WTF was the one that thought WBing was torture. I didn't want his simple head to explode by throwing too much information on his plate at once.
Originally Posted by pjorourke
pjorourke said: "But,
you can't use information derived from torture under our legal system -- so WBing murderers would serve no purpose. I don't know why you want to change that."
Pathetic. Give it up PJ.
Let me recap for you.
1) I don't think WB is torture, but WTF and the ACLU crowd think it is. To each his own.
pjorourke said:
But, you can't use information derived from torture under our legal system -- so WBing murderers would serve no purpose. I don't know why you want to change that.
Make up your mind. And beyond that,
everyone thought it was torture until Conservative pin-heads (and to quote one of ATL's sigs, if you think i'm talking about you, then i'm probably talking about you) needed to justify Bush's using it.
Everyone. That's
EVERYONE.
2) All is fair in love and war -- with the caveat that in the later, you must be the winner.
Please answer the question - you contorting yourself like this is getting painful to watch. If a war criminal is captured, is it legal to commit war crimes against that person? Your previous posts suggest you believe it is, but you seem afraid to come out and say yes to the question. Come on, man up!
3) Law enforcement is different than defense -- different rules (call them laws if you want) different standards - always has been. While WB could be/should be/is reasonable for warfare, it may not fit the standards of our system of jurisprudence -- see previous -- different rules.
Blah blah blah. If it's not torture, then it's not torture. Period. So why not use it? This "war is different" canard is is just another dodge. The rules are pretty clear. You don't torture, in war or otherwise. So if WB is allowed in war, then it's not torture (according to you). If it's not torture, then there should be no regulations against it for any other purposes.