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Is Waterboarding, Torture? Has Pres. Bush Now Admitted to Approving Torture?
Bush: <a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9956644/">"We do not torture" terror suspects</a>
Bush defends interrogation practices: <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-11-07-bush-terror-suspects_x.htm">"We do not torture"</a> <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4415132.stm">US does not torture</a>, Bush insists <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/11/08/wbush08.xml">We do not torture detainees</a>, says Bush Bush: <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/07/AR2005110700772.html">"We do not torture"</a> Quote:
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Doesn't this seem a huge departure from longstanding US policy and principle? Isn't Bush's admission, grounds for impeachment, based on the precedent of a US general's court martial for the same thing happening, on his watch? |
This would be grounds for impeachment... if a liberal party grew some balls and stepped forward, insisting on an investigation leading to impeachment.
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Oh -- i forgot. Yes, he could have had a blow job. The centrist/right wing of the Democrats, Hillary & Co. included, went along with the lies, mostly out of gutlessness & stupidity. To impeach Bush would mean accepting some responsibility. It's not going to happen. |
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administration's DOJ was for the year 2000, before the current occupants took office. There has been no follow up to the DOJ Nov. 1, 2003 WAPO news story that the OPR had opened an investigation into the prosecutorial misconduct exposed in October, 2003, that occurred in the 1983 prosection of former CIA operative Edwin P. Wilson. I suspect that as long as the public can be distracted by tripe like "a runaway bride", the "jacko" trial and acquittal, and the Bush SSI crisis road show, sprinkled with the post Schiavo circus demands for judicial "accountability, no OPR reports need ever be made public again. Some of you voted for more of this, but you remind me that you are the true patriots, and I am the negative, subversive, un-American dissenter! [quote]http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/editpos...post&p=1768929 I am observing that there is very little interest here about this story of a Federal Justice Dept. and CIA conspiracy that knowingly carried out a fraud upon the court by submitting as evidence a false and damning affadavit against Ed Wilson that led to him serving 10 years in solitary confinement, and an additional 12 years in a "super max" federal prison. I am adding the following just for reference: (Good news??? The government is "investigating"?.....Hardly... there has been no follow up on this in 19 months, ABC news and the NY Times did not report on the WA PO report below, and the "Office of Professional Responsibility" at <a href="http://www.usdoj.gov/opr/reports.htm">http://www.usdoj.gov/opr/reports.htm</a> has not issued an annual report since 2001, coinciding with the current administration's tenure in office. So....two federal judges and as many as 15 other top government officials continue to hold high office with no accountability relating to their actions in this fraud!) Quote:
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I don't know enough to say who knew how much and when, although recent accounts (such as the new Frontline 'Bush's War') seem to indicate that prisoner abuses were the result of a deliberate and high-level redefinition of 'torture' carried out amid a pervasive government-wide feeling that 'the gloves should come off'.
On the question of waterboarding, it is absolutely and unmistakably a form of torture, period. Malcolm Nance has an informative piece over at Small Wars Journal on this subject: http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/200...torture-perio/ Nance should know, as he has conducted waterboardings himself. The common mantra of waterboarding as a 'simulation' is vastly misleading. It is not a simulated drowning but a controlled drowning. |
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Members of the Bush administration met and discussed the issue of interrogation techniques and gave CIA agents clear guidelines on what they thought would be legal and acceptable questioning techniques. There is no evidence that these people failed to act in good faith. In fact I think they showed a high level of responsibility in meeting and issuing guidelines on this subject. The legality of water boarding as a questioning technique used by the CIA against military combatants was not clearly defined as illegal at the time it was used by the CIA. In 2007 Bush signed an executive order banning torture during the interrogation of terror suspects. Certainly we can debate the complexities of the issue, however, there is no clear argument that Bush or members of his administration violated any law. some people even disagree if water boarding is torture depending on how the technique is administered. Quote:
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Those guys seem very sure that waterboarding is not torture, does not inflict pain etc. Well if that is the case, I'd like to see them experience it for themselves. If it's not torture, what are they afraid of?
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It's funny, you see people who haven't experienced it saying it isn't torture, because they 'don't think it inflicts pain', yet they aren't sure, so how can they say it doesn't inflict pain?
Now take a look at hiredgun's link to the SWJ and Malcolm Nance (who has been waterboarded, was the Master Instructor at SERE) saying it absolutely torture, in fact the same type of torture John McCain went through in Hanoi. Now who would you believe? The politician who 'doesn't think it causes pain' or the ex-SERE instructor who has been waterboarded and has watreboarded hundreds of people? I like this quote as well: Quote:
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Under the UN Convention against torture they state there has to be "severe" pain rather than "pain". This is not clear. I think the world would be better served if under international law and under our law if specific techniques were put in these laws rather than subjective definitions of what "pain" or "severe pain" is. Don't you guys agree?
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uh---i don't see how this is an ethically tenable position, ace, particularly since unless you have yourself been waterboarded, you are speculating--so have you been subjected to this yourself?
if not, then you're aestheticizing the pain of another (by making it an abstract entity that you can contemplate, like a thing a toaster or a towel) on the one hand, and then diminishing it by comparing what you imagine it to be against some arbitrary standard---it'd be like having someone shove a pin into your fingernail while telling you that it didn't *really* hurt. seems an ugly road to go down if the only real basis for your position is that you think the bush people acted in good faith when they decided to make the argument that this was not torture--which was linked to their claim that the geneva conventions were "quaint"...and it doesn't seem to me that you have any actual information to go on beyond this assertion of good faith--hell, even the frontline series "bush's war" provides you with enough information to bring this assertion into serious question. i'd suggest you at least watch it. because the argument is the usual argument: these standards apply when they affect american troops--but when the states is reacting, anything goes. nearly. this is such a horrific idea, such a ridiculous precedent to set--think about it. |
Roachboy,
All I am saying is the law needs to be specific. I don't want to be water boarded, I don't even think I would have the ability to do it to a living being - human or animal. However, being at war is an ugly business, a life and death business. Those executing a war deserve clear and specific guildlines. If what we are saying is that we disagree on whether or not water boarding a person willing to attach a bomb to his body and explode the bomb killing himself, innocent children, women, elderly, disabled, relief workers, etc., is putting that person in "severe" pain and suffering that is one thing. I can accept that as a legitimate criticism of the administration. However, to suggest that Bush deserves to be impeached because he attempted to add clarity to the issue of torture for the CIA is something else - and I find that hard to accept. |
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This is a better description than I could write myself, making the argument that it is time for the house to form an impeachment investigation committee: Quote:
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"Depends on what you're definition of 'torture' is" which seems to be the common excuse to torture people presently, sounds suspiciously like "Depends on what you're definition of 'is' is."
Why is it that there seems to be a great deal of group overlap between the people who can't fathom any justifications for complex, nuanced perspectives on race relations and the people who also feel that we need complex, nuanced justifications for torture? I know it's a threadjack, so please forgive. This shouldn't be the type of thing we should be having complex, nuanced discussions about. Intellectually honest people don't need the law to define torture for them. If folks think torture is useful they should just say that. Enough of this bullshit, "Well, we only stuck pins under the nail on the pinky finger, so that's not really torture" business. If we're going to torture people, we should admit it openly, and go from there. Then again, admitting the utility of torture would seem to take a bit of the wind out of the "We needed to invade Iraq because Saddam was evil" justification for the invasion of Iraq, which is something I'm not sure the current admin wants to do (despite the fact that the current admin has very little credibility left anyway). It's difficult to convincingly complain about your enemies' rape rooms when you essentially set up one of your own following your invasion. |
Why aren't more people disgusted that we have to argue over what is or isn't torture? This is insane.
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Common sense should be enough, but in all matters where some kind of law is invovled, common sense isn't exactly prominent.
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"Regular" "good Americans"...they elected a president who they consider a "regular guy", someone who they could sit down and drink a beer with, and then torture whoever he told them to torture..... Quote:
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After what's happened since 2001, I expect this kinda of sheepish crap from the mainstream media. What surprises me are the reactions here on TFP and on other forums.
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I'm not disgusted at having a thorough and complete definition. I'm pretty disgusted at the thought of any definition that would EXCLUDE waterboarding. |
I can virtually guarantee you that they have no idea who Thompson is.
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http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q...=Google+Search The contrast makes you wonder about the rot and mediocrity inside the military, and in politics, and in corporate board rooms. Gen. Petraeus's open partisanship and "yes man" attitude come to mind. Last month, the admiral who called Petraeus Quote:
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http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/proj..._hero.html#RON |
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http://www.google.com/search?q=my+la...&start=10&sa=N |
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How is this: Questioning Guidelines for CIA: All terror suspects should be in air-conditioned or heated room at a temp of 70 degrees. They should be offered a comfortable chair or couch. If they have lower back issues and special seating is required, make sure it is available. After 2.5 hours of questioning they get a 15 minute break. Please supply coffee and donuts. Check for peanut allergies before offering donuts! After 4 hours of questioning they get 1/2 hour for lunch. Play soft music, offer a 3 course meal that excludes pork. Do not shout or raise your voice to the point were it may cause emotional pain or torment. Etc. Etc. :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: |
Offering reasons for cooperation other than the ending of induced physical and mental torment? Showing these individuals that we really aren't evil sadistic psychopaths hellbent on the destruction of their people, religion, and way of life?
What the hell, it works on Star Trek! |
Looking back through this thread I am having some trouble wrapping my head around how the question of what waterboarding fundamentally is is somehow escaping a decisive answer.
Forget the details. Waterboarding is the infliction of pain and terror for the purpose of extracting information. What possible definition of torture could exclude that activity? The only way this is possible is if the person answering the question is committed to the idea that 'torture' is by definition something done to us, whereas we by definition do not torture, and for this reason we must tweak the definition of torture in a way that emphasizes for all to see that what we do is not as bad as what they do and therefore cannot be classified as torture. If you want to claim that waterboarding is justified, go ahead. I am more than willing to engage you in conversation about whether we can execute the form of torture known as waterboarding and still retain the moral high ground. But the therapeutic attempt to redefine the terms of debate in a way that leaves intact your increasingly dissonant framework of self-righteousness.... this seems to me kind of pathetic. |
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We can maintain the moral high ground if we like, as unlike our opponents who behead people and put it on the internet, or cut off body parts, we do no permanent harm with it. They still have all their pieces in working order when its done, nor are they in a body bag. We are fighting an unconventional UN-uniformed enemy who views civilians as targets. If we want to play geneva convention games, they should be shot as spies. |
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Tonight, when you're done working, ask a trustworthy friend to come over. Give him a question to ask you that you're not comfortable answering (did you ever have sex with a man?). Put on a bathing suit, and lay in your bathtub with your head near the drain and your feet up. Put a blindfold on. Wrap your face in cellophane with just enough openings to breathe. Have your friend bind your feet and tie your hands to the spigots, to where you're incapable of escaping. Have your friend, without warning, slowly dump a few gallons of water over your face, trying to take as long as a minute or so. Have him refill the water container at a sink, and repeat. Have him repeat until you say yes, regardless of whether you've had sex with a man or not. After you've regained your breath, think about all of the innocent people that have been released from Gitmo who were waterboarded. Welcome to being a liberal. Quote:
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And as it relates to the Bush administration, why didn't the CIA have clear guidelines prior to Bush taking office? Did other President's know what was going on and ignored it? Are you assuming questionable questioning techniques only started under the Bush Admin? Seems to me Bush deserves some credit for attempting to add clarity to an issue while not pretending it was not happening. For that Host calls for his impeachment??? That seems pathetic in my book. |
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Permanent harm doesn't have to be noticeable physical damage Ustwo, my shoulder has been separated 9 times, does that count as permanent injury? By you it doesn't because I still have all my pieces. |
People have died from waterboarding. There is no more permanent harm than that.
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These are human beings. Human beings respond to kindness one way, and cruelty another way. Let me put it like this: the people who did 9/11 didn't do it because they believe we're so kind to them. A beaten dog will eventually bite. Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger. Anger leads to hate, and Hate leads to suffering. No wonder Darth Cheney is so gung-ho for torture. |
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:lol:
" The detainees were also forced to listen to rap artist Eminem's "Slim Shady" album. The music was so foreign to them it made them frantic, sources said." Hahaha now thats torture. And I still don't care. |
Don't care about one side doing it, but up in arms if the other side does it, what is it you call that again? Anybody? Anybody?
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“What's in there?” “Only what you take with you." We must face the question of torture in the face of an enemy that is ruthless. Human weakness is a reality, Bush has not hidden from the issue. |
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PRETTY PLEASE WITH SUGAR ON TOP, MR. TERRORIST, FOLLOW THE CIA RULE BOOK. Hows that? |
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The US has killed more Iraqi civilians than any other force, by the way A report in 2005 showed US forces the largest killer of civilians--the cause of 37.3% of Iraqi civilian casualties, up till then. I can't find any studies of the question since then, but I trust the numbers are roughly unchanged Also, let's not forget there WAS no so-called "Al Qaida In Iraq" before we invaded. Abu Musab al-Zarqawi didn't align himself with Al Qaida until 2004, in response to the invasion. And even after that, their suicide attacks have largely targeted ISF, US, UN and Coalition forces, not civilians. (I'm not saying they haven't killed civilians too--just that they probably view that as collateral damage, not the primary target.) So.... Who the hell are you talking about? Or are you just barfing out talking points? I KNOW you're not trying to tie this thing to 9/11, right? Right? |
Not a lot vexes me more than writing an elaborate post then having it ripped away by 'invalid thread specified'.
In short, Ustwo, I have always held your opinion in decently high regard, though I have regularly and staunchly disagreed with you. Your two wrongs equal a right and mild torture is okay comments really cement my assumption that your logic engine and moral compass are in dire need of repair. I spent a lot of the lost post apologizing for potentially breaking the rules there, but I'm skipping it the second time around. The school of thought that being from a different culture excludes you from equality of person bugs me. Are we to assume that everybody that was tortured beheaded somebody and put it on the internet, or is it possible that they are good people fighting for what they think is right. Maybe they have children they love. Maybe they care about their community. Maybe they are people. |
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I'm sorry, but I thought we were fighting a war here, this isn't a 'nice' thing, and I do not see waterboarding as a big deal as compared to the consequences of prolonged terror attacks. I think under the controlled and limited uses we use it under its perfectly acceptable. So please, you can cry me a river about it, but I lose no sleep over someone treated as such. They are still able to walk around and talk about it after, unlike the 1000's of civilians they have blown up purposefully. Quote:
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Until you've been waterboarded, saying it's not torture is truly and completely meaningless in every sense of the word.
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WHAT enemy are you talking about exactly? |
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There's a thread on the Straight Dope message board that is VERY enlightening on the subject. A participant there, one Scylla, is an intelligent, educated, and vocal conservative--basically that board's Ustwo. He'd been arguing for the use of advanced interrogation techniques earlier in other threads. Just to see what all the hoopla is about, and to settle for himself the question of whether it's torture, he waterboarded himself.
He physically did it himself--controlling the flow of water, his physical position. His plan had been to try it that way, then have his wife help with a second attempt. He says: Quote:
http://boards.straightdope.com/sdmb/...d.php?t=448717 |
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I don't think that waterboarding is indirectly proportional to the prolonging of terrorist attacks. Can you tell me how you derived this notion? Also, please enlighten on these 'controlled and limited uses'. I didn't know we were privy to the information regarding how much it has been used, and I'm not sure where I can see the regulation covering its implementation. Unless that regulation says something like: "Waterboarding is a term developed by the United States government and intended to be used non-interchangeably with normal word 'waterboarding' which means torture. Furthermore, when used by the federal government, from now on, the term shall be used to mean the following: Prisoners are asked to answer a string of questions. For each right answer, we notate and move on to the next question. For each wrong answer, we notate and move on to the next question. Furthermore, prisoners will still be required to provide there full name, service number, and identify their host nation as guided by the Geneva Conventions and Law of Armed Conflict." That is about the only acceptable definition I can come up with. |
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http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...hew/logic.html |
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If disrespecting a book such as putting the Koran in a toilet is considered torture to some, why can listening to rap not be considered torture to others? Or is it again another case of, "I'm fine with it being a particular way that is agreeable to me, but when it's not, other people have to change." |
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the comparison between putting a koran in a toilet and listening to rap if you don't like it---as if these were of the same order---answers the question (falsely) in advance and blurs out everything of importance. deliberate violation of a norm held by (many) muslims who see the koran as in itself the word of god--but this not in the way an xtian would, but more literally so is problematic in that it is about degradation and frankly about some foul ethnocentric horseshit that you woulda thought went away abotu the time of the crusades, when legions of xtian lunkheads would do that sort of thing to "celebrate" the triumph of jesus and all that over the "heathens"
it is not AT ALL of the same order as making someone listen to a kind of music that they do not like. and even the last statement can mean more than one thing: making someone "listen" to most anything at extreme volume for 48 hours, say, is also not making them listen to a kind of music they do not like. it's about sleep deprivation, which can be argued is a form of psychological torture. what is the interest in deliberately trivializing the matter? where is this coming from? |
Let us see who used waterboarding in the past:
Algeria The technique was also used during the Algerian War (1954-1962). The French journalist Henri Alleg, who was subjected to waterboarding by French paratroopers in Algeria in 1957, is one of only a few people to have described in writing the first-hand experience of being waterboarded. His book The Question, published in 1958 with a preface by Jean-Paul Sartre (and subsequently banned in France until the end of the Algerian War in 1962) discusses the experience of being strapped to a plank, having his head wrapped in cloth and positioned beneath a running tap: The rag was soaked rapidly. Water flowed everywhere: in my mouth, in my nose, all over my face. But for a while I could still breathe in some small gulps of air. I tried, by contracting my throat, to take in as little water as possible and to resist suffocation by keeping air in my lungs for as long as I could. But I couldn't hold on for more than a few moments. I had the impression of drowning, and a terrible agony, that of death itself, took possession of me. In spite of myself, all the muscles of my body struggled uselessly to save me from suffocation. In spite of myself, the fingers of both my hands shook uncontrollably. "That's it! He's going to talk," said a voice. The water stopped running and they took away the rag. I was able to breathe. In the gloom, I saw the lieutenants and the captain, who, with a cigarette between his lips, was hitting my stomach with his fist to make me throw out the water I had swallowed. Alleg stated that he had not broken under his ordeal of being waterboarded. Alleg has stated that the incidence of "accidental" death of prisoners being subjected to waterboarding in Algeria was "very frequent." Vietnam Waterboarding was designated as illegal by U.S. generals in the Vietnam War. On January 21, 1968, The Washington Post published a controversial photograph of two U.S soldiers and one South Vietnamese soldier participating in the waterboarding of a North Vietnamese POW near Da Nang. The article described the practice as "fairly common." The photograph led to the soldier being court-martialled by a U.S. military court within one month of its publication, and he was discharged from the army. Another waterboarding photograph of the same scene is also exhibited in the War Remnants Museum at Ho Chi Minh City. http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-...6100500898.jpg Chile Based on the testimonies from more than 35,000 victims, of the Pinochet regime, the Chilean Commission on Political Imprisonment and Torture concluded that to provoke a near death experience, by waterboarding, is torture. Khmer Rouge The Khmer Rouge at the Tuol Sleng prison in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, used waterboarding as a method of torture between 1975 and 1979. The practice was documented in a painting by former inmate Vann Nath, which is on display in the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...ard3-small.jpg U.S. Military survival training All special operations units in all branches of the U.S. military employ the use of waterboarding as part of survival school (SERE) training, to psychologically prepare soldiers for the eventuality of being captured by the enemy forces. Jane Mayer wrote for The New Yorker: According to the sere affiliate and two other sources familiar with the program, after September 11th several psychologists versed in sere techniques began advising interrogators at Guantánamo Bay and elsewhere. Some of these psychologists essentially “tried to reverse-engineer” the sere program, as the affiliate put it. “They took good knowledge and used it in a bad way,” another of the sources said. Interrogators and bsct members at Guantánamo adopted coercive techniques similar to those employed in the sere program.[43] and continues to report: many of the interrogation methods used in sere training seem to have been applied at Guantánamo. Seems the US though it was wrong in the past and surprise, surprise they were fighting a war at some of those times, like Vietnam and what's that, it was illegal then, so being in a war and war not being a 'nice' thing seems to be even more of a flimsy argument than they were before. |
let me put it in the same context that you're framing the Koran.
If a Fundamental Christian feels that Heavy Metal or Hip Hop is the work of the devil is that then not the same? |
same move, different words.
where is this desire to trivialize torture coming from? what does it get you? |
I'm not trying to trivialize it. I'm trying to understand where it means something and under what context and conversation.
The origins of the trivalization started elsewhere. I'm regurtitating that it is a form of torture to some muslims and is supported in that context because it's a religious document. |
well, personally, i am more of the school that desicrating the koran is just an ugly, stupid, barbaric thing to do in itself, and that the breaking down of someone's personality in order to extract information is a dubious undertaking. i think that the line it treads is problematic, veering necessarily close to psychological torture--and i'm glad that i am not in a position of trying to figure out what would be ok to do and what would not---but not as glad as i am that ustwo is not in a position to make that determination.
i don't think that treating an "enemy" as a human being is a big stretch. i just don't. waterboarding is not in any such grey area. waterboarding is torture--look at silent jay's post above, and remember what it used to be called--even the terminology "waterboarding" suggests something more benign than what it really is. |
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So long as you use the same words to describe it and only chose to modify it with qualifiers, I'll still state that it falls into the realm of ""I'm fine with it being a particular way that is agreeable to me, but when it's not, other people have to change." |
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Edit: just asked a friend who's a lot more Muslim than you are. You know what he said? "nah it's just disrespectful, not torture" |
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I particularly enjoyed post #1, especially considering he was someone who thought waterboarding was fine........until he tried it on himself, I wonder how many of the people who think it is fine on TFP would have the balls to try it, my guess is not a damn one, it might actually open their eyes to *shudder* something new, which seems scary to most of the people who feel it is ok.
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I always find it interesting to see who does and who does not vote on a given poll ...
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I've not chimed in on how I feel about torture, and at this point, I will state I'm fine with it. I'm fine with capital punishment. I'd love for public caning to be here in the US instead of just Singapore and Malaysia, maybe people would be better behaved. There are things that are done in this life that are not pleasant. There are things that I am not able to or willing to do myself. This is when other people who can do or will do those things come into play for me. This can be as low as cleaning my house to collecting garbage to finding out information about insurgents and terrorists. Having had an uncle who was tortured, drained of precious blood to give to ailing Japanese, and then beheaded during WWII, I'm all for it being used as the tool that it is. I'd like to minimize it as much as possible, and I'd like to target those that fit the profile. I'd like to believe that it is not used against innocents, but I am not naive to think that it has not happened in the past and will not happen in the future. I'd vote if I could, I find it is torture and a legal thing to do, not a choice I have up there. And the second one, I don't care if Bush knew or didn't know. |
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I have had it done to me, along with being put in a 4 foot by 4 foot wooden box for days at a time. Big deal, if it gets one of them who would stick a c-4 charge up my mothers ass to squeel like a prom date, then its bath time Osama. |
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I did post #30.
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I'll give it a shot tomorrow night, see how it is, I'll post my reaction to it as well, maybe even get a buddy to take some pics of the process.
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It was part of escape and evasion training, and training similar to sere. Try living in a box, it puts queen size bed in a whole new perspective. :) I dont recall wooden boxes in FMJ, but my DI made Ermey look like Mother Theresa. |
reconmike, how did they waterboard you? Maybe I'm doing it wrong, but I can't imagine being waterboarded for more than maybe 45 seconds at a time maybe 2 or 3 times in a row. I ended up puking.
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