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Friday, April 15, 2022

Crocodile Tears, Rotten Tomatoes, and Elephant Bones

 The Pillory


Medieval and Colonial form of punishment meant to encourage public humiliation and abuse. "Defendants" were "posted" in the city squares, and the public was encouraged to throw things and verbally abuse them for the duration of their time in the stocks. It is said that they even threw live cats and dogs, rotten eggs, tomatoes, feces...children were also included in the public shaming and abuse.



 This was considered justice, and the public basically considered it entertainment. They looked forward to it, rallied for it, probably always craved for the next "episode"

.
My dad told me if a dog tastes the blood of one of your chickens, one time, he will always kill your chickens. Farm life dictated the dog needed to be put down OR tie the dead chicken around his neck and make him wear it till it falls off. (Neither of these scenarios ever played out in my life..it was just the way of life on the farm handed down from generations of people who knew nothing other than surviving off the land.

The crimes were often unproven or things that are no longer crimes, "sexual crimes" were a gamut of activities people today engage in daily.





Mother Needham, was a notorious Madame who ran a brothel which probably gave many young women and girls on the street a place to live and a way to maintain survival. I add the modifier "girls" because it was not considered a sin, or uncommon to have a wife who was 13 years old. Girls who had already been sexually abused, or lost their virginity, were considered discards, not acceptable marriage material/ aka useless, sex work was the easiest option. 




Mother Needham

Mother Needham was Probably the most infamous brothel-keeper aka Elizabeth Needham, popularly known as Mother Needham. She was immortalized in Hogarth’s “The Harlot’s Progress”, where she is depicted trying to recruit a girl to work in her brothel.

On 5 May 1731 “the noted Mother Needham stood in the pillory in Park-place near S. James’s-street; and was severely handled by the populace. (Daily Journal)

 “She was so very ill, that she laid along under the pillory, notwithstanding which she was severely pelted, and it is thought she will die in a day or two.” (Post-Boy)


A contemporary poem commemorated Needham’s stint in the pillory:

“Rais’d on a precipice of wood,
With woeful arms extending,
An hour the pious matron stood
The force of dogs, and cats, and mud,
Sound eggs and rotten, blending.”

Needham died of her injuries before she could complete her sentence. 

“She declared in her last words, that what most affected her was the terror of standing in the pillory to-morrow in New Palace-Yard, having been so ungratefully used by the populace on Wednesday.” (Whitehall Evening Post)







What is the problem with understanding that emotional feelings come and go. They don't stay constant or you could not function! Have You never laughed at a funeral or smiled at one? What's up with crying when you're freaking extatically happy?? It's totally possible to be crying one minute and laughing the next, in fact it's a thing. It is so much a "thing" that it is used daily to jerk us around and we barely notice it, and it's super easy for a master manipulator to play with!! GET REAL please!. Ernie Shell inserted himself intimately into the life of Candus Wells. He is there breaking down barriers/ boundaries, and she seems to be letting him do it. Just like she seemed to previously with a similar charming, charismatic, manipulative, predatory Mr. Keyes. Is it because he has charmed his way in, or is it because she has nothing to hide? we can surmise almost 100% that she has daddy issues? or could it be she is standing naked in the town square with her most private boundaries destroyed, and trapped in the pillories of public humiliation?



There is a big problem with her doing this, blindly (un mindfully) because the mind can be swayed one way or another. It's why people who are drunk or high do stupid stuff, they have lapses in impulse control aka their boundaries are down. This woman has been gaslit/ in tandem one abuser at a time... hard AF, for almost a year if not much much longer, and You expect her to be "normal" and act "normal"? No matter what her guilt or innocence, she has lost her daughter, it's still a thing for her, guilt, fear, shame, self loathing, sheer terror, maybe regret, or her possible fate...more... it's still a major life changing PTSD causing trauma BY DEFINITION and pathology!!! Same for everyone around her! even the dogs miss Summer, realize she is gone! If she is innocent, and someone she loves or is BONDED with, even if it is a trauma bond, or blood, is the perpetrator of, what ever happened to her daughter... it's still a major life changing trauma, with all the after and side effects!

If they are all innocent, completely, they are still traumatized to the same degree you cannot quantify which is worse!

Stop pretending these people are supposed to fit into your personal thought boxes!

Stop abusing her further! especially if you want to go with the narrative (or alleged fact??) that she is in this position because her husband was abusing her and the children for oh so many years....

If her husband killed her daughter and forced her to cover it up, and lie, and risk every thing she's ever felt was her own, why are these people thinking it's a dandy idea to make a full spectator sport of it!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I heard a person yesterday who said/proudly, braggingly, self righteously, that she never went hungry for one day in her life...it explained perfectly why she had no empathy for someone who has, whether due to mental illness and their own lack of life skills, or neglect by a parent, or literally being in survival mode escaping from a bad situation. You know those people sitting on the sidewalk with their cups and cardboard signs, out? do you kick them on the way by? refuse to look in their eyes? deny their human-ness?

and when you question whether you know that someone is really crying or not, based on some standard of whatever you measure it by. Remember Susan Smith?
Yeh go watch her bawling like a baby for her little ones, who were taken when someone ...a black man...stole her car...If you're using your skill of crying at will, you're probably going to use it more often than once every few months.
Little suzee is still crying, in the big house. It's been reported that she cries for them every Christmas, when she's not trying to schtoop a jailer.


Elephants
Song by Rachael Yamagata



If the elephants have past lives,
Yet are destined to always remember,
It's no wonder how they scream,
Like you and I, they must have some temper.
And I am dreaming of them on the plains,
Dirtying up their beds,
Watching for some kind of rain
To cool their hot heads.
And how dare that you send me that card
When I'm doing all that I can do.
You are forcing me to remember
When all I want is to just forget you.
If the tiger shall protect her young,
Then tell me how did you slip by.
All my instincts have failed me for once
I must have somehow slept the whole night.
And I am dreaming of them with their kill,
Tearing it all apart,
Blood dripping from their lips,
And teeth sinking in to heart.
And how dare that you say you will call,
When you know I need some peace of mind.
If you had to take sides with the animals,
Won't you do it with one who is kind?
If the hawks in the trees need the dead,
If you're living you don't stand a chance.
For a time, though you share the same bed,
There are only two ends to this dance.
You can flee with your wounds just in time,
Or lie there as he feeds,
Watching yourself ripped to shreds
And laughing as you bleed.
So for those of you falling in love,
Keep it kind, keep it good, keep it right.
Throw yourself in the midst of danger,
But keep one eye open at night.




We will pull grass up by the roots, we will cover her.

 Thus as we do this we know her body will melt away.

 And only her bones will remain.

 But these we will take. 

Still feeling her absence, we will cradle her tusks in our trunks, and carry them to another ground. And thus will this soil be absolved of her death and the place of her dying be innocent again, and thus her bones will no longer be chaffed by the violence done there... 

...we cannot turn our backs at the wrong moment. We must know when to trumpet and charge, when to recede into denser forest, when to turn and track the HUNTER





Not saying there are never fake tears....


Susan Leigh Vaughan Smith (born September 26, 1971) is an American woman sentenced to life in prison for murdering her children. Born in Union, South Carolina, and a former student of the University of South Carolina Union, she was convicted on July 22, 1995 for murdering her two sons, 3-year-old Michael Daniel Smith, born October 10, 1991, and 14-month-old Alexander Tyler Smith, born August 5, 1993.


The case gained worldwide attention shortly after it developed, due to her claiming that a black man stole her car and kidnapped her sons. She later claimed that she suffered from mental health issues that impaired her judgment.


According to the South Carolina Department of Corrections, Smith will be eligible for parole on November 4, 2024, after serving a minimum of thirty years. She is currently incarcerated at South Carolina's Leath Correctional Institution, near Greenwood.



The case


On October 25, 1994, Smith reported to police that she had been carjacked by an African-American man who drove away with her sons still in the car. She made dramatic pleas on television for the rescue and return of her children. A Usenet chain letter circulated in the following days, asking Internet users to be on the lookout for the vehicle.


However, nine days later on November 3, following an intensive, heavily publicized investigation and a nationwide search, Smith confessed to letting her 1990 Mazda Protegé roll into nearby John D. Long Lake, drowning her children inside. She allegedly wanted to discard her children so that she might resume an affair with a wealthy local man who had no interest in a "ready-made" family.


It later emerged that investigators had been suspicious of Smith's story from the beginning. From the second day of the investigation, the authorities suspected that she knew where the children were. While they suspected she'd killed them, they held out some hope that the boys were still alive. Lakes and ponds were searched, including the lake in which they were eventually found. The authorities originally thought the car could have traveled out only about thirty feet. Later, they found it about sixty feet out because of its speed when it entered the lake; and it drifted on top of the water for about thirty feet. She had taken a polygraph along with her husband, David, two days after the boys disappeared. The results were inconclusive but investigators did feel that it indicated that she was lying when she said she did not know where they were. She was polygraphed during every subsequent interview with investigators and failed that question each time. There were also no other cars near the intersection where she said the carjacking had occurred. A big break in the case had to do with her story on where she was carjacked. The particular red light at which she said she stopped is only triggered when a car is coming from the cross street. According to her, there were no other cars around so there would be no reason for her to stop at this intersection.
















Or that mother's don't just snap!


Andrea Yates

in 2001

Born Andrea Pia Kennedy

July 2, 1964 (age 57)

Hallsville, Texas, U.S.

Spouse(s) Russell "Rusty" Yates























Andrea Yates

Born Andrea Pia Kennedy

July 2, 1964 (age 57)

Hallsville, Texas, U.S.

Spouse(s) Russell "Rusty" Yates

(m. 1993; div. 2005)​

Children Noah Jacob,

b. February 26, 1994

(aged 7 at death)


John Samuel,

b. December 15, 1995

(aged 5 at death)


Paul Abraham,

b. September 13, 1997

(aged 3 at death)


Luke David,

b. February 15, 1999

(aged 2 at death)


Mary Deborah,

b. November 30, 2000

(aged 6 months at death)


All children killed June 20, 2001

Motive Postpartum psychosis

Schizophrenia

Criminal charge Capital murder (x5) Andrea Yates

Outcome Found not guilty by reason of insanity in 2006

Details

Date June 20, 2001; 20 years ago

Killed 5

Weapons None (drowning)

Andrea Pia Yates (née Kennedy; born July 2, 1964) is an American woman from Houston, Texas, who confessed to drowning her five children in their bathtub on June 20, 2001.[1] She had been suffering for some time from severe postpartum depression, postpartum psychosis and schizophrenia. During her trial, she was represented by Houston criminal defense attorney George Parnham. Chuck Rosenthal, the district attorney in Harris County, asked for the death penalty in her 2002 trial. Her case placed the M'Naghten rules, along with the irresistible impulse test, a legal test for sanity, under close public scrutiny in the United States. She was convicted of capital murder, but the jury refused the death penalty option. She was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole after 40 years. The verdict was overturned on appeal, in light of false testimony by one of the expert psychiatric witnesses.[2]


On July 26, 2006, a Texas jury in her retrial found that Yates was not guilty by reason of insanity. She was consequently committed by the court to the North Texas State Hospital, Vernon Campus,[3] a high-security mental health facility in Vernon, where she received medical treatment and was a roommate of Dena Schlosser, another woman who committed infanticide by killing her infant daughter. In January 2007, she was moved to Kerrville State Hospital, a low-security state mental hospital in Kerrville, Texas.[4][5]




Background

Yates was born in Hallsville, Texas, the youngest of the five children of Jutta Karin Koehler, a German immigrant, and Andrew Emmett Kennedy, whose parents were Irish immigrants. She suffered from bulimia during her teenage years. She also suffered from depression, and at 17, she spoke to a friend about suicide.[6]


She graduated from Milby High School in 1982. She was the class valedictorian, captain of the swim team, and an officer in the National Honor Society.[7]


Yates completed a two-year pre-nursing program at the University of Houston and graduated from the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. From 1986 until 1994, she worked as a registered nurse at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. In summer 1989, she met Russell "Rusty" Yates, an engineer, at the Sunscape Apartments in Houston. They soon moved in together, and were married on April 17, 1993.[8]


They announced that they "would seek to have as many babies as nature allowed," and bought a four-bedroom house in Friendswood, Texas. Their first child, Noah, was born in February 1994, just before Rusty accepted a job offer in Florida, so they relocated to a small trailer in Seminole. By the time of the birth of their third child, Paul, they moved back to Houston, and purchased a GMC motor home.[8]


Following the birth of her fourth child, Luke, Yates became depressed. On June 16, 1999, Rusty found her shaking and chewing her fingers. The next day, she attempted to commit suicide by overdosing on pills. She was admitted to the hospital and prescribed antidepressants. Soon after her release, she begged Rusty to let her die as she held a knife up to her neck. Once again hospitalized, she was given a cocktail of medications, including Haldol, an anti-psychotic drug. Her condition improved immediately, and she was prescribed it on her release. After that, Rusty moved the family into a small house for the sake of her health. She appeared temporarily stabilized.[8]


In July 1999, Yates suffered a nervous breakdown, which culminated in two suicide attempts and two psychiatric hospitalizations that summer. She was diagnosed with postpartum psychosis.[9]


Yates's first psychiatrist, Dr. Eileen Starbranch, testified that she urged her and Rusty not to have any more children, as it would "guarantee future psychotic depression." They conceived their fifth and final child approximately 7 weeks after her discharge.[10] She stopped taking Haldol in March 2000, and gave birth to her daughter, Mary, on November 30, 2000. She seemed to be coping well, until the death of her father on March 12, 2001.[11]


Yates then stopped taking medication, mutilated herself, and read the Bible feverishly. She stopped feeding Mary.[8] She became so incapacitated that she required immediate hospitalization. On April 1, 2001, she came under the care of Dr. Mohammed Saeed. She was treated and released. On May 3, 2001, she degenerated back into a "near catatonic" state, and filled the bathtub in the middle of the day; she would later confess to police that she had planned to drown the children that day, but had decided against doing it then. She was hospitalized the next day after a scheduled doctor visit; her psychiatrist determined she was probably suicidal, and had filled the tub to drown herself.[11][6]


Murders

At the time of the murders, the Yates family was living in the Houston suburb of Clear Lake City. She continued under Dr. Saeed's care until June 20, 2001, when Rusty left for work, leaving her alone to watch the children against Dr. Saeed's instructions to supervise her around the clock.[12] His mother, Dora Yates, had been scheduled by Rusty to arrive an hour later to take over for Andrea. In the space of that hour, Andrea drowned all five children.[13]


Andrea started with John, Paul, and Luke, and then laid them in her bed. She then drowned Mary, whom she left floating in the tub. Noah came in, and asked what was wrong with Mary. He then ran, but she soon caught and drowned him. She left him floating in the tub, and laid Mary in John's arms in the bed. She then called the police repeatedly saying she needed an officer, but would not say why. She then called Rusty, and told him to come home right away.[8]


Trials

Yates confessed to drowning her children. Prior to her second trial, she told Dr. Michael Welner that she waited for Rusty to leave for work that morning before filling the bathtub, because she knew he would have prevented her from harming them.[14] After the murders, police found the family dog locked up; Rusty advised Welner that it had normally been allowed to run free, and was so when he had left the house that morning, leading the psychiatrist to allege that she locked it in a cage to prevent it from interfering with her killing the children one by one. Rusty got a family friend, George Parnham, to act as her attorney.[15]


Although the defense expert testimony agreed that Yates was psychotic, Texas law requires that, in order to successfully assert the insanity defense, the defendant must prove that they could not discern right from wrong at the time of the crime. In March 2002, a jury rejected the insanity defense and found her guilty. Although the prosecution had sought the death penalty, the jury refused that option. The trial court sentenced her to life imprisonment in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice with eligibility for parole in 40 years.[16]


On January 6, 2005, a Texas Court of Appeals reversed the convictions, because California psychiatrist and prosecution witness Dr. Park Dietz admitted he had given materially false testimony during the trial. In his testimony, Dietz had stated that shortly before the murders, an episode of Law & Order had aired featuring a woman who drowned her children, and was acquitted of murder by reason of insanity.[17]


Author Suzanne O'Malley was covering the trial for O: The Oprah Magazine, The New York Times Magazine,[18] and NBC News. She had previously been a writer for Law & Order, and immediately reported that no such episode existed;[19] Two years later, in 2004, Law & Order: Criminal Intent did air the episode "Magnificat," based in part on Yates's case. The appellate court held unanimously that the jury might have been influenced by Dietz's false testimony, and therefore a new trial would be necessary. On January 9, 2006, Yates again entered pleas of not guilty by reason of insanity. On February 1, 2006, she was granted release on bail on the condition that she be admitted to a mental health treatment facility.[20]


On July 26, 2006, after three days of deliberations, Yates was found not guilty by reason of insanity, as defined by the state of Texas. She was thereafter committed to the North Texas State Hospital–Vernon Campus.[21] In January 2007, she was moved to the Kerrville State Hospital, a low security mental facility in Kerrville, Texas.[22][4]


Although psychiatrists for both Texas's state prosecutors and her defense lawyers agreed that she was severely mentally ill with one of several psychotic diseases at the time she killed her children,[6] the state of Texas asserted that she was, by legal definition, aware enough to judge her actions as right or wrong—despite her mental defect. The prosecution further implied spousal revenge as motive for the killings, despite the conclusion of defense experts that there was no evidence to support such a motive.[23] Although the original jury believed she was legally aware of her actions, they disagreed that her motive was spousal revenge.[6]


Rusty Yates

According to trial testimony in 2006, Dr. Saeed advised Rusty, a former NASA engineer, not to leave Yates unattended. However, he began leaving her alone with the children in the weeks leading up to the drownings for short periods of time, apparently to improve her independence.[12] He had announced at a family gathering the weekend before the drownings that he had decided to leave her home alone for an hour each morning and evening, so that she would not become totally dependent on him and his mother for her maternal responsibilities.[24]


Yates's brother, Brian Kennedy, told Larry King on a broadcast of CNN's Larry King Live that Rusty expressed to him in 2001, while transporting her to Devereux treatment facility, that all depressed people needed was a "swift kick in the pants" to get them motivated.[25] Her mother, Jutta Kennedy, expressed shock when she heard of Rusty's plan while at the gathering with them, saying Yates wasn't stable enough to care for the children. She noted that Yates demonstrated she wasn't in her right mind when she nearly choked Mary by trying to feed her solid food.[26]


According to authors Suzy Spencer and Suzanne O'Malley, who investigated her story in great detail, it was during a phone call Dr. Saeed made to Rusty during the breaking news of the killings that Saeed first learned that she was not being supervised full time.[27][6] Yates's first psychiatrist, Dr. Eileen Starbranch, says she was shocked to disbelief when, during an office visit with the couple, they expressed a desire to discontinue her medications so she could become pregnant again. She warned and counseled them against having more children, and noted in the medical record two days later: "Apparently patient and husband plan to have as many babies as nature will allow! This will surely guarantee future psychotic depression."[28] Nevertheless, Yates became pregnant with her fifth child, Mary, only 7 weeks after being discharged from Dr. Starbranch's care on January 12, 2000.[29]


Rusty stated to the media he was never told by psychiatrists that his wife was psychotic, nor that she could harm the children, and that, had he known otherwise, he would have never had more children. "If I'd known she was psychotic, we'd never have even considered having more kids," he told the Dallas Observer."[30][31][32] However, Andrea revealed to her prison psychiatrist, Dr. Melissa Ferguson, that prior to their last child, "she had told Rusty that she did not want to have sex because Dr. Starbranch had said she might hurt her children." Rusty, she said, simply asserted his procreative religious beliefs, complimented her as a good mother, and persuaded her that she could handle more children.[33]


O'Malley highlighted Rusty's continuing sense of unreality regarding having more children:


During the trial, he'd successfully maintained the position that Yates would be found innocent. He had fantasies of having more children with her after she was successfully treated in a mental health facility and released on the proper medication. He worked his way through various fixes for their damaged lives, such as a surrogate motherhood and adoption (horrifying her family, attorneys, and Houston psychiatrists), before giving in to reality.[6]


Medical community

Rusty contended that as a psychiatrist, Dr. Saeed was responsible for recognizing and properly treating Yates's psychosis, not a medically untrained person like himself.[34]


Yates claimed that, despite his urging to check her medical records for prior treatment, Dr. Saeed had refused to continue her regimen of the antipsychotic Haldol, the treatment that had worked for her during her first breakdown in 1999.


The real question to me is: How could she have been so ill and the medical community not diagnose her, not treat her, and obviously not protect our family from her ... Rusty testified that he never knew that she had visions and voices; he said he never knew she had considered killing the children. Neither did Dr. Saeed, even though the delusions could have been found in medical records from 1999 ... he reluctantly prescribed Haldol, the same drug that worked in a drug cocktail for her in 1999. But after a few weeks, he took her off the drug, citing his concerns about side effects ... though her condition seemed to be worsening two days before the drownings, when Rusty drove her to Dr. Saeed's office, he testified, the doctor refused to try Haldol longer or return her to the hospital.[16]


He added that his wife was too sick to be discharged from her last stay in the hospital in May 2001. He said he noticed the staff lower their heads as if in shame and embarrassment, turning away without saying a word. The hospital had no other choice, due to the ten-day psychiatric hospitalization insurance constraints of their provider, Blue Cross Blue Shield, subcontracted by Magellan Health Services.[35][6]


Anti-depressants and homicidal ideation

Rusty and his relatives claimed a combination of antidepressants improperly prescribed by Dr. Saeed in the days before the tragedy were responsible for Yates's violent, psychotic behavior.[36] "Andrea was on 450 mg of Effexor (Venlafaxine hydrochloride), among other medications, and was in his opinion, severely overmedicated. The psychiatrist said he would reduce the Effexor from 450 mg to 300 mg. Rusty protested and quoted his own extensive research on the antidepressant. He said he read it shouldn't be reduced by more than 75 mg every three or four days, not 150 mg in one day."[24]


According to Dr. Moira Dolan, executive director of the Medical Accountability Network, "homicidal ideation" was added to the warning label of the antidepressant drug Effexor as a rare adverse event, in 2005. Yates, she said, had been taking 450 mg, twice the recommended maximum dose, for a month before killing her children. Dolan reviewed her medical record at the request of Rusty. "Yates had been prescribed Effexor in varying doses since shortly after her first suicide attempt in 1999, said Dolan, who reviewed her medical records after her first trial at the request of Rusty. A month before the murders, her daily dose had increased to 450 milligrams, twice the recommended maximum dose, Dolan said."[37][38]


Dr. Lucy Puryear, an expert witness hired by Yates's defense team, countered their contention regarding the administration of her antidepressants, saying the dosages prescribed by Dr. Saeed are not uncommon in practice and had nothing at all to do with her re-emergent psychosis. She suggested rather that her psychosis returned as a result of the Haldol having been discontinued by her doctor two weeks earlier.[36] The oral form of haloperidol (Haldol) takes 4–6 days after discontinuation to reach a terminal plasma level of under 1.5%—a medical standard for "complete" elimination of a drug from the body.[39]


Religious influences

Media outlets alleged that Michael Woroniecki, an itinerant preacher whom Rusty had met while attending Auburn University, bears some responsibility for the deaths due to his "fire and brimstone" message, and certain teachings which were found in his newsletter titled The Perilous Times, which the Yateses had received on occasion, and which was entered into evidence at the trial.[40][41][42]


In the aftermath of her 2006 retrial, which resulted in an insanity verdict, television journalist Chris Cuomo reported on ABC Primetime that: "[Andrea Yates's] delusions were fueled by the extreme religious beliefs of a bizarre, itinerant street preacher named Michael Woroniecki".[43][44][45][46] Both Rusty Yates and Michael Woroniecki have rejected these accusations.[38][42][47]


Rusty said that his family's relationship with the Woronieckis was not that close, and Woroniecki did not cause her delusions.[42][48] Woroniecki maintained that his correspondence with them was intended to help them strengthen their marriage and find the love that he says his own family had found in Jesus.[38][40][49][50][51] Both men agreed that the alleged connection between his message and her mental state was "nothing more than media-created fiction."[42]


While in prison, Yates stated that she had considered killing the children for two years, adding that they thought she was not a good mother and claiming that her sons were developing improperly. She told her jail psychiatrist: "It was the seventh deadly sin. My children weren't righteous. They stumbled because I was evil. The way I was raising them, they could never be saved. They were doomed to perish in the fires of hell."[52]


Divorce

In August 2004, Rusty filed for divorce, stating that he and Yates had not lived together as a married couple since the day of the murders.[53] The divorce was granted on March 17, 2005, after which Rusty began dating his second wife, Laura Arnold. They married on March 25, 2006,[54] and had one son. She filed for divorce in 2015.[55]


A Literary Legacy: The Pillory’s Lexicographical Transformation from its Physical Past into its Figurative Present:

 


The current OED and Samuel Johnson’s 1756 dictionary each have entries for the term ‘pillory’ as a verb and noun. Unsurprisingly, the primary singular noun definitions are effectively the same. ‘A frame erected on a pillar, and made with holes and folding boards, through which the heads and hands of criminals are put’ (Johnson) in 1756 continues to be defined as ‘A device for punishment, usually consisting of a wooden framework mounted on a post, with holes or rings for trapping the head and hands, in which an offender was confined so as to be subjected to public ridicule, abuse, assault ect’ (OED) when referring to the pillory as a noun. The only distinction being that ‘Now hist.’ (historical) suffixes the current OED definition of a punishment device abolished in Britain in 1837 and the United States in 1905. The primary definitions of the term when used as a verb replicate this pattern of near identical definition alongside the distinction ‘Now hist’ and ‘Obs’ (obsolete) suffixing entries 1.a and 1.b respectively, explaining the modern disuse of the word in this context.

 .......l

 

Johnson defines ‘pillory’ the verb under the abbreviation ‘v.a.’ meaning active verb. In the intervening two hundred and sixty years, a verb that in 1756 meant simply ‘To punish with the pillory’ (Johnson) and nothing else has transformed into the modern transitive figurative verb ‘To abuse, ridicule, or defame (a person or thing); to expose to public abuse or ridicule; to reproach,’ (OED) metaphorically applying the humiliation and vilification ....


 ‘Public abuse, ridicule, or defamation; subjection to abuse, humiliation’ of today are likewise able to be expressed via the figuration of the physical object of the pillory. The defunct instrument of punishment is figuratively expressive of any ‘place in which a person or thing is subjected to abuse’ (OED).

 

In today’s English, when the term is not historical or obsolete, it is figurative. In the main, the term survives in a manner in which it cropped up time and again in the eighteenth-century literature and art - allegorically. The allegorical utilisation of the pillory as a literary device, as a symbolic image, and a visual medium of communicating the 'abuse, ridicule, or defam[ation]... [exposure to] public abuse or ridicule' and '[acts of] reproach' (OED) with which the term is now synonymous. 






One more for the pile ...1987




Joel Steinberg and Hedda Nussbaum, the Murder of Lisa Steinberg


Joel Steinberg (born May 25, 1941)  was a  New York City criminal defense attorney who attracted international media attention when he was accused of rape and murder and was convicted of manslaughter, in the November 1, 1987, beating and subsequent death of a six-year-old girl, Elizabeth ("Lisa"), whom he and his live-in partner Hedda Nussbaum had illegally adopted.





Hedda Nussbaum was a writer of Children's books, good ones! educational books, pretty books! Books about Butterflies! 






She was also a battered wife. Has anyone forgiven Hedda? I'll admit I still sit with one cheek on the fence. 



In exchange for testifying against Steinberg, Nussbaum was not prosecuted for events related to Lisa's death. Nussbaum was alone in the apartment with an unconscious and bleeding Lisa for over ten hours without seeking any medical attention for the girl. At Steinberg's twelve-week trial, his defense argued that Nussbaum's extensive injuries resulted from a consensual sadomasochistic relationship between the two defendants. 

Her attorneys claimed that Nussbaum's decision to stay with Steinberg even though she was a victim of domestic violence was a sign of battered woman syndrome.


Matthew 25:45

Matthew 25 gives few clues as to who “the least of these” are. They’re described only as hungry, thirsty, homeless, naked, sick, and imprisoned. 


As a species who use to consider most other humans, to be brothers and sisters, we seem to have fought like hell to untie ourselves from the role of our brother's keeper, and progressed to the point beyond the New Age Babble which allowed us to easily blame people for their own misfortunes. We've had our ears tickled with our deep inhalations, and vibrational mantras, and With affirmations of "I am not responsible for your feelings, only you are responsible for your feelings, as I am responsible for mine,......" . Most of them ended up repressing their feelings and flailing out into space with a wtf!! 


Matthew 25:45

“And the King will say, ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were doing it to me!’


Matthew 25:45
Then the King will answer, 'Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one of the least of these, you did not do for Me.'