary reasons for hiding gov ernment proceedings, and an exe cution doesn’t warrant a shroud. Defense strategies that could expose America to danger or at tack should remain hidden. Recipes for weapons of mass destruction should stay secret. But what cause is there to hide execution? Such events used to be ex plicitly pub lic, so that leaders could show the “natural” conse quences of unlaw ful ac tions and deter would-be criminals. One reason offered to shield Americans from a lawful punishment — Qnmcfc wm 11 rl also say it is “just,” but we pass no judg ment either way — is that children might be exposed to the execution without guidance, and therefore trauma tized. Perhaps this is true. But no one would be forced to watch. McVeigh’s death was scheduled for the mid dle of the night; most parents could easily shield their children’s eyes. Some parents can’t constantly keep their children away from TV, but this is a special case with extensive ad vance notice. If a par ent’s concern is so* great, then surely arrangements could be made to safeguard their offspring on this '• one important occa sion. And some par ents might find this a teaching moment; hunters often extol the benefits of expos ing their children to death in a guided man ner. Why is this not an equal learning experi- * ence? To attack the issue from the other direction, perhaps we should all watch the execution. Supporters of the death penalty might find the reality of their government’s deed too much to bear and change their mind. Op ponents might see that lethal in jection is not so cruel and decide it is necessary. Some might argue that since McVeigh committed a crime against the nation, this would offer a chance to soothe the nation’s psyche. More importantly, people who are undecided could see it them (gitrVAn*4\ selves. The idea is similar to the Vietnam War. Then, the tide of public opinion turned against the war once the casualties were televised. The point here isn’t that everyone will oppose the death penalty once it’s seen on TV; supporters and opponents may both have valid arguments. But if citizens don’t see the reali ty of what it takes to produce the end result, how can they know what they’re agreeing to? The concern that made every editorial board member pause was the glorification and desensitizing that could come from seeing real death happen live on our magic picture boxes. In many ways, our culture is already bloodthirsty. Americans happily consume more gory mayhem than any other nation. And endless TV has trained American minds to absorb what they see as abstraction; it’s not really real, right? The possibil ity of hungry, angry people flock ing to the boob tube to feed on the raw meat of live, real death is dis turbing. But if the death penalty is so right and justified and accept able, as it is to many good peo ple, then why are we afraid of the government exhibiting jus tice, especially for such a grue some national tragedy? Why can’t taxpayers witness execu tions, if they are perfectly ration al? That question stopped the conversation. This editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editorial board. Responses can be sent to ode@oregon.uoregon.edu.