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Author Topic: Is it acceptable for the US government to torture people?  (Read 66103 times)
Bill Peckham
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« on: March 17, 2007, 04:54:00 PM »

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"Death is worse than torture, but everyone except pacifists thinks there are circumstances in which war is justified. War means killing people. If we are entitled to kill people, we must be entitled to injure them. I don't see how it can be reasonable to have an absolute prohibition on torture when you don't have an absolute prohibition on killing. Reasonable people will disagree about when torture is justified. But that, in some circumstances, it is justified seems to me to be just moral common sense. How could it be better that 10,000 or 50,000 or a million people die than that one person be injured?"

John Yoo, defending the torture he helped legalize under Bush. Here is the whole article:
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/editorial/story.html?id=5c3b3463-bc14-4c00-879b-2b7b432d1e79

Is it acceptable for the US government to torture people? My answer is "NO!". Once people are detained and completely under our control it is unacceptable for us to torture them. It is shocking to me that this point is even under discussion and I believe that the acceptance of torture by the current administration will result in damage to the interest of the United States for generations.

Today's children and tomorrow's grandchildren will be paying the price for decisions made in our name today. I think future generations will curse us.
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« Reply #1 on: March 17, 2007, 05:34:47 PM »

AL Qiada operatives do not respond to questions asked politely in this case yes it is OK Boxman55
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« Reply #2 on: March 17, 2007, 06:08:58 PM »

AL Qiada operatives do not respond to questions asked politely in this case yes it is OK Boxman55


Would they torture our people? Or do they just cut heads off?  I'm with Boxman55 on this one.
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boxman55
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« Reply #3 on: March 17, 2007, 06:29:52 PM »


I found this comment from Bigsky in a earlier post

The US has not tortured anyone as it is not our policy.  Even the commander at Gitmo stated to the affect that the things done in Gitmo are not torture as because if they were done to our captured troops we would not consider it torture.  But you might notice we have yet to cut civilians heads off and broadcast it on the web and tv like terrorists do.

Boxman55

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« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2007, 06:53:26 PM »

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"Death is worse than torture, but everyone except pacifists thinks there are circumstances in which war is justified. War means killing people. If we are entitled to kill people, we must be entitled to injure them. I don't see how it can be reasonable to have an absolute prohibition on torture when you don't have an absolute prohibition on killing. Reasonable people will disagree about when torture is justified. But that, in some circumstances, it is justified seems to me to be just moral common sense. How could it be better that 10,000 or 50,000 or a million people die than that one person be injured?"

John Yoo, defending the torture he helped legalize under Bush. Here is the whole article:
http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/news/editorial/story.html?id=5c3b3463-bc14-4c00-879b-2b7b432d1e79

Is it acceptable for the US government to torture people? My answer is "NO!". Once people are detained and completely under our control it is unacceptable for us to torture them. It is shocking to me that this point is even under discussion and I believe that the acceptance of torture by the current administration will result in damage to the interest of the United States for generations.

Today's children and tomorrow's grandchildren will be paying the price for decisions made in our name today. I think future generations will curse us.

I would torture people by making them listen to William Hungs Christmas CD.  Then throw in some boy bands, some death metal, then some Britney Spears music.  I'd tie them down and make them watch Pee Wee Herman movies for hours.  I'd make them eat green jello.  I'd eat a lot of garlic and onions and get real close to them and breath on them.
Yes, I'd have those terrorists on their knees begging me for mercy, to make the evil noise stop!!! >:D >:D >:D >:D

Donna
Sorry I know this is a serious subject but the question is just so absurd. Have we become so low we have to resort to torture? We're supposed to be above that type of treatment.  We're supposed to be the good guys.  What the F happened to us???? :'( :'(

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« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2007, 07:04:21 PM »

I consider dialysis (any form) to be torture, so let's HOOK 'EM UP  :2thumbsup;
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« Reply #6 on: March 17, 2007, 07:43:21 PM »

Have we become so low we have to resort to torture? We're supposed to be above that type of treatment.  We're supposed to be the good guys.  What the F happened to us???? :'( :'(

I don't know. :'(
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« Reply #7 on: March 17, 2007, 08:02:30 PM »


I found this comment from Bigsky in a earlier post

The US has not tortured anyone as it is not our policy.  Even the commander at Gitmo stated to the affect that the things done in Gitmo are not torture as because if they were done to our captured troops we would not consider it torture.  But you might notice we have yet to cut civilians heads off and broadcast it on the web and tv like terrorists do.

Boxman55

I think the cat's out of the bag on this one - the Pentagon released Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's confession this week and it shows that torture doesn't work. The information torture produces can not be trusted:
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1599861,00.html
Quote
It's hard to tell what the Pentagon's objective really is in releasing the transcript of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed's confession. It certainly suggests the Administration is trying to blame KSM for al-Qaeda terrorism, leading us to believe we've caught the master terrorist and that al-Qaeda, and especially the ever-elusive bin Laden, is no longer a threat to the U.S.

But there is a major flaw in that marketing strategy. On the face of it, KSM, as he is known inside the government, comes across as boasting, at times mentally unstable. It's also clear he is making things up. I'm told by people involved in the investigation that KSM was present during Wall Street Journal correspondent Danny Pearl's execution but was in fact not the person who killed him. There exists videotape footage of the execution that minimizes KSM's role. And if KSM did indeed exaggerate his role in the Pearl murder, it raises the question of just what else he has exaggerated, or outright fabricated.

Torture is not a means it is an end.
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« Reply #8 on: March 17, 2007, 08:09:33 PM »

This is acceptable? http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-elmasri3mar03,0,3264255.story?coll=la-opinion-center
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ON NEW YEAR'S EVE in 2003, I was seized at the border of Serbia and Macedonia by Macedonian police who mistakenly believed that I was traveling on a false German passport. I was detained incommunicado for more than three weeks. Then I was handed over to the American Central Intelligence Agency and was stripped, severely beaten, shackled, dressed in a diaper, injected with drugs, chained to the floor of a plane and flown to Afghanistan, where I was imprisoned in a foul dungeon for more than four months.

Long after the American government realized that I was an entirely innocent man, I was blindfolded, put back on a plane, flown to Europe and left on a hilltop in Albania — without any explanation or apology for the nightmare that I had endured.

There are fates worse then death; sacrificing our morality to fear would make my list.
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« Reply #9 on: March 17, 2007, 08:19:35 PM »

Nothing seems worse than death to me.
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« Reply #10 on: March 17, 2007, 08:28:35 PM »

 My principles say win at any cost....to THEM!!


Where are your balls?
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« Reply #11 on: March 17, 2007, 08:29:16 PM »

I agree with Goofynina!  Hook them up to a dialysis machine for four hours every other day.   Yes, I know this is in off topic, but it is torture!
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« Reply #12 on: March 17, 2007, 08:44:34 PM »

Hmm.............Have a set of balls and do what needs to be done to ensure the safety and survival of this country and lose a little morality or

Sit back and watch the nuke show over a US city one day because we were "too moral" to do what needed to be done to keep it from possibly happening.


However btw it is NEVER immoral to do what needs done to protect oneself from an enemy that has committed numerous attacks on us and killed thousands of civilians.

Will innocent people get caught up?  Certainly, it has always occurred in every war.  Better for a few innocent people to possibly get caught up I say than to watch a million innocent people die because we were to "moral". :banghead;



« Last Edit: March 17, 2007, 08:51:04 PM by BigSky » Logged
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« Reply #13 on: March 17, 2007, 08:48:34 PM »

I'm on dialysis right now and yes it is unpleasant, but you are simply not understanding what is being done in our name, it is pointless cruelty. Dialysis is not pointless. Here is a first person account http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/08/AR2007020801680.html
Quote
American authorities continue to insist that the abuse of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib was an isolated incident in an otherwise well-run detention system. That insistence, however, stands in sharp contrast to my own experiences as an interrogator in Iraq. I watched as detainees were forced to stand naked all night, shivering in their cold cells and pleading with their captors for help. Others were subjected to long periods of isolation in pitch-black rooms. Food and sleep deprivation were common, along with a variety of physical abuse, including punching and kicking. Aggressive, and in many ways abusive, techniques were used daily in Iraq, all in the name of acquiring the intelligence necessary to bring an end to the insurgency. The violence raging there today is evidence that those tactics never worked. My memories are evidence that those tactics were terribly wrong.

Or this first person account from an increadably long New Yorker article http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/02/19/070219fa_fact_mayer
 
Quote
Although reports of abuses by U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, have angered much of the world, the response of Americans has been more tepid. Finnegan attributes the fact that "we are generally more comfortable and more accepting of this," in part, to the popularity of "24," which has a weekly audience of fifteen million viewers, and has reached millions more through DVD sales. The third expert at the meeting was Tony Lagouranis, a former Army interrogator in the war in Iraq. He told the show's staff that DVDs of shows such as "24" circulate widely among soldiers stationed in Iraq. Lagouranis said to me, "People watch the shows, and then walk into the interrogation booths and do the same things they've just seen." He recalled that some men he had worked with in Iraq watched a television program in which a suspect was forced to hear tortured screams from a neighboring cell; the men later tried to persuade their Iraqi translator to act the part of a torture "victim," in a similar intimidation ploy. Lagouranis intervened: such scenarios constitute psychological torture.

"In Iraq, I never saw pain produce intelligence," Lagouranis told me. "I worked with someone who used waterboarding" -- an interrogation method involving the repeated near-drowning of a suspect. "I used severe hypothermia, dogs, and sleep deprivation. I saw suspects after soldiers had gone into their homes and broken their bones, or made them sit on a Humvee's hot exhaust pipes until they got third-degree burns. Nothing happened." Some people, he said, "gave confessions. But they just told us what we already knew. It never opened up a stream of new information." If anything, he said, "physical pain can strengthen the resolve to clam up."

Balls? You know what I think takes balls? Standing by your principals even when there could be a short term price takes balls. It takes balls to set an example and it takes balls to do what's right when doing right is the hard thing to do. 

It does not take balls to torture.  It use to take balls to be an American.
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« Reply #14 on: March 17, 2007, 08:50:31 PM »

I agree with glitter and BigSky... when it comes to the safety of my children, I don't care what needs to be done to stop a nuclear attack from happening in our country where my children live.
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« Reply #15 on: March 17, 2007, 09:02:39 PM »



Balls? You know what I think takes balls? Standing by your principals even when there could be a short term price takes balls. It takes balls to set an example and it takes balls to do what's right when doing right is the hard thing to do. 

It does not take balls to torture.  It use to take balls to be an American.

Ohh yes we should give the terrorists milk and cookies and read them a bedtime story and hope we give them a warm and fuzzy feeling in their tummy and maybe they will tell us their dreaded plans for death and destruction. ::) :banghead;

Jefferson once said to the affect that it was better to break principals than to stick to them and lose the country because of them.


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Bill Peckham
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« Reply #16 on: March 17, 2007, 09:10:03 PM »

That's how our choice is always presented isn't it? Torture or accept sharia law. Either or.

bleh
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« Reply #17 on: March 17, 2007, 09:42:39 PM »

Hmm.............Have a set of balls and do what needs to be done to ensure the safety and survival of this country and lose a little morality or

Sit back and watch the nuke show over a US city one day because we were "too moral" to do what needed to be done to keep it from possibly happening.


However btw it is NEVER immoral to do what needs done to protect oneself from an enemy that has committed numerous attacks on us and killed thousands of civilians.

Will innocent people get caught up?  Certainly, it has always occurred in every war.  Better for a few innocent people to possibly get caught up I say than to watch a million innocent people die because we were to "moral". :banghead;

You do what must be done when you are fighting a war.This war must be fought,And by the way the US is not, I Repeat ,The US is NOT getting there ass kicked . This is what one reply had stated to my, Iraq war comment. This will be a long war and yes it is much different than WW2.There for if you have to use torture to protect your country,and other troops in the battle field thats how you justify it.  Do you think for one second if we pull out that this country will be safe,no way,they hate America because we are free. They started it,,We will finish it...







EDITED: Fixed quote error- kitkatz, Moderator
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« Reply #18 on: March 18, 2007, 08:33:32 AM »

I will state my point one more time.And if I offend someone tough shi--- If they have information that could harm the US I say poke their eyes out to get it.  Boxman55
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« Reply #19 on: March 18, 2007, 08:54:51 AM »

Nail there balls to the floor...you want balls?  One way to get them.
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« Reply #20 on: March 18, 2007, 09:44:26 AM »

You do what must be done when you are fighting a war.This war must be fought,And by the way the US is not, I Repeat ,The US is NOT getting there ass kicked . This is what one reply had stated to my, Iraq war comment. This will be a long war and yes it is much different than WW2.There for if you have to use torture to protect your country,and other troops in the battle field thats how you justify it.  Do you think for one second if we pull out that this country will be safe,no way,they hate America because we are free. They started it,,We will finish it...

Yes we have seen what happens from sitting back and doing nothing.

Very true about the US not getting its ass kicked.  Thread got locked before I could comment on that "winner" of a comment about us getting our ass kicked.


« Last Edit: March 18, 2007, 09:50:16 AM by BigSky » Logged
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« Reply #21 on: March 18, 2007, 09:55:06 AM »

That's how our choice is always presented isn't it? Torture or accept sharia law. Either or.

bleh

When it comes down to life, death and freedom it is always either or. 

It seems to escape you that when fighting a group of people that have no regard for human life at all that certain things must be done.

No different than WWII.

If the allies would have played by your idea of having to be restricted to what is moral, the allies would not have won the war.

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« Reply #22 on: March 18, 2007, 11:19:19 AM »

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=NCW251UYFPSWHQFIQMFCFFWAVCBQYIV0?xml=/news/2004/05/09/wpearl09.xml

Daniel 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.
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« Reply #23 on: March 18, 2007, 11:40:47 AM »

When it comes down to life, death and freedom it is always either or. 

It seems to escape you that when fighting a group of people that have no regard for human life at all that certain things must be done.

Does it matter if the tactics work or not? Reading this thread I am coming to realize that it may not. It seems like what people need, is to feel like everything that can be done is being done. And by going into this dark corner of the human experience, by acquiescing to torture we prove our commitment. We feel that by going farther than previous generations we're proving our commitment, torture becomes our sacrifice.

And torture really is just a dark corner of the human experience. We've been here before, it doesn't work. It creates more problems than it solves. Do you really believe that the threats facing us today are categorically different than threats faced by this nation in the past? Torture has been around for as long as we have been on this planet, that's a large number of data points, can you point to a single time that torture was the right choice? What example in all of human history can you point to that illustrates the value of torture?

>>>Examples from TV shows do not count<<<
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« Reply #24 on: March 18, 2007, 11:56:10 AM »

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".
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