Did anyone see his press conference? He seemed pretty pissed.My favorite part:
9/15/2006 3:22:56 PM
i would love it if in the middle of a press conference he just stopped talking, waved his arms in a threatening manner, and said "RAAAAAAWR!!!!" and maybe knocked some stuff over
9/15/2006 3:26:34 PM
9/15/2006 3:44:37 PM
9/15/2006 3:47:31 PM
Well, "There will be no outrages upon human dignity" is a pretty subjective measure. He's looking for something a bit more objective.
9/15/2006 3:48:16 PM
I'm pretty sure by anyone's standard a naked dog pile of men would be considered a human outrage
9/15/2006 3:52:21 PM
^ Except for pledges.
9/15/2006 3:54:34 PM
^^good point
9/15/2006 3:55:04 PM
Yes, we all agree that naked a dog pile of men is an outrage. Is playing loud music? Is questioning someone for more than 4 hours?[Edited on September 15, 2006 at 3:57 PM. Reason : ]
9/15/2006 3:57:20 PM
rtsp://video.c-span.org/project/ter/ter091506_bush.rmyou can open it in real player. . .
9/15/2006 4:05:04 PM
so bush is the first prez to need this clarifyed right?
9/15/2006 4:10:47 PM
he's inept. simple and plain. inept. and the christians made him president. blind faith my friends
9/15/2006 4:14:37 PM
how come terrorist arent allowed to have evidence put forth even if its classified?ARE THESE GOING TO BE PUBLIC TRIALS?terry quoted colin powel, saying people dont believe his bullshit. so his response was, 'youre either on our side, or your with the terrorists'.[Edited on September 15, 2006 at 4:21 PM. Reason : 4]
9/15/2006 4:16:32 PM
9/15/2006 4:47:02 PM
9/15/2006 4:54:29 PM
^^it's common sense you dumbfuckhuman dignity is not a vague term, ESPECIALLY when you talk about the standard of human dignity america has[Edited on September 15, 2006 at 4:55 PM. Reason : jank][Edited on September 15, 2006 at 4:56 PM. Reason : jank]
9/15/2006 4:54:44 PM
common sense huh? then why dont you qualify it? is waterboarding an outrage on human dignity? how about playing red hot chili peppers? bamboo under the fingernails? sensory deprivation? come on mr common sense
9/15/2006 4:57:42 PM
yesnoyesyes
9/15/2006 5:00:21 PM
9/15/2006 5:00:38 PM
okhow about if we are at war and US soldiers get captureddo we use american common sense to decide what are outrages upon human dignity? or perhaps if hezbollah or al queda captured a US soldier, would they use their own "common sense" as far as how to treat american soldiers? you dont think its important to SPECIFY what that vague, broad, general, easily misinterpretable phrase should actually mean so our enemies wouldnt say "we are going to modify the geneva convention ourselves to make it worse on americans"? no i guess not...its more fun to make fun of bush...haha he is dumb lollers
9/15/2006 5:02:17 PM
Youre saying terrorist check the geneva convention before they torture us?
9/15/2006 5:03:51 PM
by terrorists you mean US republicans right
9/15/2006 5:04:33 PM
yea, them and al quada.
9/15/2006 5:05:33 PM
9/15/2006 5:05:58 PM
9/15/2006 5:09:05 PM
if you don't think waterboarding is an outrage upon human dignity, then you're a fuckin idiot
9/15/2006 5:10:10 PM
9/15/2006 5:10:23 PM
What are the precedents of the UN for interpreting the phrase? The US? Have any cases alleging specific interrogation techniques emerged with rulings on what practices are and aren't "outrages upon human dignity" as efined by the Geneva Convention?
9/15/2006 5:10:36 PM
Here's the text of the "Torture Memo"http://www.themoderntribune.com/full_text_us_torture_policy_memo_gonzalez_bush.htm
9/15/2006 5:10:47 PM
9/15/2006 5:15:54 PM
Seems pretty arbitrary to me. I'm down with objectively redefining the term.Now the billion dollar question: Who gets to do it?
9/15/2006 5:19:13 PM
whats the difference between trolling and several trolling?
9/15/2006 5:19:21 PM
^^and thats the conflicti think we would do a fair job of defining it, objectively, but im sure plenty of countries wouldnt want thateither way it needs clarification]
9/15/2006 5:21:31 PM
bush senior didnt need it. regan didnt need it.[Edited on September 15, 2006 at 5:26 PM. Reason : 34]
9/15/2006 5:26:45 PM
And fundamentally Bush was right to seek clarification on it.Why should the public be convinced that Bush's lawyers and the current Congress ought to get to redefine it? What alternatives exist? Why are those alternatives inferior ideas?
9/15/2006 5:27:04 PM
i dont know who should redefine itwhoever does, some people arent going to be happythis thread however is mainly retarded because most people dont think it even needs clarification
9/15/2006 5:28:28 PM
Maybe if they'd take the words their leaders use as literally as they take their ideologies, that wouldn't be a problem.
9/15/2006 5:29:25 PM
explain to me why bush waited 6 years into his presidency to even think of doing thisexplain to me why it's only become a huge hot-debated issue under his presidency
9/15/2006 5:41:38 PM
Yeah, let's have every country in the world redefine the Geneva Conventions, so that they can tell us where the boundaries lie when they're holding our soldiers as POWs.OR, howabout we have a grey area that everyone agrees not to enter?
9/15/2006 7:16:50 PM
Which part of the Geneva Convention was the enemy following when they hacked away at the necks of Nick Berg, Eugene Armstrong and Paul Johnson?"the present Convention shall apply to all cases of declared war or any other armed conflict which may arise between two or more of the High Contracting Parties."
9/15/2006 11:04:43 PM
9/15/2006 11:39:24 PM
9/15/2006 11:40:11 PM
There really ought to be an objective attempt to define terrorism and torture. Even if it's simply a transition from the vagueness of the Geneva Convention to less vagueness than the Geneva Convention, but not necessarily perfectly precise. Such compromises over official truth are made all the time. In an ultimately Mixed-Capitalist market of information exchange, we shouldn't fear the debate or the agendas behind them.Clearly the Bush administration is representing one agenda in requesting a definition--limits on what its agents can carry out without being sued--and the legislators are representing another: Party politicians trying to figure out which version of the truth will best elect them or re-elect them into the House and Senate.Viewed through that lense, I'd say the next few weeks of wrangling by administration lawyers and supporters, the usual Democratic talking heads, and a few rogue Republicans who distance themselves from the administration will be fairly predictable. A bitter angry debate over the matter, and ultimately the Bush administration will receive either the language it wants or the spirit of the language will reflect that intelligence agents won't be in trouble for following the orders of the War on Terrorism. Simple fact is that the legislators have the power on this matter, but they're more concerned with image than policy.They will also do every type of maneuvering available to avoid even the International Criminal Court as a solution to any War on Terrorism case. That'll work its way in either directly or indirectly through whatever action they take.I could be wrong though. That's just my impression of how these things work out.
9/16/2006 2:18:54 AM
From a practical standpoint a concrete interpretation of the law would certainly be nice. Politically, however, it's going to be an uphill battle because a concrete interpretation would aid Bush in fending off vague accusations of torture based on a non-specific definition of torture. Witness how the very people who accuse Bush of torture are now criticizing his attempts to seek clarification.
9/16/2006 8:38:31 AM
9/16/2006 10:27:21 AM
9/16/2006 12:19:51 PM
You avoided answering the question but:
9/16/2006 4:06:46 PM
to punish.
9/16/2006 4:18:14 PM
Yes, that is what punishment is, very good you can read a dictionary. Now answer the question as to what the purpose of punishment is. Why do we punish? What is the goal?
9/16/2006 4:20:56 PM
i think we do it to impose a penalty
9/16/2006 4:24:09 PM