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It may seem like it, but high gasoline prices aren't a law. ;)
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um sorry Flint but I did say it more efficiently |
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Meanwhile, professional interrogators are furious that you have so muddied the waters - made it virtually impossible to get accurate facts - because you tortured him. Amount of talk is akin to an assembly line of junk. Credibility - not lots of words - is essential. Even if he said something truthful, the intelligence is useless because it is just another lie as he continues to lie just to hate you. Torture him and you can kiss the city goodbye. By torturing, you are making him only hate more. That is the last thing you want if you want to save the city. In reading detailed accounts of what prisoners said, accurate facts arise because the prisoner is relaxed, can be observed as honest or deceitful, and often assumed his interrogator already knew this stuff. Again, credibility. Again, this is how professionals get accurate facts. It is a 'big dic' assumption that only action - torture - will get results. Best results are obtained from inaction or less action - simply letting him talk. You want to save Central Park? Torturing him guarantees the city's destruction. 'Big dics' restort to their knowledge base - their feelings. 'Big dics' can be saved. They get educated by professional interrogators. Useful information comes from caring or from accidental disclosures. Neither can happen with torture. To a 'big dic' mentality, that is inaction. 'Big dices' assume only action gets results which is why 'big dics' assume torture is useful. Unfortunately you do same. Implied in your post is this assumption that only physical action will get results when reality says the complete opposite. How many Orange Alerts did it take before you realized why this administration had no facts? Torture causes lots of talk - and it was all lies and more Orange Alerts. UT, if you torture that bomber, you have guaranteed the city's destruction. It should be obvious. Scary is when that is not obvious. The term 'big dic' is obscene, belittling, and accurately depicts those who somehow magically assume torture must work. Don't be a 'big dic'. A 'big dic' attitude - this need for action in direct contradiction to intelligence - would absolutely condemn the city. You want smart interrogators. You don't want muddied waters. That means no torture. |
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Then we'll have it up to $6 or so |
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That leaves the law against torture, for normal situations, and an out for the extraordinary. :cool: |
War involves moral choices. It's ironic that while we have people screaming about 'moral relativity' here in the states, everyone ignores the moral compromises made in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Noone has answered the question as to what we do with people we torture (or strenously question) and who turn out to be innocent. What compensation will there be for making people feel as if they are drowning over and over again? What if we set the price at a million dollars? If we receive howls of outrage over such a great sum of money we could ask this question? How sure will you be before you start the torture that you have the right guy? Because if you aren't willing to be a million dollars that you're wrong, you shouldn't be torturing the guy. Of course, this will not happen. The US will find a way to duck responsibility, just like we did in the Arar case. Quote:
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As for this product of the world community (me), even though I know that the odds are astronomical against gaining useful information in your scenario, I find that the stakes are so high that the needs of the oppressed (i.e. those threatened with destruction) clearly outweigh the needs of the few (i.e. conscientious objectors to the use of any means necessary under all circumstances); or, the needs of the one (i.e. rights and life of perpetrator). I would use all of my interrogation skills to extract as much information as possible while I used all of my medical skills to keep the perpetrator from dying during the interrogation. Rationale: A long shot is better than no shot. Of course, I would conduct the interrogation at ground zero and perish with the perpetrator if unsuccessful. If successful, I would submit myself for adjudication by the world community. UT, what other questions do you have pertaining to the ethics of interrogation? I certainly don't have all the answers; however, I do have some insights. :eyeball: |
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Rich, we can only prove them guilty, we can never prove them innocent. If they are released for lack of evidence, they have the smug satisfaction of knowing they beat the system. No monetary compensation. :headshake If you set fees, you'll have lots of scammers acting suspiciously. NoBoxes, you make a lot of sense. How much is training and how much did you figured out yourself? |
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Video: http://hotair.com/archives/2006/09/2...rture-tactics/ Partial transcript: http://corner.nationalreview.com/pos...Q5MTUzYmNlY2Q= Quote:
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* Al-Qaedist Abu Zubaydah was captured in March 2002.
* Zubaydah's captors discovered he was mentally ill and charged with minor logistical matters, such as arranging travel for wives and children. * The President was informed of that judgment by the CIA. * Two weeks later, the President described Zubaydah as "one of the top operatives plotting and planning death and destruction on the United States." * Later, Bush told George Tenet, "I said he was important. You're not going to let me lose face on this, are you?" and asked Tenet if "some of these harsh methods really work?" * The methods -- torture -- were applied. * Then, according to Gellman, "Under that duress, he began to speak of plots of every variety -- against shopping malls, banks, supermarkets, water systems, nuclear plants, apartment buildings, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Statue of Liberty." * At which point, according to Suskind, "thousands of uniformed men and women raced in a panic to each . . . target." As Francis Fukuyama observes in the context of WMD intelligence in his book, the big problem in intelligence isn't the need to find more information it's the difficulty of figuring out which information is true. Simply pumping every person who falls into your hands for everything he "knows" doesn't help. |
Sorry, but I'm gonna call shenanigans again, UT. If Ross were presenting info that O'Reilly disagreed with, he wouldn't be on the show. That isn't to say that all info from the Right that I disagree with is not accurate (that would be convenient, though). However, O'Reilly has too long a history of bullying guests that he disagrees with and flat-out lying for me to consider him or his show a credible source.
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Don't only listen to the sources you agree with. It's not O'Reilly telling you the information. It's Ross.
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