Frases de Stanley Williams

Stanley "Tookie" Williams . Fue uno de los fundadores de la famosa banda callejera estadounidense de los Crips.

En 1981 fue condenado a muerte por matar de un disparo dos años antes al dependiente Albert Owens, y por el asesinato de los propietarios de un motel de Los Ángeles y la hija de ambos durante un atraco, también en 1979.

Una vez en prisión Williams, que nunca reconoció ser el autor de los crímenes, renunció a la violencia, escribió libros para jóvenes advirtiendo de los peligros de unirse a las bandas y fue el centro de atención de los medios de comunicación después de que sus seguidores le propusieran para el Premio Nobel de la Paz.

Ese grupo pedía que su condena a muerte fuese conmutada por la cadena perpetua, para que desde la cárcel continuase con su labor social. Tras ingresar en prisión, Williams sufrió lo que él describía como una «transición redentora».

Desde entonces se convirtió en un símbolo de esperanza y determinación para la juventud desfavorecida, especialmente mediante la publicación de una serie de libros para niños en los que hablaba de los peligros de la vida en las bandas.

El Estado de California ejecutó el 13 de diciembre de 2005 a Stanley Williams, después de que el gobernador, Arnold Schwarzenegger, no le concediese esa noche clemencia. En los últimos años, Williams se había convertido en todo un símbolo contra la pena de muerte. El caso ha desatado un debate sobre la pena capital y la posibilidad de redención como no se había visto desde hacía años en todo Estados Unidos.

Schwarzenegger dejó para el último momento su decisión sobre si le concedía o no clemencia y conmutaba la pena capital por la cadena perpetua, pero finalmente se negó. Williams, de 51 años de edad, murió tras recibir una inyección letal -una combinación mortal de productos químicos- en la prisión de San Quintín, en California. La ejecución comenzó 20 minutos más tarde de lo previsto debido a que los técnicos tuvieron dificultades en colocar la segunda de las dos agujas que se emplean para la inyección letal, hecho que pareció molestar a Williams, según los testigos. Stanley Williams tardó 13 minutos en morir. Wikipedia  

✵ 29. diciembre 1953 – 13. diciembre 2005
Stanley Williams Foto
Stanley Williams: 9   frases 0   Me gusta

Stanley Williams: Frases en inglés

“The death penalty, it's not a system of justice, it is a system of – a so-called system of justice that perpetuates a, shall I say, a vindictive type of response, a vigilante type of aura upon it. We’re talking about something that is barbaric.”

Democracy Now! interview (2005)
Contexto: The death penalty, it's not a system of justice, it is a system of – a so-called system of justice that perpetuates a, shall I say, a vindictive type of response, a vigilante type of aura upon it. We’re talking about something that is barbaric. We’re talking about something that – it doesn't deter anything. I mean, if it did, then it wouldn't be so many – especially in California, we're talking about over 650 individuals on death row. And if it was a deterrent, this place wouldn't be filled like this. And it's an expensive ordeal that – the money, as you know, the monetary means comes out of the taxpayers' pocket.

“I mostly propagate education and the need for it, because to me, that is the terra firma in which any human being must stand in order to survive in this country or to survive anywhere in the world, in dealing, you know, with every aspect of civilization, every aspect of surviving. Education is very important. It took me all of these years to discern that, and now I do.”

Democracy Now! interview (2005)
Contexto: I’m talking to any youth who are considered to be or deemed to be at-risk or even hinting around being a thug or a criminal of any type of genre. I mostly propagate education and the need for it, because to me, that is the terra firma in which any human being must stand in order to survive in this country or to survive anywhere in the world, in dealing, you know, with every aspect of civilization, every aspect of surviving. Education is very important. It took me all of these years to discern that, and now I do.

“And for anyone to think that murder can be resolved by murdering, it's ridiculous. I mean, we look at all of the wars that we have throughout other countries and other nations, and all it does is – this violence, all it does is engender violence.”

Democracy Now! interview (2005)
Contexto: And for anyone to think that murder can be resolved by murdering, it's ridiculous. I mean, we look at all of the wars that we have throughout other countries and other nations, and all it does is – this violence, all it does is engender violence. There seems to be no end, but a continuous cycle, an incessant process of blood and gore that doesn't end. And through violence, you can't possibly obtain peace. You can, in a sense, occupy a belief of peace; in other words, through this mechanism of violence, you – it appears that because there is a standing army or standing police that is used in brutality or violence or a system that uses brutality or violence that that is going to totally eliminate or stop criminous behavior or criminous minds or killings or what have you, but it doesn't.

“Just one spin around wouldn't have done it. I was that messed up, that lost, that mentacided, brainwashed. So, I was able to gradually in a piecemeal fashion change my life slowly but surely through education, through edification, through spiritual cultivation, battling my demons. And eventually, that led to me embracing redemption.”

Democracy Now! interview (2005)
Contexto: Between the years of 1988 to 1994, and it's a continuous — it's an incessant reality for me. My redemptive transition began in solitary confinement, and unlike other people who express their experiences of an epiphany or a satori, I never experienced anything of that ilk. Mine — that wouldn't have been enough. I often tell people that I didn't have a 360-degree turnaround; I had a 720-degree turnaround. It took me twice as much. Just one spin around wouldn't have done it. I was that messed up, that lost, that mentacided, brainwashed. So, I was able to gradually in a piecemeal fashion change my life slowly but surely through education, through edification, through spiritual cultivation, battling my demons. And eventually, that led to me embracing redemption.