Posted on 12/15/2005 6:33:31 AM PST by Miami Vice
One day after notorious gang leader and vicious killer Tookie Williams was executed in California -- despite weeks of very vocal, vociferous, protests by Hollywood stars, political and civil rights leaders -- another man was executed in Mississippi.
John B. Nixon, Sr. was 77 years old when he was executed December 14, 2005. He was the oldest man to be executed since the death penalty was reestablished in 1976 and the oldest to be executed since 1916.
Unlike the Tookie Williams execution, there were no protests about this execution. There were no claims about discrimination when imposing the death penalty involving John Nixon. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton did not travel to Mississippi to meet with the condemned. Former actor Mike Farrell did not fly to Mississippi to appear in front of the prison on TV and rant about the inequities of this particular case or of the criminal justice system in general. Fox News Channel and Air America host Alan Colmes did not say Nixon might be innocent because there was no DNA evidence.
One has to wonder why this execution went ignored. After all, there were more circumstances involved with this case than with Williams that may have provided a reason for commuting the sentence to life.
Nixon was convicted of the 1985 murder for hire of a Mississippi woman. The womans ex-husband hired him. He shot and wounded the womans current husband before killing the woman as he was contracted to do.
The man who hired him only received a life sentence (Nixon was sentenced in 1986). Nixon made every possible appeal. All were rejected and Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour did not grant clemency.
Many differences between the two cases would lend themselves for clemency for Nixon as opposed to Tookie Williams.
Nixon only murdered one person, one time. Williams murdered four people, two different times. Nixon was twenty years older than Tookie and spent less time on death row. Nixon was a former auto mechanic who volunteered for service in the Navy during World War II and was honorably discharged. Tookie was the founder and leader of a murderous gang.
Unlike Tookie, Nixon was diagnosed with a mental disorder. Unlike Tookie, Nixon saved the lives of other people.
So there were a great many reasons to spare Nixon. Yet the only protests made about executing him was a simple statement from the website of the National Coalition Against the Death Penalty and something from a Canadian anti-death penalty group. Other than that, there were some news reports -- not much though.
Contrast that with the showering of media stories, TV programs, websites, and radio shows all about Tookie Williams. He even had a movie made about him.
John Nixon had no savejohnnixon.org, website going for him, like there was a savetookie.org. There were no articles in the Revolutionary Worker Online for Nixon as there were for Williams. Nothing on CNN, Fox, MSNBC, NBC, CBS, ABC, or anyplace else for Nixon as there was for Williams.
Unlike the Tookie Williams execution, there were no interviews with college professors offering their years-long studies indicating that the administration of capital punishment in the US is discriminatory. When it came to John Nixon academicians, lawyers groups, civil rights groups, and anti-death penalty groups were all MIA.
There were no witnesses when John Nixon was executed chanting: The State of Mississippi has killed an innocent man, as there was when Tookie was killed.
Europeans were not outraged by Nixons execution as they were about Williams.
Not one Catholic Bishop made a public statement about the execution of John Nixon. Yet, they were very outspoken about Williams execution. Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y., the chairperson of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Domestic Policy, wrote a letter to California Governor Schwarzenegger requesting Williams not be executed.
Bishop DiMarzio did not write anything to Governor Barbour.
The NAACP said nothing. The Death Penalty Information Center said nothing. Amnesty International said nothing.
They were all there for Tookie. They went AWOL for Nixon.
Why though? This is the real question. Why not protest the Nixon execution? This is the mystery.
As already stated the differences between the Nixon and Williams cases lent themselves to Nixon being more worthy of commutation than Williams. Yet, no sound was made to save him.
However, there was another difference between Williams and Nixon. One that may explain why so many groups coalesced to protest the execution of Tookie Williams and not John Nixon. A difference other than Williams history of violence, his history of crime as opposed to Nixons history of working for a living. A difference other than Williams creation of an organized crime group and Nixons military service.
Nixon was white. Tookie was black. Maybe that explains the reason why the silence was deafening when John Nixon was executed and a din of protests for Williams.
Could it be that the protests about the Tookie Williams execution were just another example of racial exploitation by liberals?
Probably.
A former police officer, Michael P. Tremoglie recently published his first novel, Sense of Duty. His work has appeared in the Philadelphia Inquirer, Philadelphia Daily News, Human Events, FrontPage Magazine, and the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. He has a Master of Science degree from Saint Joseph's University,Philadelphia.
While I get the point of the article, anybody who works as a contract killer has probably done enough to warrant execution.
I don't. He was White, old and didn't attract the degenerate 'Celebrities' and Race Baiters like Jesse Jackson. As a result the MSM found it too much trouble to whip up the masses to create a news event. It's really very simple AND very Racist if you ask me but typical of our new up is down Society.
(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie.Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")
There was a mental illness question. Of course, Clinton allowed a guy missing 40% of his brain (Rector) to be executed for political reasons.
If only Mr Nixon had written a few children's books!
(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie.Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")
"There was a mental illness question. Of course, Clinton allowed a guy missing 40% of his brain (Rector) to be executed for political reasons."
I know this is going to sound cold but I am generally in favor of executing contract killers no matter what.
By that math, 50% of the people on death row ought to be black, but they aren't.
It's not "bears attracted to honey" but "flies attracted to sh*t". Bears, after all, are omnivores.
As a Catholic, I am very uncomfortable with the death penalty (but would not say that I am opposed to it), and I have no problem with the Bishops taking a stance against it, I just wish they would be consistent and if they are going to stand-up for scum, that they do so for all scum, not just the politically correct scum.
Death penalty is not given for murder, but for aggravated murder. Plus many blacks live in jurisdictions where the death penalty is rarely given, even when justified or legal.
Mississippi ping
I don't think that was the point. The point was that it is okay to execute white criminals, but not black criminals.
My point was that blacks are not disproportionately represented on death row.
My point still stands.
Oh yes they would have raised their middle finger.
The Good news is that they are both dead, The bad news is that it took 20 years to do it.
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