Well Actually, guillotines are highly engineered and persnickety devices requiring specialized labor to both transport and operate them, rendering them an impractical tool that reifies labor inequalities in the field of revolutionary executions
but of course - Instructables is yet another tool of the bourgeois tech-mogul class, intended to seduce the working man into taking up the master's tool to fight against the master himself
I feel like this is just an opportunity for the engineers to produce a mobile, simple guillotine design. There must be someone who can make an Ikea-style kit with buddy pictograms.
I nominate Lego for the instruction manual and construction materials. We could involve children in direct action to illustrate how crucial it is to participate in political processes!!!
A noble, merchant, and engineer await execution. The guillotine blade jams, so the noble is set free, to the crowd's displeasure. Despite repairs, the blade jams again and the merchant is also freed. Finally it's the engineer's turn, but before the blade drops he cries "STOP! I see the problem."
OK fine. I surrender to your trebuchet preference. Sigh.
I did once have a mini-trebuchet I built on my desk and painted glittery purple. Mainly used to throw candy to my colleagues, because why not?
They also got turned on the revolutionaries almost immediately after killing only a handful of wealthy elites. The Paris Commune burned the guillotine for a reason.
I can't stop thinking about the guillotine I saw upcountry in remote New Caledonia at the museum in Bourail because it took a hell of a lot of effort to ship that guillotine all the way to the South Pacific in order to execute prisoners: nz.newcaledonia.travel/offers/boura...