Fred's facebook announcement regarding today's radio show:
Is putting a bug in a room with a terrorist torture? The president thinks so. He's released the CIA "torture memos"...has this hurt the country?From the get-go, Fred's got it wrong. Here's what he's talking about. In one of those torture memos (and we're happy Fred recognizes that we're talking torture here - at least I hope he recognizes that it was torture), specifically this memo written August 1, 2002. The memo was written as a response to a request by John Rizzo, then Acting General Counsel of the CIA. Rizzo evidently inquired whether a number of interrogation techniques would violate Section 2340A of title 18 of the US Code. Ninth on the list we find:
(9) insects placed in a confinement boxIn a confinement box, Fred. Not "in a room." Here's what the memo says about "cramped confinement:
Cramped confinement involves the placement of the individual in a confined space, the dimensions of which restrict the individual's movement. The confined space is usually dark.So Fred's imagery is misleading at best and if he knew what the memo actually said,he's just being plain dishonest.The duration of confinement varies based upon the size of the container. For the larger confined space, the individual can stand up or sit down; the smaller space is large enough for the subject to sit down. Confinement in the larger space can last up to eighteen hours; for the smaller space, confinement last for no more than two hours.
But while we're at it, let's take a closer look at title 18 - specifically the definition of torture found there. It starts:
(1) “torture” means an act committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody or physical controlIt then goes on to further define "severe mental pain or suffering" as prolonged mental harm caused by (in this instance):
(A) the intentional infliction or threatened infliction of severe physical pain or suffering;Now let's go take a look at the memo. We see what the CIA wanted to do (page 3):
You would like to place Zubaydah in a cramped confinement box with an insect. You have informed us that he appears to have a fear of insects. In particular, you would like to tell Zubaydah that you intend to place a stinging insect into the box with him. You would, however, place a harmless insect in the box.And Bybee's advice (page 14):
In addition to using the confinement boxes alone, you also would like to introduce an insect into on of the boxes with Zubaydah. As we understand it, you plan to inform Zubaydah that you are going to place a stinging insect into the box, but you will actually place a harmless insect in the box, such as a caterpillar. If you do so, to ensure that you are outside the predicate act requirement, you must inform him that the insects will not have a sting that would produce death or severe pain. If, however, you were to place the insect in the box without informing him that you are doing so, then, in order to commit a predicate act, you should not affirmatively lead him to believe any insect is present which has a sting that could produce severe pain or suffering or even cause his death [redacted material] so long as you take either of the approaches we have described, the insects’ placement in the box would not constitute a threat of severe physical pain or suffering to a reasonable person in this position. An individual placed in a box, even an individual with a fear of insects, would not reasonably feel threatened with severe physical pain or suffering if a caterpillar was placed in the box.So putting a man (one with an irrational fear of insects) in a confinement box with a harmless insect, as long as you don't lead him to believe:
1) that an insect is present (presumably hoping he'll discover it himself) orisn't torture, so sayeth the Bush Administration.
2) that the insect will cause "severe physical pain" or death
However if the fear is irrational, you wouldn't need to inform him of the "danger" of the insect. He'll already believe it. The end result is the same. And they knew that. What's the whole point.
All of this, of course, is besides the point - as weighed against Fred's rhetorical question:
has this hurt the country?The damage there has already been done. Torture has already been shown to have occurred.
The Red Cross said so:
The allegations of ill-treatment of the detainees indicate that, in many cases, the ill-treatment to which they were subjected while held in the CIA program, either singly or in combination, constituted torture. In addition, many other elements of the ill-treatment, either singly or in combination, constituted cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.By attempting to divert attention to "a bug in a room" Fred is doing a disservice to his audience and the truth.
the people that try to justify torture,the people that try to make some set of "rules" to cover their asses, the people that say too bad, "they" deserve it and on and on
ReplyDeletewell, they don't qualify as "quite
human" to me so perhaps i wouldn't get too upset if someone considered
"them" enemy combatants with no proof and no recourse offered to them and shoved a few bugs into their box or slammed their head into a wall or two.
but you know, it would bother me.
laws are laws. human beings are all human beings and torture, is torture. even, when it's us doing it. especially when it is us doing it. we have always thought of ourselves as "moral".
ha!
Did anyone think of Room 101 when they read that?
ReplyDeleteI'm sure that the fine folks at the Bush administration's Ministry of Love thought of it.
ReplyDeleteThe thing, though, about Room 101 (where the worst thing in the world resides) is that, Winston Smith got a new set of dentures UPON HIS RELEASE.
ReplyDeleteHe was broken such that he saw the damage he did to Airstrip One. He was tortured until he accepted the rightness of his execution.
He was then "free" to live out the rest of his life (until his inevitable execution, of course).
The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power.
Oooh, a bug! The humanity!
ReplyDeleteWell, that settles it. I suppose we will now just 'be nice' to terrorist suspects and ask.. "Can you tell us anything? Pretty, pretty, please?" And then they will like us and not attack us.
Were the terrorists nice to the tousands on 9/11? How about to Danny Pearl?
Many days I'm for turning a good part of the Middle East into a parking lot... starting with any place in Iran and maybe even Mecca itself... a MOAB should do the trick.
I listened to "The Hons Man," (seriously, what adult man of age would adopt such a moniker?) for a very short time today and then turned it off on the advice of my doctor, who is trying to manage my hypertension.
ReplyDeleteThe degree to which Fred and his ilk promote anger and violence is just appalling. I'm not a believer, which is too bad, because there should be a special hell for these people. They would argue that they are "just entertainers," but that is specious. Socially inept jerks lot Honsberger (I'm sure he grew up stung by the "fatty" jokes) use their positions to rile up the rabble for no reason other than ratings and their own pathetic self-interest. And it does real harm. I won't stretch a point too far, but guys like Poplawski and his ilk use guys like The Hons as a drug. They get high on him. And yet, there was Freddy, last week, acting all contrite and warm and fuzzy about the "fallen heroes." Bastard.
One thing that really got me today. Fred quotes French President Sarkozy, who apparently dissed Obama in some way. Here's a guy, Sarkozy, who Fred would normally slam for no other reason than he's French, but suddenly, because he has something negative to say about Obama, Nic is Fred's new BFF. Of course, Fred didn't consider, nor did his idiotic audience, that maybe Sarkozy said what he did for purely political reasons....
Anyway, "Fred gets it wrong" could be the subject of every blog, every day about this offensive dipshit.
Sorry for the long blog...
Clyde
Complex concepts are not your strong suit, Mountie. The opinions you express are a bit short on morality, as well.
ReplyDeleteOther than that, nice post.
Infin..
ReplyDeleteSo I'll put you down for a "Can't we all just get along?". OK?
Far from it. I don't see torture as tough or effective. I see it as brittle and counterproductive.
ReplyDeleteOur government's leaders were frightened, and not up to the task of handling a complex problem, so they resorted to secrecy, self-reinforcing and twisted thinking, and brutality.
We should have identified, tracked and killed those who attacked us. Instead, we attacked the wrong country, acted unlawfully, lost our moral authority and our allies, and became distracted from pursuit of our genuine targets.
I continue to want to hold accountable those who attacked us. Kidnapping innocents, torturing teenagers, beating prisoners to death and trampling our laws and civil liberties got in the way. It was the coward's path, chosen by a bunch of frightened pussies who felt like tough guys with shackled prisoners.
I don't give a d*mn how we get information from terrorists... a hot cattle prod to the face or the family jewels sounds about right. You can bet your sweet bippy the Muzzies don't serve tea and crumpets to those they capture. In lieu of that, a few well-placed MOABs should do the trick.. send 'em back to the 7th Century.
ReplyDeleteYou're actually a liberal doing a parody of WV conservatives, right, Mountaineer? I'd be happy to set you right, but I strongly suspect that nobody could be unintentionally wrong, wrong-headed, and unAmerican as consistently as you are.
ReplyDeleteHey, Mountaineer.
ReplyDeleteMy dad did interrogation after WWII, deciding which Germans could be trusted to run Germany. He indeed sat down, stared at people with a bemused look, in total silence, until they started to blather. No leading questions, beyond "very interesting"... or "I don't believe a word you say, but go on." You have no idea how effective that is in finding out real information. (Works on kids, too. An open invitation to the guilt trip of your choice.)
As someone who had lost most of his family to concentration camps, he most certainly did not want to play "big happy family" with all Germans. But he had an important job to do, so unlike the twits under discussion, he did not indulge himself in counterproductive acts of brutality, no matter how tempted he might have been.