Bush's Support of Torture: Global Impact and Un-American Reputation

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In summary: Saddams regime? He has surpassed Adolf Hitler in crimes against humanity, torture, murder, and brutalities that cannot even be spoken of. The amendment, offered by Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam, shouldn't be the least bit controversial. It would prohibit "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment" and firmly establish the current U.S. Army Field Manual as the guide for service members when they detain or interrogate prisoners. This amendment should not be controversial, as it is a common sense amendment that will protect servicemen from being tortured.
  • #36
loseyourname said:
You should be smart enough to know that that isn't the way the term is used in contemporary politics. If we went by the definition of classical liberalism, then Jefferson is the most liberal president we've ever had. In the US, the terms "liberal" and "conservative" are used to denote people who are either left-leaning or right-leaning, with respect to what constitutes the center for the country, with "center" simply being the average political stance. It is something that changes with time, and it is also something that is a nation-specific definition.
Yes. I am aware. I mean that, on a global scale, the US is among the most right-leaning nations in the world - passed mostly (or maybe exclusively) by dictatorships and developing nations.

I could easily say the reverse about Scandinavia... (except the "passed by dictatorships" part)
 
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  • #37
Smurf said:
Yes. I am aware. I mean that, on a global scale, the US is among the most right-leaning nations in the world - passed mostly (or maybe exclusively) by dictatorships and developing nations.

I could easily say the reverse about Scandinavia... (except the "passed by dictatorships" part)

Actually, America is the most liberal nation that has ever existed, the only country founded on the principles of individual liberty and the free pursuit of happiness. If you want to explore its intellectual roots, go back and read Locke, Hume, and Smith.

Its modern alternative, the Left, is a situation in which the State supersedes the individual and makes choices pursuant to his/her happiness (whether he/she likes it or not). In the conceptual spectrum, it points to the east/past. A dictatorship of any sort thus is infinitely more closely related to it, where a few make moral and subjective decisions that forcefully bind the rest, than to the US, where the power of the government to coerce private individuals is much lower. A measure of this is the share of the country's resources that the government appropriates.

Government expenditures as a share of GDP:

Canada 40.1%
Germany 49.4%
France 54.4%
Italy 48.5%
Sweden 59%
United States 35.9%

But then no argument would convince a Leftist, since his/her view of freedom is the ability to impose subjective judgements on others through government coercion.
 
  • #39
But then no argument would convince a Leftist, since his/her view of freedom is the ability to impose subjective judgements on others through government coercion.

Not true... Again you seem to think that if you believe in social justice, rather than "corporate Justice" then you are a communist..
 
  • #40
Anttech said:
Not true... Again you seem to think that if you believe in social justice, rather than "corporate Justice" then you are a communist..

No, but if you believe that social justice must be imposed on a people by its government, giving the people themselves no choice in this matter, then you are at odds with the classical liberal position that men should be free to choose their own lives and do what they please with their property.

That isn't to say that your position is wrong (I am assuming that you do believe social justice should be imposed by the government), but unless every single person in a given society is freely willing to give up what they own to create social justice, then you must use coercive tactics, ultimately backed by the threat of force, to implement that justice.
 
  • #41
That isn't to say that your position is wrong (I am assuming that you do believe social justice should be imposed by the government

Actually I believe that the Legal system should "impose" this, not the "goverment" The two are not the same...

Social Justist, like human rights, fair and free trade.. etc etc, are not "imposed" on people per say, they are typically a legislative framework that Business and Goverment have to abidy by, and thus it "protects" people...
 
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  • #42
Actually, America is the most liberal nation that has ever existed, the only country founded on the principles of individual liberty and the free pursuit of happiness.

This is very narror minded statement, how much reasearch have you done to come to this conclusion? America is no more "free" than any country in the EU... And some people might argue you are less free, I can't think of any other country in the EU that has something like Gutanamo bay, or a clause that allows people to be detained indefinetly without a hearing or trial... It could be interpreted as, you are free as long as you think the correct way!
 
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  • #43
Anttech said:
I can't think of any other country in the EU that has... a clause that allows people to be detained indefinetly without a hearing or trial.
I can. The UK. But only if you're forrun-lookin. That's not the law; that's just the practise. You can also execute forrun-lookin people without even any motive or extenuating circumstances to vaguely warrant it. The UK is also not averse to renditioning prisoners to countries where torture is allowed to extract information, or keep them out of the way, just like (though not to the extent of) the US. In fact, one of those countries is... the US!

51st state indeed.
 
  • #44
I can. The UK. But only if you're forrun-lookin. That's not the law; that's just the practise. You can also execute forrun-lookin people without even any motive or extenuating circumstances to vaguely warrant it. The UK is also not averse to renditioning prisoners to countries where torture is allowed to extract information, or keep them out of the way, just like (though not to the extent of) the US. In fact, one of those countries is... the US!
Total nonsence...

The Goverment of the UK is Trying to pass legislations to hold people without trail for 3 months (not indefinetly), which I doubt will get through!

It however Cannot currently deport people back to countries that have bad human rights records! This is becuase of EU Human Rights Law that the UK signed...

You can also execute forrun-lookin people without even any motive or extenuating circumstances to vaguely warrant it.
yes it looks like it, since the Brazilian got shot but legally they cannot do such things
 
  • #45
Anttech said:
The Goverment of the UK is Trying to pass legislations to hold people without trail for 3 months (not indefinetly), which I doubt will get through!
The 2001 Anti-Terrorist act allowed the UK to, among other things, detain foreign nationals on suspicion of terrorist acts or plans without charge indefinitely, and this act has been called upon a number of times. Yes, this is against the European Convention on Human Rights. So how did Blair get around that? He... uh... opted the UK out of that part (article 5). Did you know any of this? The legislation to which you refer is not what I could possibly have been talking about, since it has not been implemented yet.

Anttech said:
It however Cannot currently deport people back to countries that have bad human rights records! This is becuase of EU Human Rights Law that the UK signed...
... and subsequently forgot about. There's two separate issues here:
1. deporting someone back to their country of origin where they may be persecuted;
2. renditioning suspects to ANY country, not necessarily their country of origin, for the purposes of interrogation in a way not legally feasible in the UK.

Issue one is generally not a terrorism issue, but an illegal immigration issue. The 1971 Immigration Act allows illegal immigrants to be deported back to their country and to be detained up until their deportation. The Human Rights Act does indeed prohibit a country in the EU from knowingly deporting someone to a country where they will be persecuted. These two acts often come into conflict, and only recently the government were found yet again guilty of erring on the side of recklessness: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4303892.stm.

The second issue is a global scandal. Renditioning is much more quickly associated with the US, but there is evidence that the UK have facilitated this evil practise. About a year ago The New Statesman published an interview with a Briton who was held, then released, on suspicion of terrorist affiliation, and then was arrested on the Afghanistan (I think) border by American authorities, reason unknown. From there he was deported to one of the US' favoured places of torture, I think t=his time it was Syria. He was eventually "rescued" by... ahem... the British who were very nice about the whole thing and probably gave him a cup of tea, but not the reason why the Americans would have thought to have arrested him. Now, I can't cite this article since it was in a magazine, but here's some related stuff, just so you know I'm not making this up.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/file_on_4/4246089.stm
http://www.ihrc.org.uk/show.php?id=1309
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4088746.stm
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0210-11.htm
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,5673,1270541,00.html

Anttech said:
yes it looks like it, since the Brazilian got shot but legally they cannot do such things
The home office and the met beg to differ. They maintain it IS legal.
 
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  • #46
UK Legislation

After much debate, the UK Parliament passed the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act in December 2001.

The Act was intended to make it easier for law enforcement agencies to track terrorist funds and share information.

Most controversially, the Act grants the home secretary the power to detain suspected international terrorists without trial if deportation is not possible because it would endanger the suspects’ lives.

Since this provision violates Article 5 of the Human Rights Act, the home secretary had to assert that the UK is in a 'state of public emergency.' Article 5 guarantees the right to liberty and grants protection against detention without charge of trial.

In addition, communications companies will now have the power to retain information on calls and emails made by their customers, though they will not be able to retain their contents.

Liberty, a human rights group, legally challenged Britain's anti-terror laws in July 2002, claiming they breach human rights. Amnesty International has similarly asserted that the new laws breach fundamental human rights.

In total, 17 men have been arrested and held without trial in the UK under the new laws. Of these, 11 are still being detained.

Most are being held at Belmarsh Prison in London, which some human rights groups have termed “Britain’s Guantanamo Bay.”

Home Secretary David Blunkett has admitted that the situation is not ideal, but argues that it is necessary and “the best and most workable way to address the particular problems we face.” But in August, Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights called for an alternative to be found to the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act’s internment powers, and said suspected terrorists should be charged and face trial rather than left in legal limbo.

However, just two detainees have so far successfully challenged their detention, with three Appeal Court judges deciding in August the government was legally entitled to hold 10 other men who appealed. Solicitors are currently attempting to overturn this decision in the House Of Lords.

I stand corrected... I was aware of this, but for some reason I was under the impression that people had to be "tried"
 
  • #47
Anttech said:
Actually I believe that the Legal system should "impose" this, not the "goverment" The two are not the same...

What country has a judiciary that is not part of the government?

Social Justist, like human rights, fair and free trade.. etc etc, are not "imposed" on people per say, they are typically a legislative framework that Business and Goverment have to abidy by, and thus it "protects" people...

"Legislative framework" presumably means laws. Laws are ruled that are imposed on a group of people by the government. They are enforced using the threat of violent action if one does not comply. I'm not saying this is necessarily a bad thing, but it does run contrary to libertarianism. You're just mincing words here to avoid using words like "coerce" and "impose," but that is what the government is doing. It is the only thing that a government can do. The classical liberal position (take Jefferson, for instance) is that the government should do this as little as is possible. For the most part, it should just get out of the way. The modern-day liberal position is the opposite; it states that government should intervene in just about everything.
 
  • #48
The modern-day liberal position is the opposite; it states that government should intervene in just about everything.
In a two party system like yours maybe...

What country has a judiciary that is not part of the government?

Is your congress the goverment?
 
  • #49
I've only got a minute - and haven't read through the last 2 pages so please forgive me if I am re-stating something.

Back to the OP -

I finally google-news'd this item, and WOW!

What's brought out the threat of the presidential ax is recent legislation stating clearly that U.S. soldiers must not torture prisoners. The overwhelming (90-9) passage by the Senate of Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain's sponsored amendment says clearly that the "cruel, inhumane or degrading" treatment of prisoners under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense was to be prohibited. The potential clash between the administration and Congress has received attention overseas - and was recently reported in the British paper, The Telegraph. According to the story, White House spokesman Scott McClellan warned that, "We have put out a Statement of Administration Policy saying that his advisers would recommend that he vetoes it if it contains such language [as has already been passed by the Senate]."

McClellan makes it sound like Bush will actually veto this thing. OMG.

http://www.freemarketnews.com/WorldNews.asp?nid=1257
 
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  • #50
Anttech said:
Social Justist, like human rights, fair and free trade.. etc etc, are not "imposed" on people per say, they are typically a legislative framework that Business and Goverment have to abidy by, and thus it "protects" people...

The very concept that government should be pursuing something as ethereal, vague, and ill-defined as "social justice" is anathema to the very principles of personal freedom (and responsibility) that the US stands for.

Of course Europe is nothing but a long history of such projects, from pogroms, to state religions, to socialism, but America was founded by men fleeing from a government that would trample them for the pursuit of a "higher good".

David Hume wrote (I'm paraphrasing) that when thinking about how government should be set up, one must always assume that it will be run by scoundrels, and thus it should be given the less possible authority to interfere with individual liberties.

In Europe you operate basically under the opposite premise, thinking that the government can (and should) remedy every problem (real or imagined), and thus should be given ample authority to play around with citizens' lives as they see fit. A short name for that arrangement is authoritarianism (however democratic it may be).
 
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  • #51
Anttech said:
In a two party system like yours maybe...

Okay, under what systems does the party that identifies itself as "liberal" advocate the hands-off governing approach of classical libertarianism?

Is your congress the goverment?

Congress constitutes the legislative branch. The president, cabinet, and associated bureaucracies constitute the executive branch. The court system constitutes the judiciary branch. Together, they are the government. In their legal functions, the legislative branch makes the laws, the executive branch executes the laws, and the judiciary branch enforces the laws. (It's a little more complicated with the checks and balances, but you get the idea.)

I'm not aware of a system in which any of these legal functions are carried out by agents that are not part of the government.* If there is such a system that you know of, I'd be happy if you'd tell me about it.

*Note: Excepting the ability of PIs and private security firms to enforce laws where the government-run police force is not enough.
 
  • #52
So the democrates who have been elected into congress, have no say in the legislation process? Thats what you are implying isn't it?

In the UK the Goverment is the Labour party as they have the most seats in the house of commons. But all Bills, to become law have to pass through the above mention house. This is to say that the government does not MAKE laws, they propose Bills, then EVERYONE in the house votes on wheather they believe in the Bill or dont, Yah or Nah!

So to say that the Goverment "imposed" Laws is not true...

The very concept that government should be pursuing something as ethereal, vague, and ill-defined as "social justice" is anathema to the very principles of personal freedom (and responsibility) that the US stands for.
Social Justice not ethereal, its quite apartent if don't choose to ignore it... If the USA doesn't believe in "Social Justise" (Which to be honest I think the majorty of people in the US do) then does your nation believe in? Freedom to exploit at will?

In Europe you operate basically under the opposite premise, thinking that the government can (and should) remedy every problem (real or imagined), and thus should be given ample authority to play around with citizens' lives as they see fit. A short name for that arrangement is authoritarianism (however democratic it may be).

This is just B.S.

I don't see any EU country unilaterally making desisons that effects everyone on the planet. I however do see this authoriterian behavour from the US administration...
 
  • #53
Of course Europe is nothing but a long history of such projects, from pogroms, to state religions, to socialism, but America was founded by men fleeing from a government that would trample them for the pursuit of a "higher good".

And what "Higher good" was that... Your nationalism is blinding you from what your government is doing currently
 
  • #54
pattylou said:
McClellan makes it sound like Bush will actually veto this thing. OMG.

[In order to secure basic human rights], Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed, -- That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new guards for their future security --

I think it's time to start talking about impeachment. Conspiracy to commit torture is a high crime by any standard. I hope that most Americans would still agree.
 
  • #55
Anttech said:
So the democrates who have been elected into congress, have no say in the legislation process? Thats what you are implying isn't it?

Every member of the legislature has a say.

In the UK the Goverment is the Labour party as they have the most seats in the house of commons. But all Bills, to become law have to pass through the above mention house. This is to say that the government does not MAKE laws, they propose Bills, then EVERYONE in the house votes on wheather they believe in the Bill or dont, Yah or Nah!

It works the same way here. Every member of both the House and Senate vote on laws. But the entire Congress is the government, not just the majority party. One subcommittee proposes a bill, then both houses of Congress vote on it. If it passes, it becomes law. In what sense is this not the government making laws? If the members of Congress are not the government, then what is?

So to say that the Goverment "imposed" Laws is not true...

Sure it is. I've never written a single bill, nor been given a single vote on whether or not a bill passes. Nonetheless, I must follow the laws, because if I do not, the police will arrest me and throw me in prison.

This is the way a system of government has to work. Unless every single citizen in a given nation agrees as to how they should behave, the standards of the majority (and possibly whoever first drafted the Constitution of that nation) are going to be imposed on those who do not think they should have to abide by them.
 
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  • #56
Ivan Seeking said:
I think it's time to start talking about impeachment. Conspiracy to commit torture is a high crime by any standard. I hope that most Americans would still agree.

would you have impeached Roosevelt for bombing Dresden?
 
  • #57
ron damon said:
would you have impeached Roosevelt for bombing Dresden?

I would have impeached Roosevelt or any President for instituting or refusing to deny torture as a policy of the US.
 
  • #58
Ivan Seeking said:
I would have impeached Roosevelt or any President for instituting or refusing to deny torture as a policy of the US.

You know, if torture is ever used, it's not because someone in the pentagon or the CIA thinks it is really cool, but because, believe it or not, there are people who want to kill you and your loved ones, along with thousands of others, are hard at work figuring ways to do so, do not mind dying themselves, and, if not opposed with the utmost force, will bring the modern world to its knees in an orgy of blood and destruction.

Many terrible plots, targeting both Europe and America (and Asia), have been prevented by using information obtained by intensive interrogation techniques performed on the rats in Guantanamo and elsewhere.

Would you rather have thousands of civilians die than subject some terrorist rat to torture?
 
  • #59
ron damon said:
You know, if torture is ever used, it's not because someone in the pentagon or the CIA thinks it is really cool, but because, believe it or not, there are people who want to kill you and your loved ones, along with thousands of others, are hard at work figuring ways to do so, do not mind dying themselves, and, if not opposed with the utmost force, will bring the modern world to its knees in an orgy of blood and destruction.

Many terrible plots, targeting both Europe and America (and Asia), have been prevented by using information obtained by intensive interrogation techniques performed on the rats in Guantanamo and elsewhere.

Would you rather have thousands of civilians die than subject some terrorist rat to torture?
Worthless nonsense, besides being rather dishonest of your own attitude to torture.
In fact, you find it rather heartening that we now may start to inflict torture on the "bad guys", don't you? Or, should we perhaps, change that to hardening?
 
  • #60
arildno said:
Worthless nonsense, besides being rather dishonest of your own attitude to torture.
In fact, you find it rather heartening that we now may start to inflict torture on the "bad guys", don't you? Or, should we perhaps, change that to hardening?

The world is what it is (and the terrorists are what they are); fleeing from reality won't make things any better. Rather the opposite.
 
  • #61
ron damon said:
You know, if torture is ever used, it's not because someone in the pentagon or the CIA thinks it is really cool, but because, believe it or not, there are people who want to kill you and your loved ones, along with thousands of others, are hard at work figuring ways to do so, do not mind dying themselves, and, if not opposed with the utmost force, will bring the modern world to its knees in an orgy of blood and destruction.

So what's new?

Many terrible plots, targeting both Europe and America (and Asia), have been prevented by using information obtained by intensive interrogation techniques performed on the rats in Guantanamo and elsewhere.

Would you rather have thousands of civilians die than subject some terrorist rat to torture?

So, following your logic, first of all, how many lives must be at stake in order to justify torture; 1, 10, 100...millions? Next, who says who does it, to whom, and when? Do we do this to anyone who might have information or do we have to be reasonably sure? How do we determine sufficient cause? If we turn out to be wrong and torture an innocent person, do we give him a free balloon? And why not let the police do this? If for example we have a bomber who has hidden a bomb, shouldn't he be tortured for an answer? And if we're going to allow this, why not just do it in the courts of law? If for example we can torture a serial killer into confessing, wouldn't the potential for lives saved be worth it? Or if this only applies to non-citizens, does it apply to all races and countries, or just people from certain countries or groups? Finally, how much torture is okay? Can we torture people to death, or to the point of permanent physical damage, or just until they scream to a certain volume? If we don't get results, when do we stop? Does this go on for days, or weeks, or years? And what do we do with the people who are now a danger to society as a result of all of this; say for example the torturers? Should we just kill them when we're done, or should we wait until they turn on the neighbor's kids?
 
  • #62
U.S. Military Law

TITLE 18 > PART I > CHAPTER 113C > § 2340
As used in this chapter—
(1) “torture” means an act committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody or physical control;
(2) “severe mental pain or suffering” means the prolonged mental harm caused by or resulting from—
(A) the intentional infliction or threatened infliction of severe physical pain or suffering;
(B) the administration or application, or threatened administration or application, of mind-altering substances or other procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or the personality;
(C) the threat of imminent death; or
(D) the threat that another person will imminently be subjected to death, severe physical pain or suffering, or the administration or application of mind-altering substances or other procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or personality; and
(3) “United States” includes all areas under the jurisdiction of the United States including any of the places described in sections 5 and 7 of this title and section 46501 (2) of title 49.

...TITLE 18 > PART I > CHAPTER 113C > § 2340A
§ 2340A. Torture
Release date: 2005-08-03
(a) Offense.— Whoever outside the United States commits or attempts to commit torture shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both, and if death results to any person from conduct prohibited by this subsection, shall be punished by death or imprisoned for any term of years or for life.
(b) Jurisdiction.— There is jurisdiction over the activity prohibited in subsection (a) if—
(1) the alleged offender is a national of the United States; or
(2) the alleged offender is present in the United States, irrespective of the nationality of the victim or alleged offender.
(c) Conspiracy.— A person who conspires to commit an offense under this section shall be subject to the same penalties (other than the penalty of death) as the penalties prescribed for the offense, the commission of which was the object of the conspiracy
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode18/usc_sup_01_18_10_I_20_113C.html
 
  • #63
Lawfulness of Interrogation Techniques under the Geneva Conventions

Prisoners of War
The ill-treatment of prisoners of war, even for the purpose of eliciting information deemed vital to self-defense, has long been considered a violation of the law of war, albeit one that is frequently honored in the breach.4 The practice was understood to be banned prior to the American Civil War. The Lieber Code,5 adopted by the Union Army to codify the law of war as it then existed, explained: “Honorable men, when captured, will abstain from giving to the enemy, information concerning their own army, and the modern law of war permits no longer the use of any violence against prisoners in order to extort the desired information or to punish them for having given false information” (Art. 80).

The Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War (GPW)6 Article 17, paragraph 4 provides the general rule for interrogation of prisoners of war: No physical or mental torture, nor any other form of coercion, may be inflicted on prisoners of war to secure from them information of any kind whatever. Prisoners of war who refuse to answer may not be threatened, insulted, or exposed to unpleasant or disadvantageous treatment of any kind. This language replaced a provision in the 1929 Geneva Convention that stated “[n]o pressure shall be exerted on prisoners to obtain information regarding the situation in their armed forces or their country.”7 According to the ICRC Commentary,8 the many violations that occurred during World War II led drafters of the 1949 Convention to expand the provision to cover “information of any kind whatever,” and by “prohibiting not only ‘coercion’ but also ‘physical or mental torture.
http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/crs/rl32567.pdf
 
  • #64
Ivan Seeking said:
So what's new?



So, following your logic, first of all, how many lives must be at stake in order to justify torture; 1, 10, 100...millions? Next, who says who does it, to whom, and when? Do we do this to anyone who might have information or do we have to be reasonably sure? How do we determine sufficient cause? If we turn out to be wrong and torture an innocent person, do we give him a free balloon? And why not let the police do this? If for example we have a bomber who has hidden a bomb, shouldn't he be tortured for an answer? And if we're going to allow this, why not just do it in the courts of law? If for example we can torture a serial killer into confessing, wouldn't the potential for lives saved be worth it? Or if this only applies to non-citizens, does it apply to all races and countries, or just people from certain countries or groups? Finally, how much torture is okay? Can we torture people to death, or to the point of permanent physical damage, or just until they scream to a certain volume? If we don't get results, when do we stop? Does this go on for days, or weeks, or years? And what do we do with the people who are now a danger to society as a result of all of this; say for example the torturers? Should we just kill them when we're done, or should we wait until they turn on the neighbor's kids?

Nah, we should just smile, hand them a cigarette and ask them, "So, why did you kill all those women, children and folks just going about their lives?"... and wait for logical answer. And if we don't hear one, just try them, aquit them, and let them go.

That's the way to peace in the world...

:rolleyes:

Quit whining and give us some solutions, man! People are killing innocent people just because they are living life! GET REAL. Watch some of the footage of these guys cutting off heads of unarmed civilians, non-combatants, people who want to help them! They (the combatants) don't value human life like you do. Get it through your freakin head!

I'm just amazed at how naive some you guys are here in "forum land". Grow up and look around.
 
  • #65
You know, if torture is ever used, it's not because someone in the pentagon or the CIA thinks it is really cool, but because, believe it or not, there are people who want to kill you and your loved ones, along with thousands of others, are hard at work figuring ways to do so, do not mind dying themselves, and, if not opposed with the utmost force, will bring the modern world to its knees in an orgy of blood and destruction.
If that's not a fascist statement, I don't know what is...

And this is coming from the same person who claims:

...snip.. to the very principles of personal freedom (and responsibility) that the US stands for.
personal freedom, but tortue is ok...
Many terrible plots, targeting both Europe and America (and Asia), have been prevented by using information obtained by intensive interrogation techniques performed on the rats in Guantanamo and elsewhere.

Your blind nationalism, and bigotry are what feeds the current US administrations authoritarian behavior... At least all is able to see a mirror between the Ruler and his followers...

I really sympathies with the Rest of the States having to put up with this Fascism, hidden inside of Nationalism... What was it that George Orwell said about Nationalism..
Ohh I remember:

orwel said:
Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception.
 
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  • #66
deckart said:
I'm just amazed at how naive some you guys are here in "forum land". Grow up and look around.

How old are you, 18? :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

It is not only naive but dangerous to think that anything is different now than before. The dangers are no more real now than when the Soviet had 20,000 nuclear warheads pointed at us, or when Hitler threatened to dominate world. Do you really think that 911 was worse than Pearl Harbor? Do you think that terrorist threats are more threatening than the Japanese subs that shelled the west coast in WWII.
 
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  • #67
How old are you, 18?

I think younger... Never heard such a load of Fascist drivel
 
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  • #68
Anyone insisting that torture as a means of gathering intelligence is in any way profitable is admitting that such techniques are employed. Since no-one is admitting them, they cannot be shown to be profitable. If they cannot be shown to be profitable, there is no justification for using them.

And of course I'm sure anyone defending the use of torture on the basis that it may save innocent lives will grant the enemy the same courtesy - that is, should any Iraqi militant group have tortured American soldiers in an effort to obtain intelligence about, say, planned bombing campaigns that also kill thousands of innocent civilians, the pro-torture contingent is happy about this.

Or is torture only good if it serves American interests? Those that defend the use of the torture of foreign nationals do so under the belief that all non-American life is less important than American life. Dehumanising the enemy may make rationalising coalition brutality a whole lot easier, but as an argument it is not worth responding to, so fundamentally foul is its premise.
 
  • #69
deckart said:
People are killing innocent people just because they are living life!
That's right. We are. I am sure you can find some of the images of the horrors that we're reaping in Iraq, by googling appropriate terms. A real solution? ... might be to leave Iraq.

We've had a number of offensives on "insurgent strongholds" such as the attack on Fallujah last November. The idea is to "break the insurgency." Some people seem to argue that this is a sound way to go.

Look at this:




I'd also suggest that another possible solution is to try something more in line like the handling of the IRA.
 
  • #70
Anttech said:
I think younger... Never heard such a load of Fascist drivel

I'm 35.

Fascism
a. A system of government marked by centralization of authority under a dictator, stringent socioeconomic controls, suppression of the opposition through terror and censorship, and typically a policy of belligerent nationalism and racism.
b. A political philosophy or movement based on or advocating such a system of government.
Oppressive, dictatorial control.

I'm not a fascist.
 

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