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THE Torture Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Voice_du_More » Thu 07 May 2009, 01:46:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', 'I')f I had been ordered to torture you, I would have.


You should re-enlist.
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Voice_du_More » Thu 07 May 2009, 01:56:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jotapay', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', ' ')The civil war is coming.



Really?

The people against the "elites"?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', ' ')Once I know that they know my name I will put fear into their hearts by speaking out against them everywhere at all times until enough of my brothers and sisters awaken to take back their freedom.


But until then you'll remain anonymous?


I don't know who Voice_du_More is, but he knows a breadth of things which few others know in total sum. He understands a broad range of things in whom I've seen that few before know about.

He understands not just what is generally occurring behind the scenes (behind the MSM coverage), but the historical context as well. That is rare, IMO.


That was very kind Jotapay. Ludi is secretly getting an extra few percent on her SSI check to monitor this site so we try to not take her too personally.

I was surprised last summer when prices of oil really went big to see how many on here were really just speculators. Once they had to really worry that oil might superspike they started acting really different, like maybe they were'nt really doomers just wall street kiddies looking for a wild ride or something. That price spike was only a warning of what is going to happen if the US economy can ever get on track again. That means that in fact the US economy will never come out of this recession long enough to take a breath because as soon as we do oil doubles, maybe triples in value in a month or two.

The end is at hand, anyone with a sense of it knows, and BTW I am hardly anonymous. But the NSA is hardly courageous enough to let us all know that they are watching this site, now are they?

A government of cowards hiding behind their badges quivering because they know the sheeple are waking up. Call it law enforcement all you want, but freedom of speech is still a constitutional right. Deny it to some and you deny it to yourself.

I can feel the fear oozing out of the pores of alot of people I run into because my friendly TIPs representative has been there just hours or minutes before.

I can only pray that the full scope of the Bush abuses will be revealed by this President. So far given his actions it seems my prayers will go unanswered. We will have to live with the American Stasi perhaps until the very fall of America. What a pathetic end for such a potentially great nation.

'I am a queen, and not a widow, and I will never see mourning.'

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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby jasonraymondson » Thu 07 May 2009, 01:58:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', 'I')f I had been ordered to torture you, I would have.


You should re-enlist.



So I can torture you?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Voice_du_More » Thu 07 May 2009, 02:07:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', 'I')f I had been ordered to torture you, I would have.


You should re-enlist.



So I can torture you?


Do you actually have a desire to do so?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby jasonraymondson » Thu 07 May 2009, 02:16:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', 'I')f I had been ordered to torture you, I would have.


You should re-enlist.



So I can torture you?


Do you actually have a desire to do so?



Your the one asking me to re-enlist.. My desire is irrelevant. Have you always known you were a bottom?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Voice_du_More » Thu 07 May 2009, 02:43:12

I do acknowledge your point Jason that most people are born and will never rise very far under the current world system (or any that has existed.) I guess what at least some of us try to work toward is a more ethical world. Simply rolling over and letting despotism reign unchecked does'nt sound like much fun. I think the sad part about where Americans are right now is well,...we still like our entitlements and amenities too much and they keep coming (relatively speaking) so no need for radical change.

Obama did what we expected (or feared) he would. He ran an amazing centrist campaign and then veered sharply left after getting elected on some issues and sharply right on others. He is a perfect candidate for President of the world, he knows how to appear to be a man of the people while largely serving the interests of those who have power. G.W. was the same way and alot of us voted for him too.

Is it worth making a big fuss? I don't know. If more people were willing to make a fuss it might be.

I was considering escalating things with this post, but I have seen many of your posts and you are a smart guy. I just don't understand why so many people in America today are so quick to say that torture is ok. It would not be ok if you or someone you loved was taken off the street corner and flown to some secret location would it? Without evidence other than what?

And it goes much deeper than just that, I'm sure you are aware. We have everyday people out trying to stop terrorists now. So say the wrong thing at Starbucks (like perhaps 'have you ever read the communist manifesto') and someone with their cell phone is on the tips network in minutes. It is the Red Scare all over again and now people are starting to use their access to some of this information for political advantage.

How do I know that? I must be an insider. America is in very deep trouble, not simply from oil, not simply from the hurricane that is going to detroy another US city later this year, not simply from the fact that the Lakers are going to win the NBA championship again, we are a nation without a moral center that also happens to be wielding enough military/industrial power to burn the modern world to the ground. It is only a matter of time before a truly immoral cadre gets their hand on the reigns.

And now that we are determined to put everyone who dares question us on a watch list we are just a few short steps away from gestapo land. I have no doubt that there are stasi type operations going on in this country and some of them are continuing even after the officals have said it should end. You got soccer mom sally and her cell phone buddies tailing people through the shopping mall. It's out of control and only a laying bare of the whole thing will start to get people's attention.

here are a list of some of the things I know (don't ask how you might be a rendition candidate if you knew.)

-first responders were recruited as early as 2002 to casually spy on you when they came to do fire inspections and other such things
-TIPS did not go away it just changed shape and started linking up with neighborhood watch groups and the so called infrastructure watch groups
-The FBI has been able to use your cell phone as a bug for at least four years and they do so regulary without a warrant
-The FBI is currently trying to expand their citizen assets under direction of the CIA (now there is a place to look for advice)
-Most electronic communications in the country (upwards of 70%) are captured by the NSA

I mean let's face it we are pretty much there right now when it comes to prison planet. You go over to the UK and there is literally a camera on every corner. How scared are we that we need to do these things? Or is it just that 9/11 gave us an excuse to do what we always wanted to do, to unleash the beast within?

All I know is that when a nation looses it's moral compass decline is not far behind. It may take a century, it may take 100 seconds, I don't know. I just know it is coming. Everyone in my family knows and has believed for decades that the government is filled with crooks and liars. They shine it on because they have jobs and food and get a vacation once in a while.

Anyways, I guess we could turn out to be like the Chinese people. They have been oppressed in one form or another by emperors since time immemorial and they appear to like it that way. Someone I knew from China told me that the opinion of alot of everyday Chinese is that as long as life itself continues as it did who cares who rules. I think alot of Americans probably feel the same way. We still have jobs, half of our retirement moneys, only a $1000 copay on medical expenses (unless it is catastrophic then you will get dropped.) We have 156 channels and the house is paid off.

There are days I ask myself why I did not cross the border into Canada years ago when I had the chance. I could be crunching data in Stockholm right now.

So I guess if you really want to have some type of hall of flames type discussion I'll read your posts. Don't expect me to get too worked up about it though. I know I took the first jab, but you are sporting a USSA flag and then saying torture is needed. If I read that wrong, my apologies.

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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Voice_du_More » Thu 07 May 2009, 02:54:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jasonraymondson', 'Y')our the one asking me to re-enlist.. My desire is irrelevant. Have you always known you were a bottom?


Nice. This isn't a cruising park is it? Has it become some type of pretext? The term 'doomer porn' has a meaning I am not aware of?

I am a born-again Christian Jason, so though I do get frustrated with the state of things from time to time, I also know that God's mercy in Jesus Christ is greater than any sin. I have known many people who were all manner of sinners (including homosexuals) before their conversion. I also wish that I had never heard of peak oil. No single issue has brought more sorrow to me than that. I would gladly go back to being ignorant of all of this if I could.

Sadistic threats and innuendo are far below a person of your intelligence. USSA is an odd thing to say because Stalin was by no means a socialist. He was a brutal dictator no matter what color of uniform he wore. He was every bit as evil as Adolf Hitler. Far right fascism and far left socialism are just names people try to paste over tyranny, nothing more.

America is in just as much danger from the radical nationalism that prevailed under Bush as from the potentially Big Brother type social control we are likely to see under Obama. It's all heading in the same direction.
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby jasonraymondson » Thu 07 May 2009, 03:54:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', '
')
So I guess if you really want to have some type of hall of flames type discussion I'll read your posts. Don't expect me to get too worked up about it though. I know I took the first jab, but you are sporting a USSA flag and then saying torture is needed. If I read that wrong, my apologies.

VdM



Read more of my posts. I am not inconsistent, I am just tired.

I have spoken out on many subject of similar conceptualized notions, but I do not possess the long-winded grandiloquence of many of the other posters.

so, night
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Jotapay » Thu 07 May 2009, 08:05:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'O')bama promised the people in the CIA who conducted the torture sessions that he would shield them from being prosecuted.

Obama pledges to protect the CIA torturers

Obama is responsible for covering up the identities of the CIA torturers and protecting them from prosecution. Under international law, anyone who is involved with torture, including government officials who protect the torturers, as Obama is doing, are complicit in the crime of torture.


I agree with that. Were you as vocally opposed to administration actions when it was Bush who was implementing torture policies? Have you seen all the memos from the attorney Yoo which basically paint him worse than the Nazi SS for the capacity to rationalize inhuman atrocities?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 May 2009, 11:40:53

Waterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Jotapay » Thu 07 May 2009, 12:43:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'W')aterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:


You didn't answer my question.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ere you as vocally opposed to administration actions when it was Bush who was implementing torture policies?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 May 2009, 13:20:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jotapay', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'W')aterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:


You didn't answer my question.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ere you as vocally opposed to administration actions when it was Bush who was implementing torture policies?


I was mainly opposed to the Bush administrations Iraq War policy, and called for the Congress to impeach Bush over it. Frankly, I didn't pay a lot of attention to the torture issue during the Bush administration.....I don't have much sympathy for the al qaida terrorists, the US congress wouldn't even pass a law outlawing waterboarding, and I saw "MoveOn.org" agitprop demonstrations of waterboarding on a visit to DC, and I figured that anything that a MoveOn.org person would volunteer to do couldn't be that bad. In fact, I think a good definition of torture might be that torture is something a MoveOn.org person won't volunteer to have done to them on a sunny afternoon in Washington DC.

I thought then the Iraq War was the biggest problem for the US. I still feel the same way now----I think Obama's expansion of the war in Afpak and his failure to keep his pledge to remove US troops from Iraq is a huge mistake, and is ultimately more damaging then Obama's failure to prosecute the CIA torturers.

I think its bizarre that Obama pretends to be so upset about 3 Al Qaida guys being water tortured, while he says nothing about the US "accidentally" blowing up more than 100 women and children in Afghanistan----is doing water torture on 3 al quada mass murdering religious nuts really that much worse then killing over a hundred innocent women and children? Which is really more criminal and outrageous anyway?

How about you, Jotapay?. Were you vocally opposed to administration actions when it was Bush who was implementing torture policies? :?:

and

Do you condemn Obama for protecting the CIA torturers from prosecution? :?:
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Jotapay » Thu 07 May 2009, 14:11:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'H')ow about you, Jotapay?.

1. Were you vocally opposed to administration actions when it was Bush who was implementing torture policies? :?:
2. Do you condemn Obama for protecting the CIA torturers from prosecution? :?:


1. Yes. When Bush was first elected, I decided to take a 'wait and see' approach with him. When Saddam said one month before the war, "You can come into my country and do anything you want! Inspect anything! I don't have WMD!" and Bush said, "No, we're not interested," I knew it was all a sham and rigged. I was ardently anti-Bush administration then because I knew he was lying about everything. Yes, I spoke out quite a bit against the war and torture that happened (Abu Ghraib, etc.).

2. I think Obama should actually go after the top officials who sanctioned and implemented torture (Porter J. Goss, John Yoo, Dick Cheney, Gen Michael Hayden) and then any minions who were actively involved administering the act.
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby rangerone314 » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:04:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Voice_du_More', 'S')adistic threats and innuendo are far below a person of your intelligence. USSA is an odd thing to say because Stalin was by no means a socialist. He was a brutal dictator no matter what color of uniform he wore. He was every bit as evil as Adolf Hitler. Far right fascism and far left socialism are just names people try to paste over tyranny, nothing more.

America is in just as much danger from the radical nationalism that prevailed under Bush as from the potentially Big Brother type social control we are likely to see under Obama. It's all heading in the same direction.

You make a good point about them... I think it was George Orwell who said the difference between communism and fascism is equivalent to the difference between cat s**t and dog s**t!
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby rangerone314 » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:07:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'W')aterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:

Is there a law against dangling someone over the edge of a building and threatening to drop them 30 floors?

How about a specific law against power-drilling holes in someone's eye sockets?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Sixstrings » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:08:31

Just so I have this straight.. if you sell somebody some weed in this country, you can do twenty years hard time. Torture some people to death gets you the Medal of Freedom. That about right?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby rangerone314 » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:21:38

Why is anyone aghast or astonished at recent events, like immorality is something new? People are always immoral hypocrites.

Compare torturing people to death in the 21st century to Native American genocide in the 19th century. How about seizing vast territories from Mexico, or taking over Hawaii from the natives?

How about the "Civil" War? Burning non-combatants homes to the grounds, buying essentially draft deferments, torching Atlanta to the ground? So much for freedom and self-determination. Northerners objected to Southern abuse of blacks as long as the blacks stayed in the South (convenient) but didn't do much about ghettos.

How about United Fruit Company's adventures in Latin America? Or the fact that most of those countries were essentially ruled from our embassies?

We're hardly unique in the world; Russia, China, France, Germany, England, etc you are either a victim or an abuser. Humans are a savage and self-concerned species, it has been this way for countless thousands of years, and it will be this way until humanity dies out with the whimper of peak oil.

What makes us ALMOST unique is the extent that we don't usually want to get our own hands dirty. Its easier to have corrupt Arab, East European or Iranian gov torture people. Most American's like their meat under plastic wrap at the grocery store but they don't have the balls to kill a chicken themselves. Example my parents scoffing at idea of me raising chickens and killing some of them for food. I told them at least I have the moral courage to do the dirty work for myself.
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:29:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rangerone314', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'W')aterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:

Is there a law against dangling someone over the edge of a building and threatening to drop them 30 floors?

How about a specific law against power-drilling holes in someone's eye sockets?


Yup. Dangling someone and threatening them or power-drilling them might be considered terroristic threatening and criminal assault and attempted murder, all felonies. No one would volunteer to be powerdrilled or dangled off a building. The police would stop it if they saw it.

However, waterboarding clearly isn't a crime. The Congress considered specific legislation to outlaw it, but didn't pass it a couple of years ago and people are doing it all the time without being charged with crimes---just check out YouTube....And I personally saw some folks voluntarily doing it in DC on a nice sunny spring day. The crowd hissed and applauded the show but nobody called the cops to report a crime. No police strolling by stopped to arrest anyone. It wasn't a crime.

Maybe Obama should send a bill to Congress to make waterboarding a crime?
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:40:40

There is a federal statute against torture in general: Here is a discussion of it from a recent Eric Holder DOJ brief:

[T]orture is defined as “an extreme form of cruel and inhuman treatment and does not include lesser forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. . . . ” 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(2). Moreover, as has been explained by the Third Circuit, CAT requires “a showing of specific intent before the Court can make a finding that a petitioner will be tortured.” Pierre v. Attorney General, 528 F.3d 180, 189 (3d Cir. 2008) (en banc); see 8 C.F.R. § 1208.18(a)(5) (requiring that the act “be specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering”); Auguste v. Ridge, 395 F.3d 123, 139 (3d Cir. 2005) (“This is a ‘specific intent’ requirement and not a ‘general intent’ requirement” [citations omitted.] An applicant for CAT protection therefore must establish that “his prospective torturer will have the motive or purpose” to torture him. Pierre, 528 F.3d at 189; Auguste, 395 F.3d at 153-54 (“The mere fact that the Haitian authorities have knowledge that severe pain and suffering may result by placing detainees in these conditions does not support a finding that the Haitian authorities intend to inflict severe pain and suffering. The difference goes to the heart of the distinction between general and specific intent.”)

------------

Waterboarding doesn't seem to be "extreme" enough to fit the definition of torture under the federal torture law.....thats why no one is ever arrested for waterboarding even though people are doing it in public squares and posting their videos on YouTube all the time. However, if someone "drilled" someone else's eyeball in public, as ranger suggested above, I'll bet that would be torture under the federal statute as well as assault and a host of other crimes, and the police would quickly stop it.
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Re: US interrogators may have killed dozens, tortured to death

Postby dinopello » Thu 07 May 2009, 15:52:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rangerone314', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', 'W')aterboarding is not currently a crime in the U.S. The US Congress tried to pass a law to outlaw it a few years ago but stopped out of fear that Bush would veto it.

Now that Obama is President, it is time for the Congress to pass a law outlawing waterboarding to see if Obama will actually sign it. :idea:

Is there a law against dangling someone over the edge of a building and threatening to drop them 30 floors?

How about a specific law against power-drilling holes in someone's eye sockets?


Yup. Dangling someone and threatening them or power-drilling them might be considered terroristic threatening and criminal assault and attempted murder, all felonies. No one would volunteer to be powerdrilled or dangled off a building. The police would stop it if they saw it.

However, waterboarding clearly isn't a crime. The Congress considered specific legislation to outlaw it, but didn't pass it a couple of years ago and people are doing it all the time without being charged with crimes---just check out YouTube....And I personally saw some folks voluntarily doing it in DC on a nice sunny spring day. The crowd hissed and applauded the show but nobody called the cops to report a crime. No police strolling by stopped to arrest anyone. It wasn't a crime.

Maybe Obama should send a bill to Congress to make waterboarding a crime?


What about making prisoners stack themselves into pyramids naked? Is there a law against that ? Didn't Bush send a bunch of soldiers to jail for stuff like that ?
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