Where will we stop... nobody knows!
10/4/2007 1:06:06 PM
10/4/2007 1:06:35 PM
10/4/2007 1:34:17 PM
Dana Perino is a lying douchebagBush should be made to answer questions like they do in the British House of Commons. No carefully prepared statements that do not answer anything. No lying press secretaries. Just raw, bare fisted democracy.
10/4/2007 1:48:12 PM
your girls have your panties in a wad....let the intelligence services do their jobs and quit trying to bring down the United States[Edited on October 4, 2007 at 2:01 PM. Reason : dfa]
10/4/2007 2:00:59 PM
Yea, because we all want America to be taken over by the terrorists right?More like we want America to be a powerful and moral nation. That way, when we despose dictators and everything of the sort we can claim to be just without people rolling their eyes and waiting until they can take us over.
10/4/2007 2:26:43 PM
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2007/10/war-criminal.html
10/4/2007 2:57:31 PM
^^^let humans denounce ugly/immoral/illegal behaviour and quit trying to justify those behaviours.
10/4/2007 4:14:35 PM
bushs homeland security advisor told wolf blitzer that they dont toture, i believe she put it as "significant interrogation techniques"lol
10/4/2007 8:25:31 PM
torturing in interrogations is a great way to get bad intel. But thats ok...thats another way for American soldiers to die needlessly, after all, isn't that what most Americans want?
10/4/2007 8:52:53 PM
10/5/2007 1:42:59 AM
10/5/2007 2:16:56 AM
Dana Perino? C'mon, what's not to love?/message_topic.aspx?topic=474532
10/5/2007 2:20:19 AM
Not bad. Tony Snow was way better though.
10/5/2007 4:43:51 AM
^ You mean "better" at doing the job? If so, yes, I agree.
10/5/2007 5:00:24 AM
http://economist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9833041http://economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9832909http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9867324http://www.economist.com/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=9909351Some excellent articles from The Economist, particularly the first two. They're long though, so I doubt many of you have the attention span to actually read them.
10/5/2007 8:33:11 AM
US OF FUCKIN A BRAH!!!!!!!!!!!
10/5/2007 8:38:16 AM
define torture. should we be shoving bamboo up people's fingernails? no.should we be creative and do whatever possible to obtain viable intel from bad guys? yes.
10/5/2007 11:39:24 AM
None of the presidential candidates has given the right answer about the nuclear weapon scenario. If I were president and I knew that an individual had information about a nuclear device that was set to go off soon somewhere in the United States, I would order that the relevant information be obtained from that individual by any means necessary--and any rational person should expect nothing less of this nation's leader. Any person who's not prepared to actually make such a call shouldn't be president. And God help us if he or she becomes president.
10/5/2007 11:48:07 AM
'the nuclear weapon scenario'...ZOMFG THERE'S A TICKING TIME BOMB AND ONLY ONE PERSON KNOWS WHERE IT IS AND WE KNOW WHO THAT ONE PERSON IS AND WE HAVE HIM IN CUSTODY AND ZOMFG WE'RE ALL GOING TO DIE....the odds of that happening are slim to fucking none. Good job latching onto a scenario that any rational person can see will never happen.That said, nobody gives a shit what you would order if you were president. You couldn't get elected chairman of the office party committee.[Edited on October 5, 2007 at 12:01 PM. Reason : ]
10/5/2007 11:59:20 AM
^ If you weren't so uninformed, A Tarzansanus, you would know that the scenario at issue has been posed to the presidential candidates of both parties during recent debates. You really should try to keep up with current events.[Edited on October 5, 2007 at 12:16 PM. Reason : .]
10/5/2007 12:16:17 PM
But what you don't realize is that allowing for scenario A does not make doing scenario B okay.If I ask you if you will eat a dead human being if you're on a deserted island and the only thing left to survive on is a dead human being, you might say yes. This does not mean that eating human beings is okay and that it should be done all the time.
10/5/2007 12:50:15 PM
pretty cool wall o text there.
10/5/2007 12:55:21 PM
^^^ What's your point? How does a presidential debate question increase the likelihood that a particular event will occur?The fact that questions have been asked in no way validates the 'nuclear weapon scenario' as a probable event. The 'nuclear weapon scenario' is nothing more than a cheap emotional ploy.
10/5/2007 12:55:39 PM
10/5/2007 1:05:23 PM
10/5/2007 10:29:48 PM
hey dumbass:tell me, what does owning guns have to do with torturing citizens and foreign nationals?
10/5/2007 10:39:33 PM
I think I just saw this on CSPAN. I think it's playing again at 1:10am.
10/5/2007 10:43:34 PM
^x5 Prove it.^x4 Some stupid Jack Bauer references were made by a couple of Republican candidates, as I recall. At any rate, a president in the scenario at issue should order that the relevant information be obtained by any means necessary--call it what you will. And as far as I'm concerned, a president who doesn't recognize that necessity is more dangerous than any terrorist.
10/7/2007 6:55:10 AM
Prove what? That the 'nuclear weapon scenario'--where only one person knows the location of a ticking time bomb--is an unlikely scenario?'Prove it' is a pretty cheap out on your part.I'm not going to spend time attempting to 'prove' a negative, especially to you. You're blind if you can't see that the 'nuclear weapon scenario' torture question is a cheap emotional ploy and not a likely scenario. It is no different than other 'An old man can't afford expensive life-saving medicine for his ailing wife. Is it OK for him to steal the medicine?' type questions. The scenario exists only to provoke discussion by presenting a moral dilemma.[Edited on October 7, 2007 at 9:49 AM. Reason : ]
10/7/2007 9:49:29 AM
I always liked the old mechanism by which such techniques were utilized, in the rare possibility they were needed. Some FBI or CIA guy tortured the relevant suspect, gets the information and saves the day; then the information is thrown out of court and the relevant agent is imprisoned for 5 years after being convicted of assault. It really is not that severe a punishment to suffer for your country and it makes sure torture is only used when it is really necessary. [Edited on October 7, 2007 at 10:01 AM. Reason : .,.]
10/7/2007 9:59:43 AM
^^ You should alert the media about that--they're the ones asking that question to every presidential candidate.
10/9/2007 12:44:40 AM
Good job to hooksaw for failing, once again, to address a point. Also, nice deflection--it's the media's question. And we all know that the media only asks pertinent and valid questions during presidential debates.
10/9/2007 7:52:07 AM
^ *Sigh*1. Certain members of the media must believe the question at issue is relevant because they have posed it to all presidential candidates. 2. All the candidates must believe the question is relevant because none has said, "I do not accept your premise" or some such.
10/9/2007 11:14:02 AM
*sigh*1. Just because certain members of the media believe the question at issue is relevant, doesn't mean that the question is, in fact, relevant.2. Just because all the candidates believe the question is relevant doesn't mean that the question is, in fact, relevant.On the other hand, I do believe that you are dumb enough to believe that because a question is asked at a debate, the 'nuclear weapon scenario' must be a probable event and a relevant topic of discussion.Once again, you refuse to defend something on your own, instead appealing to numbers.
10/9/2007 12:25:27 PM
10/9/2007 2:51:09 PM
Nah, but seriously all this "no torture" talk seems a little disingenuous.We still send our young men and women off to war to have their limbs blown off, but we don't torture!We still accept the killing of innocent civilians as an inevitability of war, but we don't torture!Who are we fooling?We're still the same barbaric bastards we have been since the beginning of humanity.So, I say, torture on, America. Torture on!
10/9/2007 5:46:01 PM
your posting is torture
10/9/2007 5:46:48 PM
AHAHAI'm just sayin...
10/9/2007 5:51:35 PM
We will always torture suspects of consequence, regardless of what any administration says about what they are or are not doing.
10/9/2007 10:24:59 PM
^x6 You can't be that stupid. 1. As a journalist, I wouldn't have asked the question at issue; and as a candidate I wouldn't have answered a hypothetical--particularly of this sort. Had I given an answer to this question as a candidate, there would have been only one right answer, which is the one I gave: ". . .I would order that the relevant information be obtained from that individual by any means necessary--and any rational person should expect nothing less of this nation's leader" hooksaw.2. Whether you think the question at issue matters or not is truly irrelevant. The fact that it has been asked of and answered by all the presidential candidates makes it relevant as (a) a position taken on a political issue in a presidential debate, which could shape policy for years to come; (b) as an important part of a current event; and (c) for what the candidates' answers have revealed to us about them, which leads me to my next point.3. Does a given presidential candidate have the balls (or ovaries, I suppose) to not answer a particular question--like Clinton should have done with the Lewinsky sex question? And this leads to my final and most important point in this exchange. 4. "Any person who's not prepared to actually make such a call [enhanced interrogation techniques, torture--call it what you will] shouldn't be president. And God help us if he or she becomes president" hooksaw.If you can't understand this, I'm not going to invest anymore time in explaining it to you. Now piss off.[Edited on October 10, 2007 at 12:01 AM. Reason : .]
10/10/2007 12:00:30 AM
you know, you can really be such a pretentious and self-important twat.
10/10/2007 2:07:09 AM
^^ But you haven't explained anything (as usual). You just keep falling back on 'everyone else is talking about it, therefore it must be important and relevant.' Of course, we all know that politicians only discuss events and scenarios that are likely and probabable, and are not given to fluff or rhetoric [/sarcasm]--which takes us back to the original topic of our exchange: Whether or not the 'nuclear weapon scenario' is even likely enough to make it worth talking about.The answer is still no. The ticking time bomb--zomg only one guy knows where it is--question is designed to provoke a moral dilemma and not to be a realistic situation. Secondly, even if the scenario was probable, it's such a singular event that it is worthless in a general discussion about whether or not torture is acceptable. Unless, of course, you're trying to say that torture should be allowed because you can imagine specific scenarios (however unlikely) that you believe warrant torture.[Edited on October 10, 2007 at 7:49 AM. Reason : ]
10/10/2007 7:46:38 AM
TIMEOUT!You guys are arguing semantics, ironically resembling the title of this thread. Lets get to the root the debate, which I think you guys actually agree upon:1) Is the nuclear bomb scenario a relevant topic?Yes, because (as hooksaw stated) it's been introduced by journalists, politicians, and debate moderators. It will continue to be an issue until someone steps up and explicitly states why it is irrelevant, as A Tanzarian has. You can't ignore a stupid topic bouncing around political forums and the media, but you can put in its place. No one, or rather not enough people have done this.2) Is the nuclear bomb scenario relevant to to defense of torture?Absolutely not. Baring the existence of a "clear and present danger," like a nuclear threat, this scenario does not apply to torture practices being implemented today. Additionally, it's not very efficient to go about torturing prisoners without determining what specific piece(s) of information are needed. Allowing the torturing of a prisoner on the offchance that he/she knows something useful shows a tremendous amount of moral neglience.Finally... in response to the article posted by A Tanzarian:
10/10/2007 12:49:59 PM
amen
10/10/2007 2:41:23 PM
the rules aren't the same and the stakes have been raised by proliferation of nuclear weapons...if we have to use torture techniques to reduce our chances of being hit by a nuclear suitcase then I support whatever means necessary...
10/10/2007 4:38:07 PM
so... either you didn't read it, or you can't comprehend it.which is it?
10/10/2007 4:54:30 PM
just stating my opinion on it
10/11/2007 10:02:43 AM
So you're saying it's a little of both, then.
10/11/2007 10:08:33 AM
im sorry spooky dookie but why is my statement at all not relevant to the issues discussed in this thread....you obviously think the nuclear scenario is something that shouldn't be brought into the discussion, but I do. do you honestly think that it can't happen or do you think it won't happen. It's about COULD it happen. the answer is yes, it could happen, and during that situation I would encourage the use of torture to produce the answers we would need to save lives.
10/11/2007 10:26:55 AM