The price of a barrel of oil is a historic fact - going to be hard to pin this on anyone other than the current administration (see graph ... remember oil below $20 a barrel? sigh)
Not sure I understand your point about the US's treatment of Indians - is this to say that people fingered by a corrupt Iraqi secret service should be treated as sub-humans in the same way non-anglos were treated as sub-humans back in the day? Are you saying Andrew Johnson's injun policy worked so well we should use it as a guide to the Middle East?
The most serious difference between today and the numerous examples of torture in US history is that today torture is being condoned by political leaders and systematically used as a tactic of first resort. The constitutional issue is that this is being done without regard to existing US law and treaty obligations. If the law is to mean anything then it must apply to everyone.
The current president had carte blanc for 5 years after 9/11. He could have chosen to conduct his war within our constitutional framework, instead he chose to act as an unitary executive daring the legislative and judicial branch to stop him. Administration officials have resorted to complete memory failure and contempt of Congress in an all encompassing effort to run out the clock on their term in office. Maybe if his policies were successful their legality would have been overlooked but that is not what happened. His policies have been amateurish and not well thought out. The blow back from our post 9/11 policies will haunt us for generations. Our blind blundering bluster has been a disaster. An example of defeating ones self. I don't see everyone forgetting the sequence of events anytime soon. At least I am hoping that the 40% of Americans who believe in a Saddam-9/11 tie are also mostly people who will stay home on election day, dissatisfied that Rudy lost in the primary.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on December 24, 2007, 03:32:04 PMNot sure I understand your point about the US's treatment of Indians - is this to say that people fingered by a corrupt Iraqi secret service should be treated as sub-humans in the same way non-anglos were treated as sub-humans back in the day? Are you saying Andrew Johnson's injun policy worked so well we should use it as a guide to the Middle East?I'm sure you dont know. Pretty clear on that.You claim 200 years of tradition and honor going down the drain by our actions today, yet you fail to even comprehend our history and therefor your claim of tradition and honor being lost is false because it doesnt even compare to what past generations did, which was far worse in this country.Quote from: Bill Peckham on December 24, 2007, 03:32:04 PMThe most serious difference between today and the numerous examples of torture in US history is that today torture is being condoned by political leaders and systematically used as a tactic of first resort. The constitutional issue is that this is being done without regard to existing US law and treaty obligations. If the law is to mean anything then it must apply to everyone.Hmm so was the trail of tears, infecting tribes with smallpox by giving them infected blankets etc. etc.
Let me make sure I understand you. You are saying we can't loose our honor because we never had any honor to begin with? You are saying that we can justify torture today because we've done far worse to better people in our history?
The illegality of torture does not depend on America having a saintly past. We signed international treaties constraining our actions freely, of our own free will. And it is true that even after agreeing to abide by the Geneva Conventions we used torture. What is unprecedented is not the torture, but the openness. In the past our government kept secrets; the crimes were sanctioned but they were committed in the shadows, officially denied and condemned. The Bush administration has demanded the right to torture without shame, they've worked to make torture legal through new definitions and new laws like the cynically named Patriot Act. Maybe you're right and it was always only a myth that "we're better than them" but it is what we use to tell ourselves.
Here is all that torture is good for: inspiring fear in a population. If you want it widely known that your ruling regime is utterly ruthless and doesn’t care about individuals, all you have to do is scoop up random people suspected of anti-government activities, hold them for a few weeks, and return them as shattered wrecks with mangled limbs, while treating the monsters who would do such a thing as respected members of the ruling clique, who are immune from legal prosecution. The message gets out fast that one does not cross the government. So, yeah, if you’re a tyrant in Uzbekistan who is holding control through force of arms, fear is a useful part of the apparatus of control, and torture is a great idea, as are barbaric executions, heads on pikes, and bullets to the back of the head. When the US government announces it’s support for torture, they aren’t talking about intelligence gathering: they are simply saying “Fear us.” They are taking the first step on the road to tyranny. The real problem is that fear isn’t a good tool to use in a democratic society. We are supposed to be shareholders in our government; when a process of oppression is endorsed by our legislators and president, we should recognize that they are trying to set themselves apart from the ordinary citizenry, and it’s time to rebel…before the goon squads come to your neighborhood. Anyone who supports torture is a traitor to the democratic form of government, and should be voted out of office, if not impeached.
Hmmm all take your no answer as a NO that the US court has not found what is going on at Gitmo as torture and illegal.
Quote from: BigSky on January 01, 2008, 10:25:49 AMHmmm all take your no answer as a NO that the US court has not found what is going on at Gitmo as torture and illegal.In 1947 the United States charged a Japanese officer, Yukio Asano, with war crimes for carrying out waterboarding on a U.S. civilian. Asano was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor.
still no US court has found what we are doing at Gitmo as illegal or torture now has it!
Quote from: BigSky on January 01, 2008, 04:13:06 PM still no US court has found what we are doing at Gitmo as illegal or torture now has it!Oh please....that doesn't mean it isn't so. It is what it is, we all know that. Do "we" really want to tell on ourselves and be looked down upon on the worldly stage. Get real dude. Counting on the U.S. court to rule our actions at Gitmo as illegal is like conting on the C.I.A. to voluntarily tell on itself every time they misbehave.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 01, 2008, 02:24:58 PMQuote from: BigSky on January 01, 2008, 10:25:49 AMHmmm all take your no answer as a NO that the US court has not found what is going on at Gitmo as torture and illegal.In 1947 the United States charged a Japanese officer, Yukio Asano, with war crimes for carrying out waterboarding on a U.S. civilian. Asano was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor.Hmm still no US court has found what we are doing at Gitmo as illegal or torture now has it!
Hmm yet no US court has said the method of waterboarding they are using in Gitmo right now is torture or illegal now have they!In fact it doesn't look like it harmed old Khalid Sheik Mohammed now did it?Considering the method that was used in Gitmo of covering the terrorists face with cellophane, and having water poured over it hardly seems to be torture.
Fake executions, triggering the deeply ingrained human terror of drowning - not to mention the secrete renditions and off the books gulag,
That's it right there isn't it. It isn't about any individual and what they do or do not have in there hearts. It's about continuing to seek random vengeance (as compared to targeted justice against the actual perpetrators who remain at large) for 9/11 six years after the fact, this sounds like a pathology rather than a tactic in the long War ON Terror.