Only the NYT: Thanksgiving Turkey Pardon Inspires Anti-Death Penalty Rant

November 24th, 2011 7:15 AM

Via Fox Nation, we learn that The New York Times can find a liberal sermon in just about any holiday. At the Opinionator blog, philosopher Justin Erik Halldor Smith found pain and angst in the "dark parody" of the presidential pardoning of a turkey, since it reminds him too tenderly of the fate of death-row prisoners:

He wrote, "In just a few days, we will once again endure the annual spectacle of the president of the United States  pardoning a turkey that would otherwise have been fated for the Thanksgiving table. This event is typically covered in the media as a light-hearted bit of fluff — and fluff is what it might well be, if there were not actual humans on death row awaiting similar intervention. "

In the current American context, however, the turkey pardon is a distasteful parody of the strange power vested in politicians to decide the earthly fates of death-row prisoners. There is in it an implicit acknowledgment that the killing of these prisoners is a practice that bears real, non-jocular comparison to the ritual slaughter of birds for feasts.

I am not saying that this slaughter of birds for food is wrong ― not here anyway ― but only that the parallel the presidential ritual invites us to notice is revealing. To riff on Dostoyevsky’s famous line about prisoners: you can tell what a nation is like by the way it treats its turkeys. Obama’s pardoning of one randomly selected bird at Thanksgiving not only carries with it an implicit validation of the slaughtering of millions of other turkeys. It also involves an implicit validation of the parallel practice for human beings, in which the occasional death-row inmate is pardoned, or given a stay by the hidden reasoning of an increasingly capricious Supreme Court, even as the majority of condemned prisoners are not so lucky. In this respect, the Thanksgiving pardon is an acknowledgment of the arbitrariness of the system of capital punishment.

On his own blog, Smith proclaims that "Progressivism Isn't Funny." Based on these paragraphs, we might beg to differ.

Happy Thanksgiving from the crew at NewsBusters.