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.And now, I'm going out to Sunny's Surplus to find a World War II helmet for myself! And let the good times roll!
Are you seriously saying that you think Jefferson would condone torture?
Hamilton was a Federalist. I would have guessed that you were a state rights guy. oh wait that's right you have that whole Federal Reserve is evil POV.
After 75 months of Republican hegemony it's a bit incredible to fret that 75 days of Congressional oversight threatens the Republic. This isn't even a top five most threatening situation. Stalin had nukes pointed at us. Mao had nukes pointed at us. We didn't torture our enemies then.
Do you answer for the group that protests at military funerals? http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Anti-gay_church_protests_U.S._military_funerals
First of all what the US is doing is hardly torture.
First of all what the US is doing is hardly torture.Considering we put our own CIA through waterboarding before terrorists one can hardly consider it torture.You want true torture, look to what saddam did.By the lefts idea of torture,next they will claim that keeping terrorists in jail at all without trial will be torture.
Hate to tell you this but that was then, this is now!Military war strategy CHANGES with the times, the threat, and the enemy.When the terrorists sign onto the GC, then I will worry about what our Government may or may not do.They are lucky as it is that we dont execute them at our whim for being spies.
What's the strategy behind abandoning 200+ years of military doctrine? Do you understand the inconsistencies of your argument? On the one hand you tout the Filipino example as how to interrogate a suspect, yet you maintain we don't use those tactics. Why not?
You maintain that the water boarding/standing naked doused in cold water/solitary/sensory deprivation/use of dogs is allowed because the Geneva Conventions do not apply to people labeled as a terrorists, yet you acknowledge that the Geneva Conventions are merely the latest legal codification of 1500 years of military and political traditions. You must know that these political and legal traditions have served us well, after all they got us here to our unipower, world hegemony. You'd have to acknowledge that these political and legal traditions have served as the underpinnings of America's exceptionalism. Clearly these political and legal traditions have allowed America to lead the world into a brighter, healthier international order.
It has always been in America's self interest to be the World's standard setter. We set the standard by example. And we continue to set this example today. Today are we the model that we want to see in other countries? Where does this road lead? Should we fund a research effort into how to inflict pain without causing major organ failure? Those devices in the photos George posted are so crude. I'm sure a few billion dollars in research could develop devices more intimidating and painful.
Imagine being deprived of sleep for the better part of a month (or nearly two months) - in solitary confinement, and often in shackles and stress positions, as the Bush administration has done to prisoners at Gitmo. And think of the quality of intelligence we're getting at the end of it. The point of torture is now and always has been only torture. It is a simple, indisputable fact that this administration has legalized, authorized and enforced torture. American doctors now use their skills to keep people alive in order that they can be further tortured. As Slavoj Zizek wrote "We are in the middle of a process of moral corruption: those in power are literally trying to break a part of our ethical backbone, to dampen and undo what is arguably our civilization's greatest achievement, the growth of our spontaneous moral sensitivity."
Again, the fundamental point is what is the point? What sort of information are you suppose to get from someone after they've gone weeks without sleep? Sleep deprivation is just cruelty. People are people, don't you think we'd know if sleep deprivation worked? It's easy to do. Ha ha we played Ice T's Body Count tonight. Wow is that dude ever tired.Here is a first hand report from 5 days without sleep: http://www.totse.com/en/fringe/fringe_science/effectsofsleep173704.html Imagine 5 weeks. What would this tactic accomplish exactly?
No cruelty is coming at someone with a knife and letting them kick and scream while their throat is slit. . Cruelty is doing the same and cutting ones head off and then showing the person their headless body the last few moments they are alive.Now after all Bill, do you think those terrorists really think that being deprived of sleep is torture to them? Come on now. They cut heads off and slit throats of the innocent. If they freely and openly do this and they do not consider it torture, there is no way they think being deprived of sleep, water boarding, listening to rap music, is torture to them.
I don't care a wit what the terrorists think. Our actions should be guided by our interests, our moral and national interests. It is in neither our moral or national interests to treat people differently based on a label. That's the bright line, that's the slippery slope - when you differentiate among humans under your control based on an arbitrary label. Right now the US has one set of standards for group A and another secrete set of standards for those they (who exactly is they - a mercenary contractor? Someone unchecked by the rule of law?) say are beneath our contempt, beneath how we would treat the most hideous child murderer.
It's a story that has been repeated throughout history, remember the words of Pastor Martin Niemöller:When the Nazis came for the communists,I remained silent;I was not a communist.When they locked up the social democrats,I remained silent;I was not a social democrat.When they came for the trade unionists,I did not speak out;I was not a trade unionist.When they came for me,there was no one left to speak out.
If we do not think those methods when applied to our troops is torture then that gives us every moral authority to say its not torture when we use them.
Ya and I suppose next you are going to claim that it is immoral and we are violating terrorists free speech when the US military starts their program to hack and shut down terrorist websites.
No matter how hard you try what we are doing is not torture. If we do not think those methods when applied to our troops is torture then that gives us every moral authority to say its not torture when we use them.
Whoop there it is.
"From the time I was arrested five years ago, they have been torturing me. It happened during interviews. One time they tortured me one way, and another time they tortured me in a different way. I just said those things to make the people happy. They were very happy when I told them those things," - Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, speaking of his time at Gitmo. http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/G/GUANTANAMO_TERROR_HEARING?SITE=7219&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2007-03-30-11-04-22The transcripts have been censored to remove any details of the actual torture methods alleged. And here is the official response:CIA spokesman Mark Mansfield wouldn't respond to al-Nashiri's allegations, but said Friday that the agency's interrogation program is conducted lawfully - "with great care and close review, producing vital information that has helped disrupt plots and save lives."Notice that he does not deny torture. In fact, his words could be construed as justifying it. We have gone from "we do not torture" to no comment. One would like to disbelieve everything Nashiri says. But on what rational basis can we now do so? (h/t http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/ )Bigsky haven't you gotten the Administration's new talking points? We don't deny torture any more we simply say its worth it.