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Torture "widespread" - 5/2/2006 10:44:25 PM   
MsMacComb


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Torture "widespread" under U.S. custody: Amnesty 

GENEVA (Reuters) - Torture and inhumane treatment are "widespread" in U.S.-run detention centers in  Afghanistan,  Iraq, Cuba and elsewhere despite Washington's denials, Amnesty International said on Wednesday.
In a report for the  United Nations' Committee against Torture, the London-based human rights group also alleged abuses within the U.S. domestic law enforcement system, including use of excessive force by police and degrading conditions of isolation for inmates in high security prisons."Evidence continues to emerge of widespread torture and other cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment of detainees held in U.S. custody," Amnesty said in its 47-page report.
It said that while Washington has sought to blame abuses that have recently come to light on "aberrant soldiers and lack of oversight," much ill-treatment stemmed from officially sanctioned interrogation procedures and techniques.
"The U.S. government is not only failing to take steps to eradicate torture, it is actually creating a climate in which torture and other ill-treatment can flourish," said Amnesty International USA Senior Deputy Director-General Curt Goering.
The U.N. committee, whose experts carry out periodic reviews of countries signatory to the U.N. Convention against Torture, is scheduled to begin consideration of the United States on Friday. The last U.S. review was in 2000.
It said in November it was seeking U.S. answers to questions including whether Washington operated secret detention centers abroad and whether 
President George W. Bush had the power to absolve anyone from criminal responsibility in torture cases.
The committee also wanted to know whether a December 2004 memorandum from the U.S. Attorney General's office, reserving torture for "extreme" acts of cruelty, was compatible with the global convention barring all forms of cruel, inhumane or degrading treatment.
UNTIL THE END
In its own submission to the committee, published late last year, Washington justified the holding of thousands of foreign terrorism suspects in detention centers abroad, including Guantanamo Bay in Cuba, on the grounds that it was fighting a war that was still not over.
"Like other wars, when they start, we do not know when they will end. Still, we may detain combatants until the end of the war," it said.
The U.S. human rights image has taken a battering abroad over a string of scandals involving the sexual and physical abuse of detainees held by American forces in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay.
In its submission, Washington did not mention alleged secret detention centers.
Amnesty listed a series of incidents in recent years involving torture of detainees in U.S. custody, noting the heaviest sentence given to perpetrators was five months in jail.
This was the same punishment you could get for stealing a bicycle in the United States, it added.
"Although the U.S. government continues to assert its condemnation of torture and ill-treatment, these statements contradict what is happening in practice," said Goering, referring to the testimony of torture victims in the report. 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Isn't it amazing how so many of the hardcore Bush Camp (religious fundies) can support this yet get freaked out (in public, not behind closed doors) over consenting adults "torturing" each other for pleasure? Its like their morals and outlook on the world are 100% upside down.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/2/2006 11:16:37 PM   
MistressDREAD


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quote:

outlook on the world are 100% upside down.
actually only about 50% of the world at any given time is upside down.
And that half is just as crazy as the rightside up crew. I say if they are in prision for doing wrong TORTURE EM!! and get their ass right!! spits.....In fact let Me at em!!

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/2/2006 11:23:35 PM   
Kendra


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doesnt know much about this subject but thanks for the article  im now investigating it for my own peace of mind.. cheers

sorry spelling mistakes  again, my hands dont work as fast as my tongue wags,,,, hmmm introspection time..?

< Message edited by Kendra -- 5/2/2006 11:25:07 PM >


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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 6:24:06 AM   
philosophy


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following a number of american foreign policy decisions over the years it has become clear that the torture of foreigners is largely condoned by the American people.....after all, they vote time and time again for leaders that either support torture abroad or, in recent years, actively promote it.
When those same American people talk of holding the moral or ethical high ground, it is simply perceived as blatant hypocrisy.
i believe there is a reference in American political history that applies here.......something about all men being created equal...... so if you don't mind torturing foreigners can we expect the same standards to be applied to american citizenry in your prisons?

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 11:25:46 AM   
MsMacComb


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quote:

ORIGINAL: philosophy

following a number of american foreign policy decisions over the years it has become clear that the torture of foreigners is largely condoned by the American people.....after all, they vote time and time again for leaders that either support torture abroad or, in recent years, actively promote it.
When those same American people talk of holding the moral or ethical high ground, it is simply perceived as blatant hypocrisy.
i believe there is a reference in American political history that applies here.......something about all men being created equal...... so if you don't mind torturing foreigners can we expect the same standards to be applied to american citizenry in your prisons?
 

Now thats not fair Philosophy. The majority of Americans didnt know of this, didnt approve of it and didnt authorize it. I would ask you to give evidence of this "long history" of us doing it and voting time and time again for those that order it.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 11:34:02 AM   
mnottertail


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I do my best in the endeavor of torture, but really wonder if I am meaninfully adding to the bottom line of that GNP.


Ron

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 11:52:09 AM   
meatcleaver


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When an ex-US army officer can be interviewed on the BBC world service and say (all be it couched in diplomatic language) that the imprisoned foot soldiers are scapegoats and people should look higher up for answers, one feels that US quote 'The buck stops here.' has lost all meaning.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 12:25:26 PM   
Mercnbeth


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When you read these excepts or if you take the time to read the reference article, remember, the US charged and tried those responsible at Abu Ghraib. The Iraqi regime under Saddam promoted the practice. The Iranians show it on TV as their version of a survivor type "realty" programming. 

quote:

The heated charge that prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib by U.S. service personnel was somehow equivalent to that perpetrated by Saddam Hussein – a notion pervasive in the Muslim world and epitomized in the West by Sen. Edward Kennedy's remark that "we now learn that Saddam's torture chambers reopened under new management, U.S. management'' – has had ice-cold water dumped on it by a horrific new video.
Screened for reporters last week by Washington's American Enterprise Institute, the 4-plus-minute video clip, reportedly obtained from the Pentagon, captures the routine beating, torture, dismemberment and decapitation that occurred daily at the hands of Saddam's henchmen. However, only a handful of reporters showed up to see the new video, and even fewer reported on it. Source: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39045


quote:

BAGHDAD — Pictures of dead Iraqis, with their necks slashed, their eyes gouged out and their genitals blackened, fill a bookshelf. Jail cells, with dried blood on the floor and rusted shackles bolted to the walls, line the corridors. And the screams of what could be imprisoned men in an underground detention center echo through air shafts and sewer pipes. Source: http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2003-04-13-saddam-secrets-usat_x.htm


quote:

Amir is a 22-year-old gay Iranian who was arrested by Iran’s morality police as part of a massive Internet entrapment campaign targeting gays. He was beaten and tortured while in custody, threatened with death, and lashed 100 times (see photos). He escaped from Iran in August, and is now in Turkey, where he awaits the granting of asylum by a gay-friendly country. Source: http://direland.typepad.com/direland/2005/09/theyll_kill_me_.html


quote:

The 73-page report, “Like the Dead in Their Coffins: Torture, Detention, and the Crushing of Dissent in Iran,” provides the first comprehensive account of the treatment of political detainees in Tehran’s Evin Prison and in secret prisons around the capital since the government launched its current crackdown in 2000. Human Rights Watch has documented systematic abuses against political detainees, including arbitrary arrest, detention without trial, torture to extract confessions, prolonged solitary confinement, and physical and psychological abuse. Source:  http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/06/07/iran8774.htm 


The National Union of Journalists NUJ has released video tapes that throw light on a conspiracy to conceal the truth about the serial killings of journalists and writers in Iran. Five were killed between November 1998 and February 1999. The Iranian authorities announced that "rogue elements" in the security services had carried out the killings, and some Ministry of Information employees were tried in secret for the murders. The trial was condemned as a sham by the victims' families, their lawyer (who was arrested on the eve of the trial) and human rights and journalists' organisations internationally. It appears that there were a few individuals tried secretely in order to present scapegoats instead of admitting that the killings were approved at the highest level.

quote:

The videos (download them in either 33.6 MB MPEG or in 23 MB Quicktime) show the "rogue elements" being beaten and mistreated when interrogated, and then confessing to fantastic "crimes" including working for foreign intelligence agencies, blasphemy, adultery etc. The videos appear to have been made in the detention centre of Iran's military security agency. (Press Release) http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2002/01/102670.html 


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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 1:39:14 PM   
MsMacComb


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth
When you read these excepts or if you take the time to read the reference article, remember, the US charged and tried those responsible at Abu Ghraib.
 

Do you mean the couple of privates they threw in jail and the one female "brass" they threw to the wolves? Kangaroo court. This was authorized by Bush, Cheney, Rummie and back by Gonzales. THEY are who should be in jail. What Iraq and Iran and other countries do is something that the US can't control. We however know better and should be ashamed.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 2:50:54 PM   
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Bush, Cheney and Rumsfelds should be the men in the dock. Not only for the torture incidents because that is where the US brass has been quietly pointing the finger but for all the unnecessary deaths their war based on lies has caused.

Oh Blair too!

They are all criminals and for them to talk about Saddam Hussien being a criminal makes me laugh. The only difference is that Saddam didn't have a fig leaf called democracy saving his arse.

< Message edited by meatcleaver -- 5/3/2006 2:51:46 PM >

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 3:56:49 PM   
NeedToUseYou


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What exactly is defined as "torture".

That is really the question.

If torture includes such things as sleep depriving prisoners, verbally humiliating them, stripping them and physically humiliating them. I have 0 problems with this.

If torture is what I think of torture as in cutting peoples genitals, limbs, heads off, burning, electrocution etc... Well, then I object to that except in the most time critical circumstances.

From what I've seen most of the "torture" the US has been accused of has been the former.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 4:19:27 PM   
meatcleaver


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quote:


From what I've seen most of the "torture" the US has been accused of has been the former.



Beatings and killings is also up for grabs, shooting first and asking questions later but it is the fact that many people in the world, whether rightly or wrongly, perceive not just US politicians as condoning such action but its citizens too which is so damaging to the US cause. Especially when the US claims to be liberators.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 4:38:56 PM   
cloudboy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Mercnbeth

When you read these excepts or if you take the time to read the reference article, remember, the US charged and tried those responsible at Abu Ghraib.


You've really got to be kidding here, right? Yes, the doings at AG were all the workings of a few seargents and privates "acting alone" and unguided by higher authrorities.

What do the practices of Saddam H., IRAN, or any torture outside the US jurisdiction have to do with the OP? Somehow us being "a little nicer" is a point of pride with you or a legitimate foreign policy talking point for our Department of State? You can forget about it, we've pissed the world's goodwill so far down the drain that a college of Saints in Washington couldn't rehabilitate us.

Shitting these non sequitor's below is evading the topic. No one asked for a US v. The World comparitive torture essay. The question is, how can we practice / perpetrate torture and then condemn the very practice of it by others? We can't, regardless of your wormy, sliding scale arguments.


quote:

The Iraqi regime under Saddam promoted the practice. The Iranians show it on TV as their version of a survivor type "realty" programming.


quote:

The heated charge that prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib by U.S. service personnel was somehow equivalent to that perpetrated by Saddam Hussein – a notion pervasive in the Muslim world and epitomized in the West by Sen. Edward Kennedy's remark that "we now learn that Saddam's torture chambers reopened under new management, U.S. management'' – has had ice-cold water dumped on it by a horrific new video.
Screened for reporters last week by Washington's American Enterprise Institute, the 4-plus-minute video clip, reportedly obtained from the Pentagon, captures the routine beating, torture, dismemberment and decapitation that occurred daily at the hands of Saddam's henchmen. However, only a handful of reporters showed up to see the new video, and even fewer reported on it. Source: http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39045


quote:

BAGHDAD — Pictures of dead Iraqis, with their necks slashed, their eyes gouged out and their genitals blackened, fill a bookshelf. Jail cells, with dried blood on the floor and rusted shackles bolted to the walls, line the corridors. And the screams of what could be imprisoned men in an underground detention center echo through air shafts and sewer pipes. Source: http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2003-04-13-saddam-secrets-usat_x.htm


quote:

Amir is a 22-year-old gay Iranian who was arrested by Iran’s morality police as part of a massive Internet entrapment campaign targeting gays. He was beaten and tortured while in custody, threatened with death, and lashed 100 times (see photos). He escaped from Iran in August, and is now in Turkey, where he awaits the granting of asylum by a gay-friendly country. Source: http://direland.typepad.com/direland/2005/09/theyll_kill_me_.html


quote:

The 73-page report, “Like the Dead in Their Coffins: Torture, Detention, and the Crushing of Dissent in Iran,” provides the first comprehensive account of the treatment of political detainees in Tehran’s Evin Prison and in secret prisons around the capital since the government launched its current crackdown in 2000. Human Rights Watch has documented systematic abuses against political detainees, including arbitrary arrest, detention without trial, torture to extract confessions, prolonged solitary confinement, and physical and psychological abuse. Source: http://hrw.org/english/docs/2004/06/07/iran8774.htm


quote:

The National Union of Journalists NUJ has released video tapes that throw light on a conspiracy to conceal the truth about the serial killings of journalists and writers in Iran. Five were killed between November 1998 and February 1999. The Iranian authorities announced that "rogue elements" in the security services had carried out the killings, and some Ministry of Information employees were tried in secret for the murders. The trial was condemned as a sham by the victims' families, their lawyer (who was arrested on the eve of the trial) and human rights and journalists' organisations internationally. It appears that there were a few individuals tried secretely in order to present scapegoats instead of admitting that the killings were approved at the highest level.


quote:

The videos (download them in either 33.6 MB MPEG or in 23 MB Quicktime) show the "rogue elements" being beaten and mistreated when interrogated, and then confessing to fantastic "crimes" including working for foreign intelligence agencies, blasphemy, adultery etc. The videos appear to have been made in the detention centre of Iran's military security agency. (Press Release) http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2002/01/102670.html



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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 6:48:33 PM   
DelightMachine


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GREAT JOB MERC!

quote:

ORIGINAL: MsMacComb
What Iraq and Iran and other countries do is something that the US can't control.


Except, MsMac, we did control it by invading Iraq and putting a stop to it there, didn't we?

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 6:55:52 PM   
DelightMachine


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COMPARE AND CONTRAST

Yet another example showing that nothing meatcleaver says about politics can ever be taken seriously:

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
Bush, Cheney and Rumsfelds ...Oh Blair too! ... They are all criminals and for them to talk about Saddam Hussien being a criminal makes me laugh. The only difference is that Saddam didn't have a fig leaf called democracy saving his arse.


Merc already had quoted this when meatcleaver wrote the above sentences. Meatcleaver insists that there is NO DIFFERENCE between U.S. violations of human rights and THIS:

quote:


BAGHDAD — Pictures of dead Iraqis, with their necks slashed, their eyes gouged out and their genitals blackened, fill a bookshelf. Jail cells, with dried blood on the floor and rusted shackles bolted to the walls, line the corridors. And the screams of what could be imprisoned men in an underground detention center echo through air shafts and sewer pipes. Source: http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/iraq/2003-04-13-saddam-secrets-usat_x.htm


meatcleaver:
quote:


They are all criminals and for them to talk about Saddam Hussien being a criminal makes me laugh.

Then you have a sick sense of humor, meatcleaver.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 7:09:36 PM   
MsMacComb


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DelightMachine
Except, MsMac, we did control it by invading Iraq and putting a stop to it there, didn't we?
  

Umm no. We went into Iraq and started our own version. Abu-Ghirab? Flying people all over the world (CIA) to other countries where we would pass the dirty work off to them. Ending Saddams torture and beginning our own is not really progress, hence the article.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 7:16:11 PM   
UtopianRanger


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quote:

Do you mean the couple of privates they threw in jail and the one female "brass" they threw to the wolves? Kangaroo court. This was authorized by Bush, Cheney, Rummie and back by Gonzales. THEY are who should be in jail. What Iraq and Iran and other countries do is something that the US can't control. We however know better and should be ashamed.


You're absolutely correct. And for me, this is clearly one of the most reprehensible parts of the war so far. There's no way we should relinquish those jailers of personal responsibility, as they indeed got what was coming to them. But on other hand, absent of using Carpinski and a few others as scapegoats, not court-marshaling/charging  the real folks behind the decision making process is a crime in and of its self. It's par for the course though....

 
- R

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 7:17:03 PM   
MsMacComb


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quote:

ORIGINAL: DelightMachine

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver
Bush, Cheney and Rumsfelds ...Oh Blair too! ... They are all criminals and for them to talk about Saddam Hussien being a criminal makes me laugh. The only difference is that Saddam didn't have a fig leaf called democracy saving his arse.

Merc already had quoted this when meatcleaver wrote the above sentences. Meatcleaver insists that there is NO DIFFERENCE between U.S. violations of human rights and THIS:
They are all criminals and for them to talk about Saddam Hussien being a criminal makes me laugh.


I think that for many people the point is that Saddam is accused of killing 300,000 people over roughly 30 years. We have done one third of that in four years. We also are the ones that used Agent Orange and are the only country to use nukes plus God only knows what other types of chemical and/or biological weapons over the years. We know are setting a new standard for organized torture and repression of information. Killing innocent people, men women and children, using WMD on them, torturing them, well,,, does evaluating the details really matter? Just because the US does it in a "santized" manner with the push of a button from many miles away and then censors the media about those details, the photos etc doesnt make those poor people any less dead.


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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 7:25:14 PM   
DelightMachine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: cloudboy
You've really got to be kidding here, right? Yes, the doings at AG were all the workings of a few seargents and privates "acting alone" and unguided by higher authrorities.

What do the practices of Saddam H., IRAN, or any torture outside the US jurisdiction have to do with the OP? Somehow us being "a little nicer" is a point of pride with you or a legitimate foreign policy talking point for our Department of State? You can forget about it, we've pissed the world's goodwill so far down the drain that a college of Saints in Washington couldn't rehabilitate us.

Shitting these non sequitor's below is evading the topic. No one asked for a US v. The World comparitive torture essay. The question is, how can we practice / perpetrate torture and then condemn the very practice of it by others? We can't, regardless of your wormy, sliding scale arguments.


Cloudboy, you get very exercised about allegations against the United States but I haven't seen you get exercised about worse allegations elsewhere.

Merc's posts are more to the point than he actually mentions. Now this is MY point, not HIS: Amnesty International has been biased against the United States for some time. As a left-wing organization, it's been especially biased during the Bush administration and during the War on Terror. So it's hard to trust this organization when they talk about Guantanamo or, frankly, anything else regarding the United States. That makes Merc's post entirely ON topic.

When the United States, United Kingdom and others were preparing to invade Iraq and during the war, and now after, I've heard Amnesty International went soft on Iraqi atrocities and exaggerated United States actions, calling many questionable things "violations of human rights." This is not to say that AI didn't criticize Iraq for many of its human rights violations previously -- the organization has taken some steps to be fair, just not nearly enough.

AI's bias is a very old story. Here's one criticism from a rightwing Web site three years ago, showing that AI was doing essentially the same thing then that MsMac quotes in the OP:

quote:

On May 28, 2003, Amnesty International, the supposedly apolitical human rights organization, turned forty years old. On that day it released its annual report on human rights abuses across the globe during the year 2002.  For 311 gruesome pages, Amnesty documented the horrors of execution, torture, abduction, rape, starvation, repression, and mass murder that darken many corners of the world.  In one sad country after another, Amnesty found that mankind was suffering greater abuses in 2002 than they had in 2001, and Amnesty found a culprit to blame for the ever-declining state of human rights in the world: the United States of America.  For an organization that proclaimed itself an ideologically unbiased human rights advocate, suddenly they seemed unapologetic in their obviously political and hypocritical stance opposing the conservative government of the U.S. and President Bush’s war on terror.
The Amnesty report thundered: “The ‘war on terror,’ far from making the world a safer place, has made it more dangerous by curtailing human rights, undermining the rule of international law and shielding governments from scrutiny. It has deepened divisions among people of different faiths and origins, sowing the seeds for more conflict. The overwhelming impact of all this is genuine fear -- among the affluent as well as the poor.” 
http://www.frontpagemag.com/articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=8231


Contrast what AI is quoted as saying in the last paragraph above with what's pointed out here, in another few sentences from the same article:

quote:

One can’t but help wonder if all of this vitriol aimed at the United States doesn’t have something to do with a profound sense of failure on the part of Amnesty International.  After all, for years Amnesty International attempted with words, reports, monitors, and “official state visits” to end suffering in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq, but they were completely ineffectual.  Indeed, the situation deteriorated year after year.  Then the U.S. and its “cowboy” president come along and ended the torture, rape, and mass executions in a matter of months.


As to the point of torture committed by people in the U.S. government: If it can be shown to be necessary to prevent a terrorist atrocity, I'm for it. If it can't be shown to be DIRECTLY necessary (that is, there isn't an INCREDIBLY CLEAR reason why the torture may be needed to foil terrorists that we're hot on the trail of) then it's criminal in my book. The allegations against the United States run the gamut from serious to silly. I'm concerned about the serious ones. Amnesty International may be right in some of its allegations. It bothers me.

I don't expect anyone to actually read the paragraph immediately above. I'm absolutely positive that I'll be accused of ignoring the substance of the AI charges. That's because people who like to attack on these message boards don't like to actually read what's been written by the target of their attacks.

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RE: Torture "widespread" - 5/3/2006 7:55:48 PM   
DelightMachine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MsMacComb
I think that for many people the point is that Saddam is accused of killing 300,000 people over roughly 30 years. We have done one third of that in four years.

Prove it. Cite a credible source for that figure. It's an exaggeration to say we killed 100,000. If you're going to compare numbers, you'll also have to take into account the number of people Saddam would have continued to kill over the past for years and into the future, since we'd tried everything else to get him out of power and hadn't been able to do so, and had no prospect of getting him out of power in any other way.

quote:

We also are the ones that used Agent Orange and are the only country to use nukes plus God only knows what other types of chemical and/or biological weapons over the years.

That's an anti-American, biased description of our past history. Our use of atomic weapons in World War II probably saved lives, and that was the purpose of using them. Do you dispute that? If so, please show why we didn't actually save more lives and/or show that saving lives was not the purpose of using them. Remember, you're saying we're the equivalent of other human rights abusers. Were they trying to save lives too? Which ones that we've mentioned in this thread were ultimately trying to save more lives?

quote:

We know are setting a new standard for organized torture

Holocaust: 8 million dead.
Stalin's Soviet Union: even more dead
Mass killings in Cambodia and China (in little Cambodia more than a million dead, in China many millions).
So are you serious about that claim or do you want to take it back? If serious, please back up that statement.

quote:

We know are setting a new standard for ... repression of information.

Really? Care to back that one up too? These reports of U.S. abuses are in our daily newspapers. Was that the situation in the Soviet Union? Is it the situation in China today? Are you serious? If so, please show how we're worse than any other country.
quote:

Killing innocent people, men women and children, using WMD on them, torturing them, well,,, does evaluating the details really matter? Just because the US does it in a "santized" manner with the push of a button from many miles away and then censors the media about those details, the photos etc doesnt make those poor people any less dead.

If you're so concerned about poor, tortured people, you wouldn't brush aside torture committed by Saddam, as you did in a previous post.

Some details matter. Context matters. If you don't take into account the fact that the United States in the past prevented far more human rights violations from taking place (than any that you cite), and in the current war on terror we're fighting thoroughly evil regimes that have some of the worst human rights records in the world today, then you're creating a cartoon version of reality.  

< Message edited by DelightMachine -- 5/3/2006 7:56:48 PM >


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