Washington Post

By E. J. DIONNE, Jr. 

Timothy McVeigh presents oppo­nents of the death penal­ty with the hard­est test they have con­front­ed in decades. And the debate about whether his May 16 exe­cu­tion should be tele­vised has forced us all to con­tem­plate exact­ly what it is that coarsens our cul­ture — real­i­ty, or its presentation.

If there is to be a death penal­ty, the man who killed 168 peo­ple in the Oklahoma City bomb­ing cer­tain­ly deserves it.

Had McVeigh escaped this sen­tence, could any pros­e­cu­tor have sub­se­quent­ly made a case that the par­tic­u­lar mur­der­er he or she had brought to tri­al was some­how worse than this one? And McVeigh, with his cold talk of dead chil­dren as col­lat­er­al dam­age,” has done all in his pow­er to incite the desire for jus­ti­fi­able vengeance. If mem­bers of the fam­i­lies of the vic­tims want to see him die, how many among us could hon­est­ly say we’d feel any differently?

But will we — and they — be bet­ter off for hav­ing put McVeigh to death? Most of the clas­sic argu­ments against the death penal­ty come down to ask­ing whether a soci­ety pro­motes respect for human life by a sys­tem of pun­ish­ment that involves tak­ing the life of a killer, even a mass killer.

It’s doubt­ful that sen­ti­ment would sat­is­fy the legit­i­mate anger of peo­ple in Oklahoma City.

Consider, how­ev­er, an impor­tant state­ment made by Attorney General John Ashcroft when he banned in-per­son inter­views with McVeigh. I do not want any­one,” Ashcroft said, to be able to pur­chase access to the podi­um of America with the blood of 168 innocent victims.”

Nobody can dis­agree with that sen­ti­ment, but it rais­es the ques­tion: For a killer like McVeigh, does the death penal­ty ele­vate the very podi­um all of us want to deny him? Does soci­ety’s deci­sion to take his life allow McVeigh to paint him­self — in his own eyes, if in the eyes of few oth­ers — as a mar­tyr? Does cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment become, in such cas­es, exact­ly the oppo­site of a deterrent?

Fear of mak­ing McVeigh a mar­tyr plays a big role in argu­ments against tele­vis­ing his exe­cu­tion — as it is, it will be shown only by closed-cir­cuit tele­vi­sion to accom­mo­date the fam­i­lies of the victims.

If despi­ca­ble ter­ror­ists like McVeigh are to be shown at the moment of death, of final­i­ty, the sym­pa­thy he so craves will become a real­i­ty,” busi­ness­man Abe Novick wrote last week in the Baltimore Sun. McVeigh under­stands the role the media plays in today’s world — how it can make killers into heroes and tragedy into entertainment.”

The num­ber of Americans who will ever view McVeigh as a hero is mer­ci­ful­ly small. But Novick’s point is valid, made all the more so by the obscene request of an Internet com­pa­ny to get access to the exe­cu­tion so it could sell it as a pay-per-view.

Yet is it tele­vis­ing the exe­cu­tion that achieves the ends Novick describes, or is it the exe­cu­tion itself? Doesn’t that sug­gest it is the action itself that troubles us?

The New York Times edi­to­ri­al­ized last week that by pub­licly tele­vis­ing Mr. McVeigh’s exe­cu­tion, broad­cast­ers would be show­ing the very kind of act — the tak­ing of a human life — for which Mr. McVeigh is being exe­cut­ed. The tele­cast would appeal to the basest instincts of the view­ing pub­lic, and would inevitably coarsen our society.”

The Times edi­to­ri­al­ly oppos­es the death penal­ty, so its stand is intel­lec­tu­al­ly con­sis­tent. But its argu­ment can be turned around. If we became more pub­licly aware of the num­ber of exe­cu­tions car­ried out in our names, if we had to con­front them in a way we do not have to now, would we not become more aware of pre­cise­ly the point the news­pa­per made? Might we not ask our­selves ifex­e­cu­tions were the very kind of act” they are designed to punish?

In the end, I find it dif­fi­cult to dis­agree with the respect­ed civ­il lib­er­tar­i­an Nat Hentoff, who wrote ear­li­er this month: We, as a peo­ple, demand account­abil­i­ty of our pub­lic offi­cials. Surely we should not shirk our duty to wit­ness — and there­fore be account­able for — the exe­cu­tions that we permit.”

Note how many of my sen­tences have end­ed with ques­tion marks. They reflect how hard it is for even staunch oppo­nents of the death penal­ty to evade ques­tions about whether there are some crimes for which exe­cu­tion is the only tru­ly just punishment.

Timothy McVeigh, in oth­er words, may deserve to die. But will our soci­ety enno­ble itself by putting him to death? If we were sure of the answer, we would have few­er qualms about putting his exe­cu­tion on tele­vi­sion for all to see.