Consider yourself lucky if you are reading this, you most likely not to have lived in a society with extreme judgements, sentences, and punishments. Back in the good old days if you did something wrong, for example stole a goat, chicken, Adultery, you were pretty much assured being handed a death sentence. In those days there was no hanging around on Death Row, contemplating the errors of your ways whilst waiting for some form of humane, painless death. Executions in the ancient history seems to be so barbaric and devices used were built with careful engineering to push the guilty to feel extreme and prolonged pain before death. The forms of execution listed below really are so barbaric that you might question your faith in human nature. Blowing from the gun. With the invention of the cannon came this wonderfully imaginative way of executing enemy combatants. The basic method was to tie the unfortunate victim to the barrel of a cannon and fire it. Horrific as this sounds I imagine it w...
Southern Iran: A Mechanic Tragically Lost His Life After Being Pulled Into The Engine Of A Boeing Passenger Jet At Airport

Abolfazl Amiri, a local mechanic, was conducting routine maintenance on Varesh Airline’s Boeing 737-500 when the incident occurred.
The engine on the right-hand side had been started for a test run with its cover flaps open, and a safety perimeter had been established around it, as required.
Unfortunately, while realizing he had forgotten a tool on the engine, Amiri returned and was sucked into the engine before it caught fire, resulting in his death.
Amiri’s remains were recovered following the response of the airport fire brigade. Iran’s aviation authority has initiated an investigation into the accident.
In a separate incident in May, a man died after being pulled into the engine of a KLM passenger plane at Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport.
Passengers and crew members aboard the Embraer 190 aircraft reported hearing a loud, distressing noise from the engine, which quickly began emitting smoke.
The Dutch Royal Military Police, investigating the incident, later concluded that the man had intentionally climbed into the engine, suggesting it was a case of suicide. They also identified him as an employee of a company operating at the airport.
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