- which presumably indicates what he'd like to do the liars who rule us.
I was morbidly intrigued by the illustration. Was it some sixteenth century atrocity practised on a hapless South American tribesman? Was it one of those dreadful mediaeval European executions using molten lead?
No, not quite so bad as that. Image-matcher Tineye found me the whole picture:
(source: Wikimedia) |
It comes from a book, Praxis rerum criminalium (1554) by the Dutch lawyer Joos de Damhouder, "which he almost entirely plagiarised from an unpublished text by Filips Wielant and from other works." Joos himself is pictured as sober-solemn:
Joos de Damhouder (Pic source) |
Filips Vielant (Pic source) |
- a petulant, sadistic face if you ask me. Look at that mouth and those eyes. Perhaps in the century that intervened, eminent personages learned the value of portraits as propaganda, for this one reveals too much.
There is no shortage of such people, or of the villains prepared to serve them. There's always some excuse for torture, and a crowd that can easily be provoked into saying you can wire him up for me, haw-haw, damn towelhead.
“And yet our personal experience and the study of history make it abundantly clear that the means whereby we try to achieve something are at least as important as the end we wish to attain. Indeed they are even more important. For the means employed inevitably determine the nature of the result achieved; whereas, however good the end aimed at may be, its goodness is powerless to counteract the effects of the bad means we use to reach it.” - Aldous Huxley, "Ends and Means" (1937).
William Blake: "A Divine Image" (pic source) |
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3 comments:
Depressing Saturday?
I look at some things to exorcise my fear. But it's relevant to today, with people's willingness to overlook Western governments' involvement in torture and indefinite detention.
I agree, and the level of public support is appalling. I have spoken about this on our local radio.
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