View Full Version : Torture Photos
excon
May 15, 2009, 02:04 PM
Hello Righty's:
Help me out with something. We needed to torture in order to keep us safe... But, releasing the photos of us doing it will make us unsafe??
How's that?
excon
ETWolverine
May 15, 2009, 02:17 PM
We need CIA operatives to keep us safe... But releasing pictures of CIA operatives makes us unsafe??
How's that?
Same difference.
Elliot
excon
May 15, 2009, 03:20 PM
We need CIA operatives to keep us safe... But releasing pictures of CIA operatives makes us unsafe???
How's that?
Same difference.
ElliotHello again, El:
So, releasing the name of Valorie Plame made us unsafe. I got it.
excon
galveston
May 15, 2009, 04:09 PM
Obama wants to have his cake and eat it too.
He says he doesn't want the photos released.
He could just issue an executive order to that end.
So:
If the court releases them, he can tell the conservatives that he was opposed to it all the time, so it's not his fault.
To the radical left, he can then say that they got what they wanted, he didn't stop the photos from being released.
I think the argument against releasing the photos is to NOT give our enemies any weapons to use against us if we don't have to.
Propaganda, you know.
inthebox
May 15, 2009, 08:18 PM
EX
You should know that a war is not only military but political. No war can be won without the will of the people - that is what makes what Jane Fonda did in Vietnam reprehensible. What purpose would publishing pictures of torture have? It would only serve as anti-war propaganda. If the Obama administration doesn't want to continue fighting this war, then Obama should be transparent and just withdraw all troops... yesterday. If he wants to win this war, these photos would only stir up the enemy and undercut the men and women fighting this war for us.
G&P
excon
May 17, 2009, 09:00 AM
Hello again,
Here's the problem I have with your arguments... At least you're being consistent, though. You blame the messenger, not the message..
Apparently, you have no problem with what we did. You only object to people finding out about it.
I never understood that. I still don't. In fact, if you want to measure wrongs, in my view, DOING something wrong, is 100 times WORSE than telling people about it...
That's just me, of course. Yes, you and me ain't made up of the same stuff.
excon
ETWolverine
May 17, 2009, 09:06 AM
Hello again, El:
So, releasing the name of Valorie Plame made us unsafe. I got it.
excon
I said CIA agents, not former analyst hack political appointees.
ETWolverine
May 17, 2009, 09:25 AM
Apparently, you have no problem with what we did. You only object to people finding out about it.
And your problem with that is..
In fact, if you want to measure wrongs, in my view, DOING something wrong, is 100 times WORSE than telling people about it...
Committing national suicide is the greatest wrong of all. But that's what you are advocating.
That's just me, of course. Yes, you and me ain't made up of the same stuff.
Thank G-d for small favors. You're right... some of us ain't suicidal. Some of us understand that winning a war and making sure that our fellow citizens don't die because of your misplaced ideals is more important than those misplaced ideals.
It continues to amaze me that your ideals only go so far as the military and the CIA are concerned. Only they, in your understanding, have the responsibility to follow the law as you interpret it. YOU have no such requirement. You can break any laws that you desire, as long as you can justify that law as a violation of your personal rights, ei: drug laws.
But G-d forbid that any government official, no matter what he is trying to accomplish, no matter what war he is fighting, no matter who he is protecting, should do anything that you interpret as a violation of someone's rights... no matter what kind of terrorist he might be, and what actual laws apply to him.
Forget that your interpretation of the law itself is flawed and has no historical basis whatsoever. Forget the fact that YOU are the only one saying that the terrorists in question aren't really terrorists or that they didn't know what everyone else in the world acknowledges they knew. Forget that the actions in question didn't actually violate any laws. Forget that these actions were previously APPROVED by the very people who are using the revelation of these actions to the public for political gain. NONE of this means anything to you. None of this is important to the issue.
You have made up your mind. The CONTEXT and the facts mean nothing to you.
That is a moral failing on your part, not ours. The inability to re-examine your positions or your actions in light of context is a failure of your morals and ethics, not ours. People with STRONG ethics and morals can adjust their actions to match the situation within a moral framework. Those who ape morals and ethics stick to a position by rote rather than actually examining the position as the context changes. You lack this ability.
Elliot
excon
May 17, 2009, 09:48 AM
You can break any laws that you desire, as long as you can justify that law as a violation of your personal rights, ei: drug laws.
You have made up your mind. The CONTEXT and the facts mean nothing to you.
That is a moral failing on your part, not ours. The inability to re-examine your positions or your actions in light of context is a failure of your morals and ethics, not ours.Hello again, El:
I don't know. You say, because I smoke pot, I am, therefore banned from questioning law breakers?? And, because I do question them, it's moral failing on MY part??
Dude! That's silly. You're out to lunch.
Besides, that's the best argument you got for torture - to attack ME?? I'm just the messenger anyway.
excon
PS> Are you telling us, that you've never been cited for breaking the law?? That YOU'RE Mr. Goody Two Shoes, and that's why YOUR arguments are the only ones to be considered here?? I'll bet that's what you ARE saying. That's also why nobody listens to you.
inthebox
May 17, 2009, 01:26 PM
EX
Let the "truth commisions" begin, and remember to include Nancy in it.
What is the purpose of publishing the photos?
I'll accept your premise that this is torture and this is illegal and should be prosecuted to its fullest - just answer the question.
In other crimes, say serial murder, and the serial killer is convicted - same question What is the purpose of publishing photos of the crime?
G&P
excon
May 17, 2009, 02:13 PM
What is the purpose of publishing the photos?Hello in:
Right now we've got people saying, that all we did was dunk 'em in the water for a few seconds... It ain't nothing...
If that's all we did, why are you so opposed to their release?
excon
speechlesstx
May 18, 2009, 06:44 AM
No matter how grandiose and noble the stated justification may be, wanting to release these photos is pure politics. The harm comes from the lack of context and the point is to tell one side of the story so all those leftist do-gooders can pat themselves on the back and inflate their sense of self-importance.
Is it any coincidence that Obama flopped on this after Pelosi got caught lying through her teeth about what she knew?
excon
May 18, 2009, 06:56 AM
No matter how grandiose and noble the stated justification may be, wanting to release these photos is pure politics. Hello Steve:
Of course, you SAY it's politics because you DON'T want them released...
Look, THIS is what America DID in YOUR name. I know, you'd rather wear your blinders. That's OK. YOU don't have to look at the pictures when they're released. But, there are some of us who believe in transparency.
And, I've asked this before, with NO satisfactory answer... Why would releasing these photo's put our military in MORE danger?? How, will finding out that American tortures, make an Al Quaida fighter fight harder??
It makes NO sense. Therefore, I believe you DON'T want them released strictly for political reasons.
excon
tomder55
May 18, 2009, 07:41 AM
Why don't you ask the President . This is from his statement on the issue.
"My belief is the publication of these photos would not add any additional benefits to our understanding of what was carried out in the past by a small number of individuals," .... "The most direct consequence would be to further inflame anti-American opinion and put our troops in greater danger."
Besides ;the photos in question have nothing to do with the issue of EIT . They are a rehash of Abu Ghraib's unauthorized treatment of prisoners .
speechlesstx
May 18, 2009, 07:44 AM
Hello Steve:
Of course, you SAY it's politics because you DON'T want them released...
Actually I'm not sure I've said one way or the other, I'm just asking what is the point? What is the end goal here? I know what your point is, but what is everyone else's goal in releasing these photos? I suspect it is exactly what I said, and Thomas Sowell makes that point (http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell042809.php3) better than I can:
Those who choose to live outside those laws, whether terrorists or pirates, can be— and have been— shot on sight. Squeamishness is neither law nor morality. And moral exhibitionism is beneath contempt, when it sacrifices the safety of those who live within the law for the sake of self-satisfied preening, whether in editorial offices or in the White House.
That's all this is, moral exhibitionism by a bunch of moral hypocrites.
Look, THIS is what America DID in YOUR name. I know, you'd rather wear your blinders. That's OK. YOU don't have to look at the pictures when they're released. But, there are some of us who believe in transparency.
I'm just not that "squeamish" as Sowell puts it. I believe America did in my name what America had to do given the circumstances to protect her citizens. As Pelosi' denial highlights the only thing that's changed are the circumstances, she along with many others now doing their "self-satisfied preening" were fine with it back it 2002 because of what had just happened and what was on the line. They, and our country o our behalf were acting on the "reasonable man" standard (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/05/14/AR2009051403603.html).
Now that we're safer because rough men did violence on their behalf they don't have the balls to admit their complicity, put themselves on the line and dare disappoint their rabid base so there is no other reason than political to release those photos - without benefit of the aforementioned context - and I find that contemptible.
And, I've asked this before, with NO satisfactory answer... Why would releasing these photo's put our military in MORE danger?? How, will finding out that American tortures, make an Al Quaida fighter fight harder??
It makes NO sense. Therefore, I believe you DON'T want them released strictly for political reasons.
Would any answer satisfy you? I have my doubts. Was Obama wrong in what he said? If so how?
"In fact, the most direct consequence of releasing them, I believe, would be to further inflame anti-American opinion and to put our troops in greater danger," Obama told reporters. "Moreover, I fear the publication of these photos may only have a chilling effect on future investigations of detainee abuse."
It really can be as simple as I just don't see what benefit there is in releasing the photos. I think we did what we had to do and as I've said before we could have just lined them up and shot them and nobody would have said a darn thing about it.
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 08:22 AM
I think that releasing the original memos was a HUGE mistake.
However, since that mistake wa made, I think that we should release ALL the memos in an unredacted format. Let the efficacy of the techniques be known. Let the public know what information was garnered through these techniques and how it was used to prevent other terrorist attacks.
Of course, that would simply mess up your entire point, excon... that perhaps the techniques a) aren't effective or trustworthy, b) didn't garner any new information because the guys it was used on didn't have any information, and c) that the information garnered via these techniques didn't do anything to stop any terrorist attacks.
And it would mess up your ancillary point as well... that whether the techniques are effective or not is not the point. That the use of the techniques for ANY reason is wrong.
You see, by releasing the memos in full, your point about the fact that we only THOUGHT these guys knew something becomes completely wrong. Your point about the efficacy of the techniques becomes wrong. And if the saving of thousands... perhaps millions... of lives can be proven, it eliminates the idea that "torture" (if that's what this was) is never justified. Because most Americans would tend to disagree with that point.
THAT is why the Dems are fighting so hard to keep that part of the information buried. They NEED that information to remain buried in order to justify their moral high ground. If the full info comes out, then it would blow that moral high grown out from under them, and they know it.
As for pictures... pictures are frozen in time. A picture of a guy's head being doused with water is a fixed image. There's no way to extrapolate duration of the event. If there was FILM of the so-called "torture" sessions, it would make sense to release them so that people couls see exactly what was done and come to a conclusion based on reality. But the Dems can't let that happen... it would again blow away their moral high ground.
As for allowing PICTURES to be released... why? What is the gain? It doesn't add anything to the interpretation of what happened. The only purpose of releasing such pictures is to inflame tempers and make the people in the pictures into targets for foreign powers. It is purely political.
And with Nancy Pelosi caught with her pants down (figuratively) the Dems are just hoping for the entire argument to go away. Obama has reversed himself on the release of the pictures and on military tribunals for the POWs because he has realized that the issue is turning around to bite him on the butt, politically. He wants the issue to go away. So does Pelosi. So do the rest of the Dems in Congress.
The hard left wants to crucify Obama for his reversal. Code Pink called for Obama to be tried as a war criminal over the weekend. The ACLU is talking about filing criminal charges against certain Obama officials who are blocking their attempts to make the photos public.
Some of Obama's political deals are falling apart as well. Obama was planning on using the Gitmo issue and the EIT issue as a way to pay off his more liberal Congressional supporters in exchange for them supporting him on health care nationalization. However, with this reversal of positions, Obama is finding that it will be difficult to keep his Dems in line on health care nationalization. They are backing away from the issue because it's a political hot potato issue and they need to distance themselves from it in order to get re-elected in 2010. He needs to find something to give them in exchange for their support, but the thing he was going to give them is turning out to be a politically untennable position for him.
The entire issue of these memos is turning out to be a political gamble that Obama lost, and his loss may be more than he bargained for.
Elliot
excon
May 18, 2009, 08:36 AM
Of course, that would simply mess up your entire point, excon... that perhaps the techniques a) aren't effective or trustworthy, b) didn't garner any new information because the guys it was used on didn't have any information, and c) that the information garnered via these techniques didn't do anything to stop any terrorist attacks.Hello again, El:
It MIGHT mess up my point, if that WAS my point. But, of course, it ISN'T my point. It never was my point and never will be. It's not surprising that you don't know where I stand.
Here's my point. Torture is illegal. Torture that works, is just as illegal.
As a matter of fact, your suggestion that torture is OK, BECAUSE it works, is utterly despicable. Clearly, if saving lives is the only criteria we use when determining whether we should torture or not, it's only a matter of time before you wrongwingers introduce legislation to allow torture for drug dealers, kidnappers and sex offenders. After all, wouldn't that save lives??
Nope. That ain't happening as long as I have a breath in me.
I wish you knew a little more about what this country stands for. I'm doing my best to teach you - but it ain't happening.
excon
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 08:58 AM
Hello again, El:
It MIGHT mess up my point, if that WAS my point. But, of course, it ISN'T my point. It never was my point and never will be. It's not surprising that you don't know where I stand.
Here's my point. Torture is illegal. Torture that works, is just as illegal.
Then why, on so many occaisions, did you argue that we didn't really know what KSM knew, we only THOUGHT it was what we knew. I can go back and show you your own statements if you'd like.
Furthermore, the whole point is that none of these techniques were torture. Not legally, not historically, and not even morally. SAYING that it's torture doesn't make it so.
I don't know if you have a little sister or brother, excon. But if you do, sis you ever go swimming with her or him and dunk her or him in the pool? According to your definition of torture (and you keep saying that the amount of time the person is dunked doesn't matter) you were engaging in torture of your sibling. I know that it sounds ridiculous... that's because it IS ridiculous. CONTEXT counts. The specifics of what is occurring counts. You are ignoring context and the specifics of the case in order to make an argument that doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
As a matter of fact, your suggestion that torture is OK, because it WORKS, is utterly despicable. Clearly, if saving lives is the only criteria we use when determining whether we should torture or not, it's only a matter of time before you wrongwingers introduce legislation to allow torture for drug dealers, kidnappers and sex offenders. After all, wouldn't that save lives??
AND AGAIN, you ignore context. You ignore that these POWs are not criminals but PRISONERS OF WAR and are not subject to the same rules as criminals. CONTEXT is everything, and again you put forward an argument that ignores context because it can't handle the scrutiny.
Nope. That ain't happening as long as I have a breath in me.
You don't have a say in the matter. You're not running the CIA, you're not a politician, and you don't get to set policy. You can state your opinions all you'd like. You can try to convince others all you'd like... though I suspect that you are failing miserably in that... but you don't set policy. The amount of breath you have in you is irrelevant. We have done it, nobody is going to go to jail for it, and Obama has now pretty much signed on to it.
I wish you knew a little more about what this country stands for. I'm doing my best to teach you - but it ain't happening.
Excon
Excon, I know EXACTLY what this country stands for. I don't doubt you willingness to give your life for this country. I have a similar willingness. But I have a willingness that you lack... a willingness to sacrifice my SOUL to protect it.
'Good people sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.' --- George Orwell
I'm willing to be one of the rough men. You clearly are not. That's not a criticism of you. Not everyone can or should be one of the rough men that Orwell spoke of. The fewer rough men we need, the better. But I am one of them (mentally and emotionally, not physically... at least not anymore), and you are not. That is why you refuse to look at context when making your arguments, whereas I do. Context would force you to change your position and make you into one of the rough men too, and you are not constitutionally capable of that. Again, not a criticism, just a statement of fact.
Elliot
excon
May 18, 2009, 09:30 AM
Then why, on so many occaisions, did you argue that we didn't really know what KSM knew, we only THOUGHT it was what we knew.
But I have a willingness that you lack... a willingness to sacrifice my SOUL to protect it.Hello again, El:
You misunderstand... again. The ticking time bomb scenerio fails because it is predicated on knowing things that one can't know. It's no more difficult than that.
Therefore, it doesn't matter what we've think in OUR brains about what he KNOWS in HIS brain, because it's all UNKNOWABLE. It's OBVIOUSLY unknowable too. It doesn't take a genius to figure that stuff out.
You know it's unknowable too.
Your second statement above is true too. If my country gave up its soul, there's nothing to protect any longer, and the terrorists have won.
excon
speechlesstx
May 18, 2009, 09:50 AM
Hello again, El:
You misunderstand... again. The ticking time bomb scenerio fails because it is predicated on knowing things that one can't know. It's no more difficult than that.
Therefore, it doesn't matter what we've think in OUR brains about what he KNOWS in HIS brain, because it's all UNKNOWABLE. It's OBVIOUSLY unknowable too. It doesn't take a genius to figure that stuff out.
You know it's unknowable too.
You keep saying that as if intel operates in a compete vacuum and are just randomly pulling people off the streets to waterboard them on the chance they might possibly know something... kind of like TSA pulls 70-year-old white women aside to frisk them before boarding a flight to see their grandchildren. Is that how they operate?
Your second statement above is true too. If my country gave up its soul, there's nothing to protect any longer, and the terrorists have won.
America hasn't given up her soul, just the mere fact that we're having this discussion demonstrates that. A country with no soul doesn't wrestle with such issues. Your standard demands perfection and that ain't happening.
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 09:51 AM
Excon,
We knew that KSM was one of the highest level planners in AQ. We knew who he met with. We knew how long he met with them. We knew what the people he had met with had done. Ergo, we knew that he had information that we needed. We didn't GUESS, we didn't THINK IT. We KNEW it for a fact. You just can't accept that.
And you miss the entire point of what I was saying with regard to sacrificing my soul. I'm willing to sacrifice mine so that you don't have to sacrifice yours.
Elliot
tomder55
May 18, 2009, 09:58 AM
Neti Pots (http://www.webmd.com/allergies/sinus-pain-pressure-9/neti-pots)
spitvenom
May 18, 2009, 09:59 AM
I just have one question Why are there Photos in the first place. I learned very early in my teenage years that Pictures = Evidence. So when I had a party at my house first rule NO PICTURES. Is this standard procedure to take pictures of prisoners? Please some one tell me why they took pictures just seems stupid.
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 10:01 AM
Here's a question, excon.
Of all the terrorists held at Gitmo... something like 650 people... why were only three subjected to enhanced interrogation techniques? If the CIA was so clueless as to what information was held by which detainees, why would they have picked only three detainees to "torture"? Why not torture all of them?
Could it be that the interrogators KNEW which guys had information they needed and what type of information it was? That perhaps they weren't as clueless about what the terrorists knew as you seem to be? Perhaps they weren't working in a vacuum and had corroborating information on which to base their interrogations.
Nahhhh, couldn't be. They only THOUGHT they knew.
Elliot
excon
May 18, 2009, 10:03 AM
Ergo, we knew that he had information that we needed. We didn't GUESS, we didn't THINK IT. We KNEW it for a fact. You just can't accept that.
And you miss the entire point of what I was saying with regard to sacrificing my soul. I'm willing to sacrifice mine so that you don't have to sacrifice yours. Hello again, El:
Keep going. You're making my point...
So, we waterboarded KSM, NOT because he knew of IMMENENT attacks. NOT because there was a ticking time bomb, but because he was a leader and we just generally wanted to know what he knew...
That's despicable. It's against the law. It's NOT what we said we were doing. You HAVE given up your soul.
Look, if you want to throw yourself on a grenade to save my life, cool. But, DO NOT TORTURE IN MY NAME!
excon
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 10:10 AM
I just have one question Why are there Photos in the first place. I learned very early in my teenage years that Pictures = Evidence. So when I had a party at my house first rule NO PICTURES. Is this standard procedure to take pictures of prisoners? Please some one tell me why they took pictures just seems stupid.
The CIA documents EVERYTHING they do so that they can provide that documentation to their oversite body... known as CONGRESS. You see, the CIA doesn't lie to Congress. They document everything that they provide to Congress, and they document when and how and to whom they provide that information to Congress so that nobody can accuse them of lying to Congress or revealing something they shouldn't have revealed.
Apparently Stretch Pelosi forgot that the CIA is one of the best organizations in the world at providing documentation of what it is they do, why they do it, and who they report that information to. That's why Pelosi could have the chutzpah to lie to the press and think she could get away with it. She simply forgot who she was dealing with when she tried to throw them under the bus by saying they never told her what they were doing.
But the point is that the CIA documents EVERYTHING they do. They need to be able to document who was there and under what circumstances they participated. That is why pictures exist. (It also provides training material for the next generation of agents, but that is another matter.)
But CONGRESS IS SUPPOSED TO KEEP THAT INFORMATION SECRET.
Elliot
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 10:15 AM
Hello again, El:
Keep going. You're making my point...
So, we waterboarded KSM, NOT because he knew of IMMENENT attacks. NOT because there was a ticking time bomb, but because he was a leader and we just generally wanted to know what he knew...
Where did you get that? What did I say that gave you that impression?
That's despicable. It's against the law.
No. It's not. And that's the point.
It's NOT what we said we were doing. You HAVE given up your soul.
It's not what we were doing. There was specific information that we were obtaining. It wasn't just a fishing expidition. If it was, they would have tortured EVERYONE. They didn't. They knew who they were interrogating, what it is they were looking for, and why they needed the information. That's why they ONLY DID IT TO THREE PEOPLE.
Look, if you want to throw yourself on a grenade to save my life, cool. But, DO NOT TORTURE IN MY NAME!
OK. I'll do it for myself and my family, and for all those Americans who's lives will be saved by it. Consider your name out of the issue. Now let the CIA get back to doing its job.
Elliot
spitvenom
May 18, 2009, 10:28 AM
If Pelosi lied she should be punished. But to me giving the order to torture should be a far heavier penalty then lying about knowing. Personally this seems like a pathetic attempt to take the spotlight off the real problem.
spitvenom
May 18, 2009, 10:33 AM
HMMMMMM...
Bush-era torture aimed to 'link al Qaeda, Iraq' (http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=94823§ionid=3510203)
speechlesstx
May 18, 2009, 10:41 AM
Neti Pots (http://www.webmd.com/allergies/sinus-pain-pressure-9/neti-pots)
I haven't used a Neti pot but until my Waterpik gave up the ghost I used it to waterboard my sinuses from time to time.
tomder55
May 18, 2009, 10:59 AM
If Lawrence Wilkerson knew that to be a fact then why did he wait until now to say something ? He has been blowing his pie hole about Cheney since at least 2005. He was part of the Powell ,Armitage cabal that opposed the Iraq war from the beginning . Now they are doing CYA because they played a key part in it.
As Liz Cheney said this weekend on ABC 'This Week' Wilkerson "has made a cottage industry of fantasies about the vice president" .
Indeed ;this is what he told CNN about his claim.
“I couldn't walk into a courtroom and prove this to anybody, but I'm pretty sure it's fairly accurate.”
Al Libi's original testimony regarding Iraq AQ links occurred months before Wilkerson says waterboarding was used to get this admission out of him.
Heck ;even the left leaning New Republic says he's a nut job.
The Latest Delusions of Lawrence Wilkerson - The Plank (http://blogs.tnr.com/tnr/blogs/the_plank/archive/2009/05/15/the-latest-delusions-of-lawrence-wilkerson.aspx)
speechlesstx
May 18, 2009, 11:06 AM
Pretty sure it's fairly accurate? If that's a good enough argument against the administration it should be a good enough argument for the interrogations, we were pretty sure KSM knew stuff.
ETWolverine
May 18, 2009, 11:11 AM
If Pelosi lied she should be punished. But to me giving the order to torture should be a far heavier penalty then lying about knowing. Personally this seems like a pathetic attempt to take the spotlight off of the real problem.
There is no real problem. That's the point. The "problem" was created by the Dems as an excuse to bash Bush and by extension the Republican Party. No laws have been broken, no rights have been violated, and there is no reason that any of this is in the media at all.
Furthermore, for one of the loudest protestors (Pelosi) to end up having not only known about it but to have also approved it, and then LYING about that fact... THAT's a chutzpah.
If she and her committee approved of the EIT, then there was no law being broken. Her committee is the determinant of what is and what is not allowed, and she approved it. Ergo, there was no law broken, because her approval IS THE LAW. For her to now say that she didn't know about it is nothing more than an attempt to politicize something that was never a political issue to begin with. And now everyone sees it for what it is.
inthebox
May 18, 2009, 02:43 PM
Hello in:
Right now we've got people saying, that all we did was dunk 'em in the water for a few seconds.... It ain't nothing...
If that's all we did, why are you so opposed to their release?
excon
Answering a question with a question ? :confused:
IF the CIA is prosecuted for torture and the fall guys are convicted, WHAT PURPOSE IS THERE TO PUBLISHING PHOTOS OF THEIR CRIMES?
EX,
Do you want to see pictures of the victim of a serial killer? What purpose is there?
Publishing the photos is a purely political maneuver by those on the left, just like Jane Fonda's Vietnam pictures - it is meant to sway public opinion against a war effort. Admit it you know this is true. :rolleyes:
G&P
excon
May 18, 2009, 02:53 PM
Do you want to see pictures of the victim of a serial killer? What purpose is there?Hello again, in:
The pictures aren't the point. Owning up to what WE DID is the point.
I didn't have anything to do with what a serial killer did. I DO have something to do with torture that is done in MY name.
It appears to be a distinction that's lost on your side.
excon
inthebox
May 18, 2009, 02:58 PM
WE DID? I did not torture anyine, did you?
Who said torture was ever done in YOUR NAME?
G&P
excon
May 18, 2009, 03:05 PM
Who said torture was ever done in YOUR NAME?Hello in:
I don't know how you dance around these things, and come up with this stuff. Is it simply to avoid responsibility?
This IS a government OF the people and BY the people... So, whatever my government does, it does in MY and YOUR name.
Maybe that's why you think torture is OK, because you didn't do it yourself... That's nuts.. Your hands are dirty too.
excon
inthebox
May 18, 2009, 03:14 PM
So, whatever my government does, it does in MY and YOUR name.
The government sends $400 million abroad to planned parenthood, the biggest purveyor of KILLING THE UNBORN.
I am for life, but what this administration does is on their hands not mine.
And according to your reasoning, then IF those who waterboarded are convicted of torture, then Obama, and Pelosi, and you , and I are equally responsible and should pay the price?
It is you who are dancing around the question of what is the purpose of publishing the photos is.
You know it is purely political, the left wing's anti- American agenda. You should own up to that.
G&P
Skell
May 18, 2009, 04:50 PM
So Elliot you've shifted from the argument that 'it isn't torture so its not illegal' to 'it is torture, but we had to do it to save lives'?
And because they are 'POW's' its OK..
So my questions is along the lines of what excon asks.. If you think its necessary to torture these really bad terrorists, why not torture pedophiles, drug dealers and murderers who know things that can save lives? Why stop at Muslim terrorists??
I'm guessing deep down you think that should happen?
galveston
May 18, 2009, 07:20 PM
US citizens and enemy combatants are not under the same rules.
No matter what you say.
Skell
May 18, 2009, 09:07 PM
It is illegal to torture POWs. It is illegal to torture US Citizens. If you allow one why not the other?