http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=NCW251UYFPSWHQFIQMFCFFWAVCBQYIV0?xml=/news/2004/05/09/wpearl09.xmlDaniel Pearl had Balls.A couple points. First torture doesn't work. These first person accounts are pretty clear that US soldiers do not know how to torture so what we end up with is pointless cruelty. It seems manifest that pointless cruelty harms our interests and makes us less safe. And as the first person account of Mr. Fair made clear the impact on the torturer is profound and long lived.The second point is that in World War II we did not torture. While our guys were being subjected to the Bataan Death March we were observing the Geneva Conventions. After WWII, while the USSR had literally hundreds thousands of nuclear warheads targeted on hundreds of American cities, we did not torture. We lived under the threat of nuclear annihilation at the hands of the godless Soviets for fifty years without torturing. The fact that the US did not torture is one of the things that protected us.
Actually torture does work.Case in point. In the Philippines a Al-Qaeda operative was picked up. He refused to answer questions. He was turned over to another Philippine officer who tortured him. What information was gleaned from that you might ask? He fessed up that Al-Qaeda had operatives in the US at flight schools learning how to fly planes, of which he named some names, he said the plan was to fly planes into buildings and named several. This information was turned over to the Clinton Administration who not only refused to act on it up they in fact buried this information. So in fact the most important piece of information that could have possibly been used to stop 9/11 was gleaned by torture.
It must also escape you that the allies deliberately bombed civilians during WWII.
To this day it is not official government policy to commit torture. Geneva Conventions, Actually by the GC terrorists are not covered by them.However the SC did give them GC protections because the terrorists wanted them and they were a bit ignorant about how they work. So be it. As such by GC we do not have to give trials to any suspected terrorist until the war with them is over. So until Al-Qaeda surrenders all we catch can sit int Gitmo. Also we may execute all those we catch in the field of battle that are fighting without uniform as we may deem them spies as per the GC's.
Mention torture to those who lost love ones on 9/11, they have suffered more torture than can be imagined. This world anymore comes down to fighting fire with fire, I say do whats needed. "Kill them all, let GOD sort em out".
Your example proves the point - torture did not work. The information was not acted on because information gleaned through torture is suspect. When you torture people you can't act on what the person says because they are being tortured. That is why torture is not a tactic in the war on terror, torture is pointless cruelty. How about in all of human history an example of a successful society that condoned torture as a tool of State?
"War is not legally about killing. It is about compelling an enemy to submit. To achieve this it is lawful to incapacitate the enemy's military forces and damage or destroy valid military objectives. But you can never kill or further injure an enemy who offers to surrender or who is already incapacitated by illness, wounds, or previous capture." That nice summary is from Professor Dave Glazier http://balkin.blogspot.com/2007/03/john-yoo-appears-to-confirm-cia.html who actually knows quite a bit about the laws of war -- he served twenty-one years as a Navy surface warfare officer before going to law school. It hurts your case to even bring up WWII. In WWII we fire bombed Dresden but we still weren't willing to torture, that should tell you something about what that generation thought about torture.
I posted first person accounts, it's pretty clear we have abandoned previous rules of conduct in the military and the use of mercenaries contractors creates a black hole that now allows us to disappear people.The US is now breaching treaties and international conventions on human rights so it doesn't matter what label you give people, the label does not justify torture, secret rendition and acts of thuggery. Your construct allows a who? A company commander, a contractor ... some low level individual to decide some poor schlub is a terrorist for who knows what reason and it's see ya, wouldn't want to be ya.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 18, 2007, 08:07:19 PMYour example proves the point - torture did not work. The information was not acted on because information gleaned through torture is suspect. When you torture people you can't act on what the person says because they are being tortured. That is why torture is not a tactic in the war on terror, torture is pointless cruelty. How about in all of human history an example of a successful society that condoned torture as a tool of State?Actually you are wrong because it did prove the point, so far beyond a doubt that a blind man could see it.What the torture gleaned was the plan of 9/11 DUH!!!
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 18, 2007, 08:07:19 PM"War is not legally about killing. It is about compelling an enemy to submit. To achieve this it is lawful to incapacitate the enemy's military forces and damage or destroy valid military objectives. But you can never kill or further injure an enemy who offers to surrender or who is already incapacitated by illness, wounds, or previous capture." That nice summary is from Professor Dave Glazier http://balkin.blogspot.com/2007/03/john-yoo-appears-to-confirm-cia.html who actually knows quite a bit about the laws of war -- he served twenty-one years as a Navy surface warfare officer before going to law school. It hurts your case to even bring up WWII. In WWII we fire bombed Dresden but we still weren't willing to torture, that should tell you something about what that generation thought about torture. Actually WWII shows how little you know. Only you would think torture was worse than the killing of civilians on purpose as was done in WWII.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 18, 2007, 08:07:19 PMI posted first person accounts, it's pretty clear we have abandoned previous rules of conduct in the military and the use of mercenaries contractors create a black hole that now allows us to disappear people.The US is now breaching treaties and international conventions on human rights so it doesn't matter what label you give people, the label does not justify torture, secret rendition and acts of thuggery. Your construct allows a who? A company commander, a contractor ... some low level individual to decide some poor schlub is a terrorist for who knows what reason and it's see ya, wouldn't want to be ya.Sorry but your first person account is worthless. Far too many have stepped forward claiming the same thing, thus giving the US a black eye, yet only later turning out to be false.Till a US court confirms it beyond a reasonable doubt, its worthless.Conduct changes with the times and the enemy, the military knows far more than you on what they need to do to get the job done fighting terrorists. Considering it is the military putting their life on the line, and not you, I will go with what they want and what they want to do to protect this country.
I posted first person accounts, it's pretty clear we have abandoned previous rules of conduct in the military and the use of mercenaries contractors create a black hole that now allows us to disappear people.The US is now breaching treaties and international conventions on human rights so it doesn't matter what label you give people, the label does not justify torture, secret rendition and acts of thuggery. Your construct allows a who? A company commander, a contractor ... some low level individual to decide some poor schlub is a terrorist for who knows what reason and it's see ya, wouldn't want to be ya.
Maybe you should ease up on banging your head. The information was not acted on, 9/11 happened. By what definition did the torture work? I thought the whole point of the ticking time bomb justification for torture was that through torture you could prevent the terrorist act. If your example is a success what would constitute failure?
I’ll make my unrebutted point again. Torture is pointless because you cannot act on the information gleaned. You cannot act on the information because you cannot trust the information. You cannot trust the information because its source was a person who was being tortured. The act of torture makes the product of torture worthless. There is no way around this.
You claimed Jefferson said to the affect that it was better to break principals than to stick to them and lose the country because of them. I can’t imagine he said anything of the sort when speaking of the Founding Principles of the country. Jefferson may have said such a thing in relation to personal views – slavery, temperance – but torture goes to the Founding Principles of the Republic.
If Jefferson were alive he would maintain that torture is an affront to and incompatible with freedom.
Yes Jefferson is saying it is alright to steel a horse or even level Hackensack New Jersey to save the Republic but the idea that we would torture would have never crossed his mind. It is pretty humerous that you would suggest that Jefferson, of all the Founders, would support resorting to torture. Maybe Hamilton, but Jefferson? That's preposterous.
I asked you in reply #23 "Do you really believe that the threats facing us today are categorically different than threats faced by this nation in the past?" you never did answer.
Just a comment, for which I fully expect to get pounded: Let's keep to the subject, which is interesting in and of itself, and limit the snarky ad hominem comments. Slights and digs aimed at the person being addressed serve only to make the author of those comments sound unreasonable, and detract from the arguments being put forth.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 21, 2007, 09:01:15 AMYes Jefferson is saying it is alright to steel a horse or even level Hackensack New Jersey to save the Republic but the idea that we would torture would have never crossed his mind. It is pretty humerous that you would suggest that Jefferson, of all the Founders, would support resorting to torture. Maybe Hamilton, but Jefferson? That's preposterous.You fail to grasp that not every little specific thing needed to cross his mind.It is more than evident that this was his thinking. One only needs to look at how the Constitution was written to see this. He knew better than to pigeonhole future generations.
Hmm funny you say that about Hamiltion because its clear you take the Hamiliton view on government and the Constitution.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on March 21, 2007, 09:01:15 AMI asked you in reply #23 "Do you really believe that the threats facing us today are categorically different than threats faced by this nation in the past?" you never did answer.Far more than at any other time in history. But as always you dont quite understand do you. Not only do we have to deal with the outside threat but that from within from trying to hogtie our troops and government from taking the very drastic actions to deal with these very drastic times.
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