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Yes.
No.
I'm not quite sure.
Such overthrows would be about taking financial and weapon power away from those governments, not to spread democracy overnight, though the seeds would be planted. Remember that the war in Iraq is about many things. Also, I don't trust the words of Author Wesley Clark. I have seen him interviewed a bunch of times, and he is a total politician. He has run for president, and I think he might even have a campaign going right now. What would he be doing revealing what was in a classified memo? How trustworthy would that be? So even if he is telling the truth, he has proven himself to be untrustworthy. |
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You are dreaming right now.
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Some are born to sweet deleight
Some are born to endless night
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Dream Journal: Dreamwalker Chronicles Latest Entry: 01/02/2016 - "Hallway to Haven" (Lucid)(Or see the very best of my journal entries @ dreamwalkerchronicles.blogspot)
There're just too many posts in this thread to read them all so I am going to jump in with a point that relates to some posts about 6 pages back. Namely, the dismissal of the idea that simply talking with a terrorist can reap any useful intelligence. |
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Some are born to sweet deleight
Some are born to endless night
Nemo is oversimplifying very much. The answer isn't to try to convince one person. The problem is ingrained in their culture so the real solution is to influence their culture by showing them - as a whole - that there's a much better way to go about living in the global community. |
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To do that, there must be an active engagement diplomatically, socially, and economically, the goal being to befriend rather than antagonize their culture. |
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Voting "No" in this poll means not thinking this is torture: |
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Last edited by Neruo; 10-21-2007 at 10:24 PM.
“What a peculiar privilege has this little agitation of the brain which we call 'thought'” -Hume
I hope (and I think) you meant "...that do NOT prove..." because the offenders have already been punished for treating those people that way. |
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Awh gosh dangit. I always check for this kind of HUGE mistakes that TOTALLY ruin the entire post, but sometimes they slip through, causing some huge contradictions . Of course I meant that it does Not prove it is found normal. (It just proved that it happened at least with a couple of prisoners). |
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Last edited by Neruo; 10-21-2007 at 10:24 PM.
“What a peculiar privilege has this little agitation of the brain which we call 'thought'” -Hume
Then what a shitty way to over-generalise. |
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Last edited by Oneironaught; 10-21-2007 at 11:15 PM.
The government has already admited to being allowed to use torture, and have said it can be useful. And they are always trying to change the definition od torture. So even though they say they dont really torture anyone its just a word game to them, and its pretty easy to see through. |
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Neruo, those pictures don't prove much that anyone with a basic understanding of the psychology of prisoner/captive relationship doesn't already understand. It was absolutely inevitable. When you put under-educated nineteen-year-olds in charge of prisoners, this is what happens. Unfortunately, the complete lack of even the most basic knowledge of psychology and human nature by the people in charge is what led to that embarrassing display. |
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It is inevitable to have not just extreme interrogation methods, but actually torture people, as it seems, purely for 'fun'? Ironically, it indeed was extremely predictable. If you give people control like that, as in Abu Graibh, they are bound to torture(, as in that famous university experiment that shows people go power-crazy quite quickly). However, doesn't it being predictable make it even more bad? Wasn't there someone that thought this through? Isn't there some council for human rights in the US army that warns and prevents such situations where people are extremely likely to torture and abuse other people? |
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“What a peculiar privilege has this little agitation of the brain which we call 'thought'” -Hume
That's exactly what I'm talking about. So you know about this phenomenon, but the high-ranking officers in charge evidently never heard of it. I don't know the answer to that question, but evidently not. That's bad enough, but what's worse is the torture that is planned and approved of. |
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Just like any jail you have a boss who watches over everyone else. Seeing as how this is the military I find it hard to believe he didn't know. Infact I wouldn't be surprised if everyone there knew. The question is, is it the offically policy or was it the 'unoffical' policy to torture people. Of course the answer doesn't really matter since its exactly the same thing, and only said one way to cover the butts of higher ranking people when they get caught. |
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A few 19 year old idiots put some underwear on the heads of some terrorists. That does not mean Bush secretly has a pro-torture policy. The U.S. military is enormous. Some people are going to break rules. |
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You are dreaming right now.
I disagree. |
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You merely have to change your point of view slightly, and then that glass will sparkle when it reflects the light.
It was the lack of leadership there that was the problem. |
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*coughcoughOnce Againcough* |
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Last edited by Oneironaut Zero; 10-24-2007 at 03:38 AM.
Dream Journal: Dreamwalker Chronicles Latest Entry: 01/02/2016 - "Hallway to Haven" (Lucid)(Or see the very best of my journal entries @ dreamwalkerchronicles.blogspot)
I definitely agree 100%. And to the "terrible" cases where a poor, helpless terrorist gets his jaw shattered or is forced to wear underwear on his head I say: "So fucking what. Sometimes people actually get what they deserve." They have no rights. They were dead to rights the moment they joined the wrong team. |
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