I get it, someone should just call Justice Kennedy and ask him what the answer is going to be....danmand said:Oh, well, if the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit ............
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I get it, someone should just call Justice Kennedy and ask him what the answer is going to be....danmand said:Oh, well, if the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit ............
No, I am afraid you don't get it.onthebottom said:I get it, someone should just call Justice Kennedy and ask him what the answer is going to be....
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Actually he's not. The Geneva Conventions are pretty specific on what conditions have to apply for someone to be an enemy combatant. Things like they have to be in uniform or at least decorated with some sort of militia insignia, with a formal chain of command. The only exception is for people who take up arms to defend their own homes--but Khadr was a foreigner in Afghanistan.james t kirk said:he is an enemy combatant
I believe that you are off the mark on this one. It is likely closer to the truth that torture is as likely to elicit false information as it is to get accurate information.DonQuixote said:... My problem is post-conflict. Torture, defined in the
most limited meaning, doesn't accomplish anything.
It only results in false confessions, and near always
[90%] provides no actionable information. Torture
only elicits false information.
...
Team 'w' loves torture.onthebottom said:Is anyone favoring torture on this thread? Did I miss something?
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Yeah but those are mainly the Cons & GOPers on the board....fuji said:I think terb probably has many threads started by people who love torture, or at least love being tortured. Some of them even pay for it.
james t kirk said:Correct me if I am wrong, but after WW2, all German soldiers had to do 2 years in an allied POW camp (and if they were really unlucky, the Russians sent them off to starve to death.)
Consider it dine. The western front soldiers laid down their arms and walked home.james t kirk said:Correct me if I am wrong, but after WW2, all German soldiers had to do 2 years in an allied POW camp (and if they were really unlucky, the Russians sent them off to starve to death.)
I would hope the discussion about torture here (as you are probably hoping)DonQuixote said:I disagree.
Veteran interrogators have repeatedly stated torture
does not provide either reliable or operational information.
It creates many other problems. Interrogators that
engage in torture also suffer emotionally from inflicting
the violence on the victim.
It is well-documented you can crush a victim's
psyche with five days of continuous suffering.
What is most interesting is that the US has never
in our history consider torture a valid way of
obtaining information. This current debate
of the Bush administration's walk on 'the dark
side' as Cheney stated a week after 9/11 is
a sad commentary on how far we've fallen.
That is the imperial view. The view of decent people is that it is morally offensive.DonQuixote said:It isn't acceptable because it doesn't work.
DonQuixote said:If it would save lives it would likely be accepted.
Its not an imperial view, its a pragmatic view.
But you said that it was wrong because it does not work. That is very differentDonQuixote said:Torture is wrong.
I don't know what you mean by saying I have
no problem with Americans being tortured. My
prior post states torture doesn't work and may
increase the recruiting of opponents.
its more sad than pragmaticDonQuixote said:If it would save lives it would likely be accepted.
Its not an imperial view, its a pragmatic view.
That is hogwash. If you dislike someone, killing him works. Does not makeDonQuixote said:You are making a distinction without any difference.
Its my opinion that we justify conduct or criminalize conduct
based on its broad acceptance and outcome.
An example is divorce. Not that long ago it was commonly
accepted that divorce was morally wrong and the moving
party in the divorce case had to show there were grounds
for the divorce. Now that it has become common place
with no fault divorces there no longer is an issue of morality,
or better, immorality connected with it.
I can probably give more examples but morality does seem
to follow commonly accepted beliefs and values. if something
works then we rationalize and justify the conduct.
DonQuixote said:I can probably give more examples but morality does seem
to follow commonly accepted beliefs and values. if something
works then we rationalize and justify the conduct.






