by TrueKaiser » Tue 08 Mar 2005, 00:54:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', '
')Sure! They've got air conditioning, better quarters, and a fixed location so they can get better food. What's not to like?
i highly sujest you aquire the following documentary and watch it several times,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Torture: The Guantanamo Guidebook.
Monday 28th February 2005 Ch,4
For a grim TV experiment a group of volunteers agreed to undergo 48 hours of the type of treatment sanctioned by the US for detainees at Guantanamo Bay. The point the programme makes – painfully, powerfully and at great length – is until you see what some of these methods involve , you’ll have little idea of how easily interrogation becomes out and out torture. By all accounts, (including the FBI’s) this is exactly what has happened at Guantanamo.
The Guantánamo Guidebook recreates some of the practices used at the US naval base where hundreds of so-called "enemy combatants" have been held without trial or access to lawyers for nearly three years.
Using an east London warehouse and declassified internal documents obtained from US sources, programme-makers mocked up conditions as they are inside Guantánamo, before subjecting seven volunteers to some of the milder forms of torture alleged to have been used by US authorities.
The programme exposed the volunteers, three of whom are Muslim, to 48 hours of "torture lite" including sleep deprivation, the use of extreme temperatures and "mild" physical contact.
As at Guantánamo and more vividly in Abu Ghraib, the volunteers were also subject to periods of enforced nudity and religious and sexual humiliation.
The programme is part of a four-pronged investigation into the modern-day use of torture practices, in and outside the Cuban island base which Amnesty International has described as an "icon of lawlessness".
It is part of an upcoming season of films examining the use of torture in the "war against terror".
Presented by Jon Snow, Channel 4 says the programme is designed to examine the widespread use of torture and whether it can ever be justified in what the US and UK governments have called the wider war "against terror."
"The use of torture or of information gained through torture has been justified as essential on the war against terror," said the Channel 4 head of news and current affairs, Dorothy Byrne.
"This season of programmes challenges the viewers to watch torture techniques we know are used in Guantánamo [and asks whether] can such torture ever be justified. Does it work? And how the values of western society are undermined by the use of such torture."
all you need to do is sign up(which is free) and search for the four part torture series(i do recomend you watch them all.).
then tell me if you would like to be treated like this cause i am sure we can arange somthing.