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:bolt::brikwall:
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Why won't you answer his question? |
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I can confirm that Jill's citations are the popular opinion among federal agents who do or did this stuff. This poster has personal statements from those who did real world work even on some famous cases. Have repeatedly said almost everything in Jill's citations. Where is classicman's research - also known as vaporware. Knowledge based only in "I feel it is true" research. Jill's citations introduce one concept that others never mentioned. Torture was once used not for information. Its purpose was criminal punishment. Numerous others who did this stuff - not one ever mentioned this criminal punishment aspect for torture. So how does a disciple of Wingnut News know more than professionals? classicman again *knows* which explains numerous supporting facts in his every soundbyte accusation. classicman would take a cheap shot rather than contribute facts? I am not the only one who has accused him of doing this. Professionals routinely state that torture only poisons the well. But those so extremists as to support Cheney still deny because Cheney, et al said so. Cheney is an professional? Well Cheney also thought he was a world class military strategist. When did Cheney become a god - to be blindly believed by wacko extremists? When does classicman post anything but empty accusations? classicman is accused of doing to Jill what he does routinely - soundbyte accusations - cheap shots this time at Jill. |
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The psychology part, it doesn't take an expert to tell me that it would be different when you are doing a training exercise where you KNOW the people in charge aren't going to let something happen to you, and being a prisoner where you really actually fear for your life. That is basic psychology 101. |
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I have a question for all of you who think what we did isn't torture, those pictures from Abu Ghraib, if they had been reversed, and it was OUR soldiers who were treated like that, how would you have felt? You would all have been screaming bloody murder that they were tortured, but since it was US who did it, you feel the need to make excuses. You really need to examine that. |
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UT, the scenario you described above, the accidental killing of innocent victims while striking at an enemy, is far different from torturing someone who is in custody. One is collateral damage that is an accident, the other is purposeful and intentional mistreatment of someone who is already in custody. |
Jill. That was brilliant. Really interesting.
This, right here, that we are describing is the ragged edge. We cannot as peoples dictate which threats will occur and which dangers we will face. We can only dictate our response. It is up to us, whether or not that response robs us of our humanity, or proves it. . |
Just as an aside though; it's wrong to say torture isn't effective...look how many witches we managed to root out in the middle-ages.
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In post #69, Undertoad provided a link to an editorial, written by the former speech writer to President Bush, that you quoted in the following post, that attempts to "decode" the memos that are the subject of this thread. The author goes on and on about what we all know now is false information about what interrogation techniques actually resulted in thwarting the planned attack in Los Angeles. It's been proven that that attack was uncovered nearly a year before waterboarding started being applied. So since that cite was nothing more than an obviously politically biased editorial that has been thoroughly debunked, I feel no compunction to accept it as countering any cites I provided. Then we have your post #82, with a link to an article alluding to a secret memo by President Obama's National Intelligence Director, wherein he allegedly says that "high value information . . . a deeper understanding of the al-Qaida network" [was obtained using the harsh interrogation methods]. That would seem to support your claim. However, we aren't made privy to the actual memo that allegedly went out. We have no way of determining context, intent, or even whether those quotes were pulled completely out of context, and don't mean what the author alleges they mean. And the clarification that was provided, was brushed aside as "hedging." You will note, that in post #128, Redux provides a link that also mentions the private memo and the same allegations of its content as your cite. However, it goes on to expose a serious flaw in that allegation. Quote:
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1.) John Kiriakou, as a former CIA officer who supposedly witnessed the interrogation, has a very personal vested interest in Covering His Ass. His testimony, therefore, should be weighed very lightly before we allow it any credence. 2.) It goes on to say that "It’s been suggested" that these interrogations led to the capture of another bad guy. Suggested by whom? Not to mention that a "suggestion" isn't remotely the same as a "proven connection." Ironically, your next cited post, post #198, completely contradicts the cite in your previous post, saying "Kiriakou said he did not witness Abu Zubaida's waterboarding but was part of the interrogation team that questioned him in a hospital. . . " So which version of his story should I believe? He either witnessed the waterboarding as alleged in your cite in post 192, or he didn't, as he later claims in your cite in post #198. I find Kiriakou to be an unreliable witness and feel comfortable dismissing any evidence provided by him until such time as he has to testify under oath. There aren't any more referenced cites between there and when I re-entered the discussion in post #234. Quote:
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I thought this was interesting. According to a recent poll, the more often Americans go to church, the more likely they are to support the torture of suspected terrorists.
Turn the other cheek. Ha! |
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Link I'm not sure of the validity of this, but it is rather damning. |
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Over and above that I can't see how anyone can approve torture for people who have been convicted of no crime. As for the poll, I never doubted that I was a: |
An interesting bit about the history of torture by the Brits in WW2 on NPR today.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...ryId=103728934 |
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