see my previous post...i was calling out his strawman
6/13/2008 4:13:39 PM
do you even know what a strawman is?
6/13/2008 4:15:22 PM
6/13/2008 4:15:43 PM
6/13/2008 4:16:13 PM
We've noticed. Since that's all you ever do.
6/13/2008 4:17:23 PM
nice job of excusing your strawman by claiming it wasnt a strawman when you used it against another person (even though i didnt mention anything about the first time you used it)maybe laying off the self quotes would help?
6/13/2008 4:18:33 PM
I find when people don't read things the first time, repetition helps.Kind of like boldfacing.
6/13/2008 4:20:03 PM
6/13/2008 4:20:05 PM
Indeed.By that logic, we shouldn't even be fighting Al Qaeda. We should be taking more cues from them...
6/13/2008 4:21:35 PM
6/13/2008 4:21:42 PM
I find it fairly nonsensical that someone could legitimately believe that there may be some innocent people in Gitmo and still argue we should treat them like sub-human animals. Either you have to be convinced - quite wrongly - that they're somehow all guilty, or you're pretty much just an asshole. That's really what it comes down to.
6/13/2008 4:23:25 PM
Haha, you can't "call out a strawman" by giving an example you don't believe in. Besides, you don't have a stawman if you are using an if -> then statement. "I'm sure [you believe] none of them are guilty" - strawman"IF you believe none of them are guilty THEN ...." - Not a strawman
6/13/2008 4:23:46 PM
6/13/2008 4:24:07 PM
Yeah that might be - at that point you have to argue that the people at Gitmo either are or should be treated with basic human rights.
6/13/2008 4:26:22 PM
6/13/2008 4:27:04 PM
6/13/2008 4:27:48 PM
you're giving me opinions that I don't hold and using those lies to make followup argumentsyour entire premise is flawed, and you continue to build off of it]
6/13/2008 4:28:11 PM
6/13/2008 4:28:49 PM
Please clarify your position, TreeTwista10. That'd be sensible if you think it's being misrepresented...[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 4:30 PM. Reason : ...]
6/13/2008 4:29:17 PM
maybe you need to do a better job of remembering who said what to you
6/13/2008 4:29:29 PM
So now we're reduced to arguing semantics over whether Tree's original semantic argument was valid.
6/13/2008 4:29:42 PM
6/13/2008 4:30:37 PM
6/13/2008 4:33:45 PM
Let's try reading again, since I know it's so hard for some people. (Public schools these days!)
6/13/2008 4:35:09 PM
I just went back and read every one of TreeTwista10's posts, and I have yet to see an articulated position on this issue.Anyone care to correct me on this?
6/13/2008 4:37:27 PM
^i know, yet somehow people already have my position pegged somehow
6/13/2008 4:39:03 PM
6/13/2008 4:42:49 PM
depends if it could compromise our security...there are a lot of unknowns]
6/13/2008 4:44:11 PM
^^^Except it doesn't. It simply assumes some people are innocent.To wit: Not all prisoners in Gitmo are guilty. Therefore, some prisoners are innocent. (In fact, the government itself has admitted this already, so it's not even up for debate).However, some, such as Oeuvre, have already argued for denying Habeas Corpus rights - i.e., the right to challenge the legality of the detention - to all prisoners.Therefore, since have already determined that some prisoners are innocent, denying HC means denying innocent people the right to challenge their detention. So, why do you oppose innocent people having the right to challenge their detention? If they're guilty, one can assume the military and the courts competent enough to figure that one out - or else we have far bigger problems. So, what exactly is the problem here?Meanwhile, as to your objections over security - we have procedures to deal with circumstances like these. We can get counsel with security clearance and handle the case in such a fashion - we already have procedures in place to do this now.[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 4:47 PM. Reason : ^^^]
6/13/2008 4:45:41 PM
all this was pretty much talked about yesterday and today in the gitmo thread\message_topic.aspx?topic=529558i probably made the mistake of assuming you had read through that as wellone of my statements about the gray area of these people being held is that not only are they not US citizens, but they're not even officially part of a state's armed forces, they are essentially rogue guerillas...therefore they are technically not abiding by the laws of war and many would say they dont deserve the benefits of the laws of war]
6/13/2008 4:49:05 PM
We don't know that. You are making the mistake of conflating the guy whose suicide vest didn't go off with some random guy who got fingered by random-ass bounty hunters looking to make a quick score. This is why I make snarky remarks about clairvoyance - you make assumptions about the character of detainees that we don't know for certain. This would be why habeas hearings are a good thing. To weed out cases where we know these facts for certain and ones where it's clear we don't.To summarize - a habeas hearing is not the same as a full trial. It's determining whether or not the person has been lawfully detained. That's it.
6/13/2008 4:51:30 PM
Habeas Corpus is not a law of war.It's an overarching legal principle that extends well beyond war. And well beyond America, at that. This protection has existed for almost 800 years in the West.[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 4:54 PM. Reason : ...]
6/13/2008 4:53:21 PM
But the people who were plucked from the battlefield...the ones who are guilty and who are rogue guerrillas that are committing acts of war without any national affiliation, the ones who are breaking the law of war...do they deserve the geneva convention
6/13/2008 4:54:31 PM
6/13/2008 4:56:50 PM
Damn good question.I'll leave whether the Geneva Conventions apply to legal scholars, but will positively state that even those you describe are entitled to some legal protection. This is exactly what the Military Commissions were designed to address. The courts are presently cleaning up the ambiguous mess...[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 5:01 PM. Reason : ...]
6/13/2008 5:00:10 PM
I'd be willing to bet that a lot of these guys weren't taken on the battlefield, and if they were, then you have a quick trial, determine that they were shooting at soldiers, and find them guilty. You make it sound like giving them a trial is the same as handing them a rocket launcher and saying "here, go appease some Nazis for us."
6/13/2008 5:23:21 PM
I didn't start this thread, but it's pretty obvious this is not really about McCain's opinion of the case, or whether the USSC was right.This thread is objective verification that Sen. John McCain has no business being in authority anywhere in this country, at any level.I cringe at the idea that someone who can't define HC might vote, not to even mention running for office - and President at that.
6/13/2008 5:28:33 PM
Oh yeah here's a lil Ben Franklin quote "Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety" founding fathers w00t w00t
6/13/2008 5:31:12 PM
Abraham Lincoln should've done the same thing. He's a fascist bastard according to your standards.
6/13/2008 6:13:57 PM
Did Al Qaeda have an entire region of the United States on its side actively fighting to destroy the union?I've NEVER posted one of these before, but that deserves a big, fat...[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ...]
6/13/2008 6:23:17 PM
so you're ok with it as long as it infringes upon the rights of actual us citizens? Not foreign combatants?Holy shit, there has to be something wrong with you if you agree with that logic.this is what I mean by you people always siding with the wrong bunch. It's always fuck America, fuck Americans, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, you're an alright kind of guy.I don't get it.[Edited on June 13, 2008 at 6:33 PM. Reason : .]
6/13/2008 6:29:53 PM
6/13/2008 6:45:44 PM
6/13/2008 9:31:05 PM
6/13/2008 11:31:57 PM
6/13/2008 11:53:28 PM
Now wait a minute...Don't we fight the war first, and THEN prosecute the vanguished?
6/14/2008 1:08:30 AM
wtf is a vanguished?
6/14/2008 1:17:02 AM
6/14/2008 8:16:58 AM
Lincoln's suspension of Habeas Corpus was Constitutionally provided for.But this tu quoque doesn't change anything.
6/14/2008 10:23:06 AM
Just because it was provided for doesn't necessarily make it right, which is of course what historians go back and forth on to this day.
6/14/2008 10:30:11 AM