CIA Blogger Fired for Criticizing Torture Policy
PetManimal writes "A contract software developer for the CIA who had a blog on the CIA intranet was fired after criticizing torture in an entry. The title of the post: something along the lines of 'Waterboarding is Torture and Torture is Wrong.' The Washington Post reports Christine Axsmith is not the only CIA blogger -- the spy agency uses blogs to let agents and other workers share information and ideas." From the article: "Hundreds of blog posts appear on Intelink. The CIA says blogs and other electronic tools are used by people working on the same issue to exchange information and ideas. CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano declined to comment on Axsmith's case but said the policy on blogs is that 'postings should relate directly to the official business of the author and readers of the site, and that managers should be informed of online projects that use government resources. CIA expects contractors to do the work they are paid to do.'"
2) For those wondering - waterboarding
Charming thing for a civilized country to be practicing & defending.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
and saw "Nothing for you to see here. Please move along." Wow, they work fast.
I don't get it... the CIA doesn't torture people. The USA doesn't torture people. Why should the CIA care if a contractor says torture is wrong? They must have fired her for goofing off on company time/equipment.
--
make install -not war
Im I the only one wondering what the hell this has to do with our online rights?? It was on a private INTRANET for god sakes...
Keep a low profile.
-- www.globaltics.net
Political discussion for a new world
The Gestapo wouldn't take that shizzil.
If an employee does something you don't like, as an employer you can easily fire them for some other infraction... just dust off your unused copy of the employee handbook.
It won't be long before bloggers are put on the same list as communists, terrorists and bad James Bond films.
Where do I find my online bill of rights? I'm sure I've got rights that have been violated. I've been trolled. I've been insulted and corrected, publicly without an inquiry or hearing. Who enforces these rights? To whom do I bring my grievances?
she was only fired and not tortured for her views on torture.
I was working for a huge meat packing company and we had internal company blogs so we could share ideas and generally make the company run better. You know, totally Web 2.0. I am a committed vegan so I posted a blog entry called "Meat is Murder and Murder is Wrong" and guess what happened to me? I was fired! Can you believe that!?!?!? Freaking fascists.
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
Have any of the posters expressed approval of the government or CIA in a non-work related fashion and not been fired?
If they fire contractors who "waste" time, that's okay.
If they only fire contractors who "waste" time criticizing the government, that's not okay.
-Eric
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Newsflash: If you piss off your boss by publically whining about their policies and practices, you can be probably be fired at any company in the world.
This isn't really news. It happens a lot in the working world.
http://econo-girl.blogspot.com/
from the BoingBoing story a day or two ago..
A contract software developer for the CIA was kidnapped and tortured by the CIA. Details to follow.
http://religiousfreaks.com/Make as much noise about torture as possible.
Developers: We can use your help.
I fail to see how this even begins to fit the "News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters" moniker.
Oh, it was on a BLOG on an INTRANET - guess that must make it newsworthy. Feh - this is partisan posting and nothing else.
Here we have a contractor who did something the employer didn't like. Employer fires contractor. End of story.
Having consulted for 10 years, I can tell you that generally contracts are written to allow either party to terminate their agreement for almost any reason with almost no notice. If you're lucky you'll get legal to make it two weeks in cases where you violate the terms, but I'm guessing legal at the CIA can dictate very tight terms.
What happens when you are the one on the board because... *gasp* a mistake!
Have you fscked your local propeller head today?
Your ideas intrigue me. Please tell me more about how torturing children will keep them safe from terrorists. Also, I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.
... looks like a cover to a rap album.
Certainly I can understand the issues involved with firing someone who posts an anti-torture blog. It just has "bad idea" written all over it. On the other hand this was an internal blog that she would have had to have written at work. I strongly suspect that rather than a "blog" these things are meant to just be an internal work diary recording what projects you've been working on, progress you've made and ideas relating to those projects, so that others that may have tangential interest in those projects can stay updated. The sort of thing where person A says "I really need something like X", they can do a quick search of the internal system and find that person B has is working on a project similar to X, and that in fact it will also do Y and Z which, now that they think about it, person A would also be interested in. Person A can then get in touch with person B and save themselves much duplication of effort. If that's the case then you have to admit that spending work time long writing Op-Ed pieces in your work diary instead of whatever you are supposed to be doing might be a good reason for someone to terminate your work contract.
This is also the sort of thing where, despite needing to really know a bit more to be able to make any reasonable judgement, we are simply never going to hear anymore due to secrecy constraints. I guess that means I'll just flag it as "mildly dubious" and keep an eye out for any more of this sort of shenanigans.
Craft Beer Programming T-shirts
and the victim is unlikely to actually die if this is done by skilled practitioners.
Who'd they practice on before they became so skilled?
Gov't Torturer: I only lost 3 this week.
Superior: Good enough. Here's your "Skilled in Waterboarding" cert. And no, I don't want to know what you did with the bodies.
Gov't Torturer: Thanks. BTW, you might want to avoid the "mystery meat" at the cafeteria.
An intraweb is still a web.
Assuming it was still on a website, I think the word `blog` still holds.
This isn't really a moral or rights issue, it was an internal company blog that was supposed to pertain to the contractor's work. What it is, however, is draconian and foolish. Draconian because it would have been much more effective to discuss this with the employee before pulling out the pink slips. Foolish because of the very real stifling effect it will have on what others say and the kind of culture that will promote. A culture in which open discussion of ideas and up-from-the-bottom thinking are discouraged is dangerous for any organization, but especially for an intelligence organization. It also misses the point of blogs. It appears Jack Ryan would have been fired in this CIA.
So, let us review. A software developer had access to a blog set up specifically for collaborating on software issues. She instead uses it as an opinion journal, and even go so far as to reveal classified information that she has seen in the course of her previous job. Regardless of the clearance required to access the site, she shouldn't have been using the resource the way she was and she certainly shouldn't have been discussing interogation transcripts in her roll as a software developer!
Being fired seems like the logical concequence.
Sounds like the contractor was being paid to do one thing but was instead "blogging" about this. Title should read "contractor fired for improper use of company time."
Criticize your employer and be prepared for the consequences, including job termination, even if you are 100% correct. No one should be surprised. Hopefully the woman in the article has another job lined up.
....is beyond me. People are writing things about their companies on blogs and getting fired for it. Why is that such a suprise? If belittle your company in a public place and hurt their image, why shouldn't you be fired.
Now, this was an internal blog that was actually used BY the CIA employees to discuss information that may be needed...this type of post was uncalled for and deserved a punishment, though maybe a suspension would do. Blogs are nothing but a way to get in trouble.
That which does not kill me only postpones the inevitable.
> (tell that to the burka wearing clitoris missing women)
I call bullshit. Do you think the situation for women has gotten much better now that Afganistan is free from the Taliban? How about the situation for women in Saudi Arabia or other "friendly" Islamic countries?
Implying that we have invaded other countries for the good of women worldwide is complete bullshit. We invaded Iraq because Bush wanted a Middle East country to bitch-slap and Iraq looked like the easiest target. Boy, how wrong that turned out to be. Ironically, Iraq was probably the most progressive in the treatment of women... although that still doesn't say much.
Maybe if you want to keep your job you should keep your mouth shut and not criticize your employeer. There are plenty of people who can fight the fight for you, we are all well aware that the CIA practices waterboarding on foreign nationals on a regular basis. And occationally it is practiced in government institutions against American citizens (prisons and mental hospitals).
It has shown many times that torture often produces falses confessions, so I'm skeptical of its effectiveness for gathering information. I will not deny its effectiveness for punishment though. Punishment that leaves no scars is a step up from the usual beatings that take place.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
Go read the actual article: she was fired for writing about the contents of a transcript of an interrogation she read.
This was undoubtedly at least SECRET codeword information, and she posted it on a network where, with certainty, not everyone on the network had been "read into" the compartment. In other words, she violated "need to know."
So they pulled her clearance, and since clearance was required for her job, they fired her.
She's lucky they didn't arrest her. Dammit, "I don't like this" is not a sufficient reason for violating classification.
I call bullshit. Do you think the situation for women has gotten much better now that Afganistan is free from the Taliban?
If by "better" you mean "women are no longer dragged out into what used to be a soccer field in front of a crowd at lunchtime and shot in the head for daring to teach their daughters to read," then... yes, better.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
obviously, if they are using blogs for information management, then we really do need a new 'intelligence' agency, or at least they need a better IT dept.
the only permanence in existence, is the impermanence of existence.
I am amazed that the parent has been misunderstood and moderated as such. The above post should at the very least be "interesting". Folks, you need to leave your political and social baggage at the door, especially when given mod points. /. is definitly going down hill in a hurry!
I'm actually surprised to see one of these "company blogs" being used by someone not in the marketing or PR department. The poster should have been a little more cognizant of where she was posting this information. I thought that most people realized that internal blogs were strictly there for marketing/progaganda purposes.
I'm also kind of curious about why the poster didn't follow Rule #1 of contracting...do your job, stay invisible, and collect your paychecks. This has been true in every place I've worked where contractors were used. Any mistakes by a contractor meant they were instantly out the door, which explains why a lot of sysadmin jobs are contracted. Mail server went down for an hour? New sysadmin from the agency tomorrow.
Even with that though, I can't believe they'd go to the trouble of firing her. They're within their rights to delete the posting, since it's their blog on their intranet. It shows a little paranoia on their part about not letting unofficial opinions get out. Which is wierd, because that was what company blogging was supposed to be all about; "open, spontaneous communication" among the employees.
Don't work for the Central Intelligence Agency.
Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
I can't tell if Sir Buzz is being fecetious or actually believes what he wrote. Whichever it is, his statement needs to be countered, lest someone actually buy into that line of nonsense.
"osake no hou ga, biiru yori ii" to omotteiru.
Is this issue really about torture, or about breaking company policy? Although I wouldn't put it past the CIA to fire someone who crticises their policies, this looks like a simple case of workplace internet misuse.
And, you gottat be thinking "Would you want to piss off an organization that is sanctioned to perform 'waterboarding'?
Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
I wish I hadn't commented so I could mod this funny.
It's not hard at all - take a look at his links.
Last post!
"If by "better" you mean "women are no longer dragged out into what used to be a soccer field"
Oh, that still happens, just not in the major cities. Town/Village centers suffice if there is a lack of a soccer field. Also they don't send out invitations or make public announcements. Smaller crowds but the end result is pretty much the same.
Are you saying that some bomb-chucking Arab is going to behave himself if we torture him and let him go? Or are we just torturing him to make ourselves feel better? Torture is an entry point for evil into our world. I can think of situations where it might prevent more evil from coming into the world, and maybe it's justified in those cases. Being able to say "We showed HIM what happens if he messes with us" is not one of those cases.
Unauthorised use of a government computer system. The way they are using that law, the government can make anything an employee does that the government doesn't like "unauthorised". Go straight to jail. How soon before people are arrested for similar postings from a government library computer? Just wait till the US nationalises the internet, in the interest of homeland security. In the old USSR, any action that wasn't specifically allowed in writing was unauthorised, and a punishable crime. Wheras in a free country, anything not explicitly prohibited by law is NOT a crime. Now the USA is heading in that direction, starting with government employees.
Wake up. You're next.
Every time I see a wake up call that the USA is becoming a totalitarian state, and expect to see Americans rise up by the millions, all that really happens is some people whine on a blog, and the rest don't even notice. You folk don't deserve one hundredth of the few freedoms that you still have (for the time being).
God help the earth.
I call bullshit.
I was about to call bullshit too, but since you came by yourself...
You may be sarcastic, but you were actually dead-on. The US and CIA do not torture. It's the evildoers who torture. It's the Iranians and North Koreans who torture. The Taliban and Saddam tortured. The Palestinians and Lebanese torture - that's what they're doing to the captured Israeli soldiers as we speak. The whole idea about American torture was made up by the French to keep the international community from finding out about their own torture programs. This is why we need to stand by our president and Israel and stop this axis of evil.
The CIA blogger was spreading false information. I think firing a liar is the least they had the right to do.
Interesting to see the latest blog entry of the econo-girl. She claims she went public to make it harder for her former employees to take any further action against her. I'm sure the original (internal) blog was not meant to cause harm, but I'd say at this stage she should stop digging a deeper hole for herself, find a good lawyer, and maybe take a trip out of the country for a while.
The current quibble is whether this ammendment applies to non-citizens as it does to citizens.
It's pretty sad that the only thing apparently keeping the government from torturing us is that some people have a right not to be tortured.
I also find it very interesting that you infer terrorism == islam == ancient african custom that happens to be in force in an area that is mostly muslim. Israel bad Israel strange construction. Settle occupied land long time. Aboriginals hate good. peace at any cost Yep. Equitable peace at any cost. Do you mean you prefer this forever war?
...and as a final thought
I put it to you that Evil does not exist. It's a figment of your religious mind. In reality, people do bad things for reasons that seem good at the time.
I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.
Couldn't they just demonstrate to him how nice their torture policy really is?
:)
A couple of electrodes expertly placed will have him singing praise for the CIA in his blogs in no time
Will program for karma.
I was not "Trolling". The fact is I don't trust "reports", they tend to be "one sided". People have it in for GWB, and most of the time I might agree. But the problems at the CIA and the contractor are probably have little to do with "policy" of "torture", and more than likely fall somewhere else.
But just because she happened to "blog" about "torture", that MUST be the reason for the firing. uh huh right.
Why is this on the front page of slashdot anyways?
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
They're good at that kind of thing, you know. They're the US espionage and assasination department; they specialize in killing people, and hiding the details on how it was done, and denying that they were ever involved. That's their job; along with secretly destabilizing foreign countries from within, and generally advancing US interests overseas.
The CIA is the real threat from the USA; the one that acts against leader, diplomats, and policy makers; not jjust the big, clumsy, noisy guys blowing up angry peasants in their little desert huts. They're the ones that decide how articles of surrender get written; and how wars get decided even when there never actually was a war in the first place. They're the ones who silently put the guns to the heads of the "bad guys" children, and bring them into line; they're the ones who quietly control the world, moreso than governments or diplomats even could.
Don't fuck with the CIA. If you do, your luck can turn sour really, really fast. Your house might burn down; your kids might die; your "drug habit" might mysteriously land you in jail (even if you've never touched drugs in your life), etc. These people are the guys who took on the KGB, and WON. They're not to be trifled with.
You forgot to add this to your list:
"Torture is wrong"
Toture hurts our efforts in the war on terrorism, gets U.S. soldiers killed, and should not be the practice of any race that calls itself civilized. Do you want to argue that torture is not bad? Please feel free. You will have has much luck at that as trying to say molesting children is good or beating the head of a baby in with a baseball bat is acceptable. And nice try putting politics into this since most Republicans with morals know torture is wrong too. Only evil people think torture is good.
Every government has a couple/few spooky agencies that will do things that go miles beyond ethical boundaries of the vast majority of people. Like paying and training humans for an army to kill, it must be done.
A very unplesant fact of life.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Evil comes in many forms, which form will you take?
Well, we don't have to guess for you: you are evil, and you have just shown us what form you take: that of a cynical war monger. You want to see evil? Look in the mirror.
I can't speak for those "other countries", but the Canadian constitutional applies to everyone, citizen and non-citizen alike, just like the rest of the laws.
It's also why we're reluctant to extradite death-penalty cases unless we get assurances that the death penalty won't apply. Once they're here, they have the same right not to be put to death for a crime as anyone else.
It must work - our murder rate is 1/3 the US rate.
It's a place of employment, not a public forum for discussing social policy. Posting personal opinions on a company network is asking for trouble.
Also... people... read the article. It indicates her "security badge was revoked". If the government yanked or suspended her security clearance, she would no longer be able to access classified material or work on classified projects. If this is indeed what happened (the wording is a bit vague), then her employer had no choice but to fire her, as she was no longer able to perform her duties. BAE Systems is mostly a government defense contractor, so all of their programming positions may have required security clearance.
She made a dumb move by flagrantly criticizing the organization that contracted her employer. I know there are more than a few places where I would have gotten into severe trouble for doing exactly what she did. I'm not saying I'm sure I would have been fired, but it's something to at least think about first. Sniping at the organization that hired your employer is *never* wise, and I honestly wonder what was going through this woman's head. In the race to scream about censorship, I think some of us are forgetting that her decision was ill-advised by professional standards.
On the other hand, I would question the thought process of whomever decided to pull her security clearance. Was this decision subject to the normal procedure or review? Did the government overseer overreact (or intentionally respond) in a way that forced BAE to fire her without good cause, or was this another incident in a long line of discontented grumblings that made it look like her political attitudes went against the contracting agency? If this is the case, it may have been wise to yank her clearance. Having people work with organizations they despise is not particularly prudent, especially when it involves exposure to sensitive issues. This could be knee-jerk management, it could be pettiness, or it could be a prudent handling of an employee whose attitude was increasingly hostile to the organization for which she was employed. Without further details, I'm not sure there is a way to figure out which of these it is.
---
According to the latest ruleset, this post should be modded as Vorpal Flamebait +5.
I think its checkered past speaks for itself... botched coup's... political assasinations... what do these "do-gooders", even like Valerie Plame, think they are getting into? Like they are gonna change the agency? ROFL!!
I'm striving to underdstand your logic. You claim that the USA is civilized because it has laws banning torture. Yet, in spite of the fact that We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, there is uncertainty over whether the illegality of torture applies to non-citizens. This would suggest that non-citizens are not all men, but something else. Indeed, this wholly undermines any claims that the outlawing of torture are based on moral considerations. How can it be moral not to torture me, but to torture my neighbour?
The USA may guarantee freedom of speech. But it doesn't gaurantee freedom from execution from the state -- and many other things. Furthermore, when you think about recent concepts such as 'free speech zones', you see that the utility of freedom of speech extends only as far as the 'right' can be excercised -- which in the current US political climae is not very far at all.
Finally, if you use countries that practice infanticide or honor killing as your yardstick, then something is wrong. After Abu Ghraib, I heard people like yourself pointing out that 'at least we aren't as bad as Saddam was'. This sort of reasoning strikes me as very worrying.
Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
From Baby it's cold outside
The editor who let this one through needs to seriously reconsider it.
It can't be take back, but some kind of reconsideration is necessary.
Clearly the woman did the wrong thing at the wrong place.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Oh, that still happens, just not in the major cities. Town/Village centers suffice if there is a lack of a soccer field. Also they don't send out invitations or make public announcements. Smaller crowds but the end result is pretty much the same.
No, it's not the same. Yes, Afghanistan has long been a fractured place with a wide range of local cultural pockets ranging from Cool to Insane. But the Taliban moved in and said, "Now there's a central authority here, and a dominant theocratic culture that we will enforce at the point of a gun, and one feature of that culture, country-wide, is: women who try to get a job (even if we've killed her husband), or who teach daughters to read will be put to death."
Of course it's horrid that there are spots in that country where that same attitude still exists. But the difference is that now there is no longer a "government" that directly embraces and celebrates that medieval nonsense by actually having government employees who run around and do that evil crap. It will be at least a generation before it becomes culturally embarassing, for more like a majority of Afghanis, to have that stuff happening in their more rural areas. But the difference is crucial: before, it was the law of land, and now it's not.
Just like it took a while before some people in the deep south of the US stopped openly lynching blacks (and getting a nudge-nudge-wink-wink from the local law enforcement). Now, such a think is loudly, and instantly condemned from every meaningful corner of the culture, and perpetrators of such crimes get what they deserve. The Taliban was still running the courts and what passes for law enforcement in Afghanistan just five years ago. This stuff takes a little while - but to suggest that there's no difference between the two conditions is absurd. Both in philosophical and practical terms.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
Reduce, reuse, cycle
It must work - our murder rate is 1/3 the US rate.
I know someone will point out correlation isn't causation, but I think this does lend some support to my theory that everyone putting all of thier statements in the form of a question would help people get along better, eh?
It makes sense to me. If you bite the hand that feeds you, you should expect it to quit feeding you.
What quibble are you talking about? The current administration has asserted that even US citizens apprehended on US soil can be classified as enemy combatants and held outside of the usual (criminal, military) prison systems.
The quibble I'm concerned with is whether the laws of the nation apply to everyone, or if the president and his cronies are exempt.
But hey, it's a free country, so if you want to be ignorant and WRONG, go right ahead.
i find it a little uncivilized that there is question as to weither the Bill of Rights applys to non-citizens, but im pritty damn sure that your speeding laws apply no matter what country you were born in
By the plain text of the language, the same holds true of the US Constitution. It doesn't use the word 'citizen' at all - it speaks of the rights of 'people' instead. But the Constitution has always been seen as nothing but an inconvenience to the rulers, and they mostly don't even bother to pretend to follow it anymore.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
...whether the person being tortured did it or not.
Confessing to a crime is always better than being tortured by another.
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
If they were good at it N.Korea would ahve a new leader, Castro wouldn 't be here, Bin laden would be dead, Saddam would have been killed, and weapons of mass destruction would have been found, because they would have put them there.
Use your brain.
oh, and it was a Female.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Maybe I'm just a pinko leftie traitor who should be waterboarded until I see the light, but it seems to me that administrations that pay attention to the laws of the land generally don't have their initiatives declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court and are rarely handed opinions that include justices writing on the record that the administration may be guilty of war crimes. Just a thought.
Then again, there are still people who are convinced McCarthy was a hero, so I guess there will be people who think it's a fine, moral, upstanding thing to split legal hairs over exactly who is exempt from cruel and unusual punishment.
And yes, it's splitting hairs. Please imagine the Founding Fathers, sitting around drafting the Bill of Rights. "Hey, Benjamin, you think all men are endowed with certain inalienable rights, or is it just U.S. citizens?" "Are you kidding, Thomas? Foreigners aren't real people. Fuck due process. Whip 'em till their backs bleed, fine by me!"
It was an internal company blog, using the company's facilities (paid for my the US taxpayer, not Mrs. Axsmith), so it's like e-mail. A little discretion should be shown. We all know about firings due to e-mail -- it happens all the time.
BTW, Mrs. Axsmith is also lawyer, so I wonder if she should have known better.
Your moral relevance stance, which is essentially "we're not as bad as the worst", is pathetic. And the sucking sound of that giant information vacuum operating around your head must drive you crazy.
So when will we have a White House press release accusing Washington Post of endangering National Security by revealing that the CIA has records of using waterboarding torture?
Watch the +5 posts in this story. How much you wanna bet it's all about Bush and the CIA is evil, when the story is about blogging? It's funny how no offtopic mods hit those posts.
The story is in YRO - Your Rights Online. It's not about blogging per se, but about losing your job while exercising your right to speak out about government-sponsored torture.
If you're all that upset, why don't you blog about all the GOOD things torture provides:
Gee, I guess when it comes to the good things about torture, I'm pretty much drawing blanks ... but I'm sure that if you give the CIA a few days, they'll find someone who's gone through it who is willing to say (under threat of more torture) that waterboarding isn't "really" torture.
Torture is just stupid. It gets you inaccurate information, and provides rationalization for your enemies to go that much further. There IS no up side.
War monger? I hate war. But I hate Hitlers of the world MORE.
There is a choice, Chamberlain or Churchill. People called Churchill a war monger. Chamberlain came back with a piece of paper and it NEARLY cost Britain its soverignty.
I guess it is so much easier to call people names.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
Regardless of where you work, if you don't agree with the perceived standards and practices of your employer, look for a new job.
If you are religious, you may want to pass on the job offer in the abortion clinic. If you oppose alcohol, accepting the position at Budweiser may not prove to be a great decision. Accepting the gig with the CIA was the first in what appears to be a line of poor decisions Axsmith made.
Long live free will!
"Does this wine taste funny to you?" -- Socrates
Here are some statistics for you. Not exactly a "looming massive imbalances in sex ratios"... That info was pretty easy to find. Maybe next time you should search for it before you post. Thanks!
India -
at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 1.07 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 1.02 male(s)/female
total population: 1.06 male(s)/female (2006 est.)
China -
at birth: 1.12 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.13 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.91 male(s)/female
total population: 1.06 male(s)/female (2006 est.)
United States -
at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 1 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.72 male(s)/female
total population: 0.97 male(s)/female (2006 est.)
Worldwide -
at birth: 1.06 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 1.03 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.79 male(s)/female
total population: 1.01 male(s)/female (2006 est.)
If you must!
I guess I'm not sure why you think that the word "online" obviously only means the public internet. It certainly didn't used to mean that as recently as 10-12 years ago. Before that "online", just meant electronic communications, sometimes just via a private dialup BBS.
Slashdot only has a few limited categories (which is a mistake IMO), so the category definitions tend to get stretched beyond the literal definitions of them. While this isn't literally "My Rights Online", since I don't have access to private government intelligence websites, it's certainly someones rights online.
AccountKiller
So either one must torture captured suspects, or do nothing and 'take it in the ass'. No middle ground, like standard police interrogation techniques, gathering intelligence via interviews, forensics, etc. Wow.
Ever thought of interviewing for Fox News or Crossfire? Oh wait, that one's gone now.. hah
It would be sad, yet somehow amusing in a black-humour kind of way, if people who argued as you do found themselves in an interrogation room someday themselves.
ERROR 144 - REBOOT ?
You're right - correlation isn't causation.
Take the murders caused by hand guns out of the US stats, and our murder rates are similar.
Guns don't kill - stupid people with guns kill.
Per capita, Canada has more firearms, but WAY less hand guns, than the US. There's the causative difference - pretty much unregulated hand gun ownership.
The UK and Germany are signatories of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), and have both integrated the chapters into their respective legislatures. See Article Ten of the ECHR, which concerns itself with, and is entitled, the right to freedom of expression, and Article Three, which prohibits torture regardless of nationality.
CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano declined to comment on Axsmith's case but said the policy on blogs is that 'postings should relate directly to the official business of the author and readers of the site, and that managers should be informed of online projects that use government resources. CIA expects contractors to do the work they are paid to do.'
Tomorrow's story will be, "Axsmith was fired for numerous reasons completely unrelated to his blog entry, which we spent last night inventing. Paul Gimigliano has been fired for not knowing when to employ liberal amounts of whitewash."
Stop-Prism.org: Opt Out of Surveillance
And if a company foolishly terminates someone for stating something they didn't like they should be prepared to be taken to task for it. Nobody should be surprised she's complaining.
The real irony here is that if we had committed as many troops to Afghanistan as we have to Iraq, we might actually have been able to create a true democratic state there with actual security in more places than the capital city, and Bush might have had his shining beacon of democracy in the Muslim world, which is what he was trying to get Iraq to be.
Afghanistan was the right war at the right time. Iraq was the wrong war at the wrong time, and used up and continues to use up resources that should have been used to finish the job we started in Afghanistan, where now the Taliban can continue to survive and raid small towns because there are not enough troops to guard them or train Afghanis to guard them.
If by "better" you mean "women are no longer dragged out into what used to be a soccer field in front of a crowd at lunchtime and shot in the head for daring to teach their daughters to read," then... yes, better.
Nah, now they are forced to suicide like Turkey makes its females that violate honor.
You've got a good point.
There is a lot of controversy over this, even in gov't circles, believe it or not. On one hand, you are right, the intelligence field is a world that operates in a very murky, semi-legal, dirty world. Sometimes, the only way to get information from a determined enemy is to do bad things to good people to get them to provide info. That could mean deliberately compromising an individual in an influencial position using drugs, sex, money, gambling or other shady vices, it could mean finding people with a grudge and plying them with money, drugs, sex, or all three.
The use of interrogation to obtain information from an enemy prisoner is always touchy. You have to know the person's attitudes about his employer. Is he patriotic? Has he a weak spot in his feelings? Can we expand on that? If he is a strong supporter or a fanatic, then the problem is compounded and made more difficult. The use of environental factors to reduce a person's resistance to interrogation does not necessarily have to include what the law would call torture. That could include such things as sleep deprivation, disturbance of the sleep/wake cycle, isolation from fellow prisoners or outside news, etc.
The use of such techniques as waterboarding are controversial because they do not necessarily include the deliberate infliction of pain - but DO inflict mental anguish through inciting a fear of what one's captors may do to you next. Remember - many of the people we have kept prisoner are from cultures where torture is a common method of interrogation. The CIA uses the fear this incites in their prisoners to influence them to talk, and in the heat of the overall conflict, it is remarkably easy to convince oneself that taking just that one small step further won't hurt.
There are those that would argue that subjecting these people to harsher methods of interrogation are necessary because the people we are holding are trained to withstand the legal methods we are allowed to use. That is the heart of the controversy, and there are arguments on both sides.
Myself, I tend to come down on the side of more civilized conventions. Not over how effective it may or may not be, but as soon as we gave up the high ground, we lose any protections we may have been able to claim from holding that high ground. That may put us at a disadvantage, but we've overcome such disadvantages before and come out on top.
"Money is truthful. If a man speaks of his honor, make him pay cash." Notebooks of Lazarus Long, Robert A. Heinlein
Fired "for" versus fired "after". There is a difference.
Of course, one doesn't expect the moonbat anti-ChimpyBusHitlerMcHalliburton crowd to catch this.
668: Neighbour of the Beast
I find interesting the cognitive dissonance that allows for members of the right-wing to claim that there is an objective moral authority above and beyond the laws of man on issues like gay rights but that only the law and points of technicalities of citizenship are all that matters when the ability to torture foreigners suspected of knowing terrorists is on the line. Pick one or the other, and if you pick the "objective moral authority" side, then do try and strain your brain to think of what Jesus would've thought of torturing people to save your own skin.
There's no quibble about whether the 4th, 5th, 6th, and 8th Amendments apply to our current law enforcement procedures. The restrictions are on the government, and they apply anywhere the government acts, and nowhere in the amendments is government only barred from action against citizens. Go, and see if you can find limitations to bar injustice against citizens only in the Constitution. Furthermore, given the results of Hamdan vs. Rumsfeld, it's pretty damn clear that torturing people is flat out illegal in the opinion of the Supreme Court.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
...the English language. Peaceful, not peaceable.
Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
"spy agency uses blogs to let agents and other workers share information and ideas"
Lets. Nice. A few years back CIA suspended a collection of workers for the summer accusing them of running a collaborative network in house without approval. Now that blogging is cool, they're allowing what amounts to the same thing?
It was being done anyway, and clearly the allowed channel is risky if you can get fired for writing the wrong things. I bet money the back-channel is up again.
You are checking your backups, aren't you?
re: It is against everything we stand for to torture someone, even if it meant that a terrorist suspect would go free. What about the School of the Americas? Isn't that torture training suposidly?
I can't speak for those "other countries", but the Canadian constitutional applies to everyone, citizen and non-citizen alike, just like the rest of the laws.
Only on Canadian Soil. The government is free to act as it pleases outside our country, same as the US. Our Supreme court has yet to rule (AFAIK) that the Canadian government needs to act within our constitutional limits on an international level.
That's the same escape the US government is using in Guantanamo. They are not in violation of the US constitution if we torture in Cuba.
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
"The current quibble is whether this ammendment applies to non-citizens as it does to citizens."
Nonsense. The amendment clearly restricts the authority of Government. It does NOT confer a Right on a Citizen: The Right already exists by virtue of the fact that they are a Person. (You remember that whole "We hold these truths to be self evident, blah blah, endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights..."
The Government has no authority to perform cruel and unusual punishment on any person. They are explicitly forbidden to do so by the Constitution. You are absolutely wrong, as is everybody who agrees with you, up to and including the President.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
We even have a "Bill of Rights" and an Amendment banning cruel and unusual punishment.
FWIW, I respect the Bill of Rights and the US constitution, and I think your forefathers were on the right track. However these documents should not bind the government to these rules only within the borders of the US.
But hey, the US is a free country so if you want to be snarky to the point of being petulant AND WRONG, then go right ahead.
Really? Free? Recall the McCarthy era, where books were banned. Is Mary Shelly's Frankenstein such a threat to the US security? Free my ass. Frankenstein was a banned book during that era.
And ask the prisoners in Guantanamo Bay what they think of US freedoms.
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
The USA may guarantee freedom of speech. But it doesn't gaurantee freedom from execution from the state -- and many other things. Furthermore, when you think about recent concepts such as 'free speech zones', you see that the utility of freedom of speech extends only as far as the 'right' can be excercised -- which in the current US political climae is not very far at all.
It must be awesome to be able to completely and utterly lack perspective. How can you, in the same post, say that using "honor killing countries" as a yardstick is "wrong", and yet you can say things like the political climate is "not very fall at all". The reason he has to used honor-killings as a yardstick is because of people like you have who have absolutely no perspective. Don't say the US political climate on free speach "isn't very far at all". That's ignorant. It's incredibly far. Where are the "free speech" zones in Germany that let me deny the Holocaust? Or is Germany an unfair yardstick too? Maybe you should try wearing a facist symbol in Italy.
What you really mean to say is the US doesn't do a very good job letting the people I agree with do whatever they want (like block traffic and disturb events.. the reason for "free speech zones"). You should try getting some "perspective". Then you want make incredibly stupid statements like "not very far at all"... Rational people just roll their eyes.
Want to bet on that?
Section 1 of the 14th Amendment -
Hmm, a goverment contractor critisizing the employer about something that is totally unrelated to their work. Is it suprising they were fired?
Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!
http://financialpetition.org/
The constitution of the US extends protections to all persons, not just citizens. This is quite obvious in the wording, albeit not explicit, as it always refers to citizens as a separate class from simply person where citizens are granted additional benefits (e.g. the vote). This has also held up numerous times in courts.
As for slaves, they were not counted as persons. Apparently neither are "enemy combatants".
It might be a bit offtopic here, but torture seems to be really have a comeback. And it IS popular, even by the average western voter. I guess for modern society it means back to square one: The middle ages (for people teaching evolution, please draw your inquisition card). Have fun!
when slashdot used to be about technology.
A slashdotter who didn't build his own computer is like a Jedi who didn't build his own lightsaber.
Yes, that was pretty horrible. That's why it is important that the coup plotters, the ones now illegally operating as authority inside DC, the ones who both hijacked the vote and are complicit in the 9-11 attacks need to be brought to justice, for murder, crimes against humanity, war crimes, arson, and etc. maybe a little RICO action as well.
The list of high level people who are asserting this grows larger, one of the latest ones is a retired US general, retired Major General Albert Stubblebine. His specialty is image analysis, he says, that based on his own research, 9-11 was an inside job based on the evidence, that there is some considerable shenanigans involved with the civilian planes and ay-rabs with razor knives _only_ destruction scenario, and that serious investigations are in order. Real. Damn. Serious. ones, not joke whitewash investigations.
You can argue with him or any other of the high level people now daring to speak out against the american murderous coup fascists, support them and their take over- or not, take the opposite tack-your choice. It is getting to the point there is no middle ground left, not to anyone even mildly interested in the subject of freedom, laws, the concepts of right and wrong, our history, and just where the moral high ground is.
So be it. Nations have been ripped apart before for much lesser reasons.
All I can say is, anyone who swallows the blood profits neocon fascist coup plotters fairy tale public conspiracy theory is a *complete and utter loon*, has a sub median IQ, and simply refuses to look at the evidence because it doesn't fit their pre conceived notions. And if you are "following their orders", you might want to rethink that seriously. Go ahead and extrapolate how bad this is going to get the longer those murderers are in charge and "deciding" things.
That there are a lot of planetary muslim idiot murderers no one argues against, ample evidence to show this is true, this is a fact. That the US (and Israel and the UK and some others) is/are now run by the same sort of murderers and liars is *also a fact*. The evidence is overwhelming now. 9-11 was a reichstagg fire event, a contrived allowed-to-happen "new pearl harbor" to quote one of their think tank coup plot scenarios, that was OPENLY PUBLISHED. I mean, c'mon now! This is as blatant as it can get!
If there is a crime, look first to "who profits". Flatfoot 101 work. Go ahead, look hard, who has profitted from this?
Not sure how much more evidence you need to see what is going on here, but if it is much more than what is available now, just count yourself in as a fascist and coup supporter and be done with it, at least be honest about it.
Or maybe it just means Canadians are horrible shots...
"But this one goes to 11!"
Another aspect here is that she is forming alliances with people who also disagree with the leadership, and that's bad. Now that others know how she feels, they may be inclined to share secrets with her, knowing that her sense of ethics may conflict with the leadership.
Bush might have had his shining beacon of democracy in the Muslim world, which is what he was trying to get Iraq to be.
I don't think you're correct. I think he wanted a shiny beacon of capitalism, but capitalism got in the way of itself.
War monger? I hate war. But I hate Hitlers of the world MORE.
Ah, the Hitler card: just define any group, nation, or political leader you don't like as a Nazi or Hitler, and all of a sudden, you think your position is justified. The irony is that that kind of simplistic us-vs-them thinking is pretty much what defines Nazis and Hitlers. People like you exist in all nations and all peoples, you mistake your self-righteous convictions for morality, and, in the end, you are just evil.
I guess it is so much easier to call people names.
You should know; you do it so often.
Perhaps a better one would be
CIA contractor removed from contract for NOT DOING HER JOB.
Misuse of government resources is a CLEAR violation of the oath she swore when she got her security clearance, agency policy, her company policy, and any modicum of professional ethics.
This is no different than her being asleep at her desk.
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
The woman in question was working for a CIA contractor, and the duties for which she was given access were software testing.
FYI, just having a security clearance is not enough to work at a particular facility. You need the requisite clearance AND access. Access is at the absolute discretion of whoever is running the facility.
Contractors in such a setting are always in a precarious circumstance. In many ways, they're encouraged to feel like part of the team, but they're not. Contractors who become nuisances or whose choices require the customer to spend time and effort usually get their access yanked.
At one place I worked, incoming contractors were explicitly cautioned about all the way in which some of their predecessors had gotten their access yanked. Because our customer was the only one the company had, losing your access to the customer's facitily meant you got fired. Some of the reasons that had resulted in losing access seemed incredibly petty.
I can think of many reasons this woman lost her access. The biggest problem is that she used her customer's computer system to criticize that very customer! As a contractor to the US government, she should have just known better than to critique foreign policy on a CIA intranet. A secondary problem is that she based her opinions on an interrogation transcript for which she apparently had need-to-know at some point. However, it's inappropriate in that setting to share even the fact that she had access to the transcript with anyone who didn't have a need to know about that.
Contractors who think independently and who aren't willing to follow even the most picayune of the customer's rules are problems (from the customer's point of view) that are very easily solved.
I'm not saying that I disagree with her comments or that I don't think this is all much ado about nothing. However, she should have seen that extending her comments from funny discussions about the cafeteria food to her opinion of the country's foreign policy was turning her into a nail that was sticking up. If there's one thing that places like the CIA can do very well, it's knowing how to hammer down any nail that sticks up.
Like paying and training humans for an army to kill, it must be done.
That's a very interesting opinion; do you have any facts or arguments to back up that assertion? In other words, can you prove that it "must be done"?
It's official. Most of you are morons.
"The US is absolutely civilized."
"We even have a "Bill of Rights" and an Amendment banning cruel and unusual punishment. The current quibble is whether this ammendment applies to non-citizens as it does to citizens."
The law is designed to be an expression of the values of the society it applies to - determining what it does, and does not, deem acceptable. You seem to be missing the point over whether torture is, or is not, right. If something is fundementally not right, a country should not do it, regardless of whether it happens to have a law which makes that particular practise explicitly illegal.
Interesting that you choose the word "quibble" to describe the debate over whether non-USA human beings deserve the same human rights as USA human beings. Are non-USA citizens somehow less human?
This seems to split the world into two sorts of people - "us" and "them", with "them" (from your point of view) being the rest of the world. And you describe it as a "quibble" over whether "they" are equal to "us" as human beings.
If you really think this way, is it any wonder that "they" could possible dislike "us" ?
(I've used "them" and "us" from a USA perspective here. Remember that 95% of the world's population (including myself) thinks of it the other way round).
This article submission is a waste of space and time. If you critize your employer using its own property, you will probably get fired. Props to the CIA actually firing someone. The biggest waste of money in the government today is worthless employees and contractors.
And just where does that say that non-citizens have no rights?
I was referring to the Bill of Rights, where the bulk of our protections are found. Look at amendment 4, for instance. "The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." There's no distinction there between citizen and noncitizen. Nor in amendment 6: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence."
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
Can you provide a single example of an American citizen being dragged from US soil to be held as an enemy combatant without due process? A link to a reputable news source would be sufficient.
How about the BBC?
...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
yes, it is your fault, you voted didnt you?. And if you didnt, then it's still your fault as you didnt do your duty to ensure that your voice was heard.
There are 3rd party options and if you (and enough people like you) are as fed up with "the way things are" as you say you are to vote for someone who isnt in the red or the blue. They may just win and do something you actually support insted of moaning about how you have no say while you waste your ballot, or vote for someone you dont like.
Its not subjective at all. The US isn't uncivilized simply because someone on the left wing is in disagreement with the current administration
I appreciate what you are saying, but you must consider what is going on here.
There is no possible way a rational person given any reasonable definition of "civilized" can catagorized the United States as "uncivilized". Anyone who does is either using hyperbole, is ignorant, is lying, or has a complete and utter lack of perspective. Period. On slashdot, some moron claiming America isn't "civilized" is either using hyperbole, or just anti-American take any chance they can to take a whack. Welcome to Slashdot politics.
Insightful?! WTF?! US does NOT have freedom of speech. It is not about what the law says, it's about practice. According to this fuckface's logic a country that has a law that allows anyone to critisize the government, but where you get killed for actually doing so, this country has freedom of speech. And you mod this asshat up? Mod down NOW, this is one of the lowest points of slash.
:( )/gay marriage is actively opposed by people, so much that it is stopped in most (all?) places
NDPTAL, if your awesome country is civilized, explain these things: being arrested (not convicted) limits your rights/people are tortured/ID was not laughed at & dismissed/having a machine do certain mathematics is illegal/free-speech zones (oops, free speech dies again
Note how I did not pick any left vs right wing issues. These are universal, selfevident standards of civilazation. The 'omg leftwing hippy' trick does not work here. And I always do love the 'hey, there are other countries where people have it worse, so it's ok what our government does to us'
Sickening.
Was blogging against her company's client, on the client's network on client time. People like her get paid extremely well. It's a very, very lucrative market for people with clean legal records, or mostly clean legal records, and programming skills. She got axed for timecard fraud, not blogging. If she did this on her own time, without using client computers, they wouldn't have done anything. However, she not only identified herself, but broke almost all of the basic rules of conduct for her market.
This woman is an idiot. Maybe she considers it a virtue to be "loud-mouthed," but her being a "mouthy bitch" just cost her a clearance for at least the next five years. Most likely, because it's time card fraud, she'll be barred for life from contracting with the CIA or any other major agency.
The reason he has to used honor-killings as a yardstick is because of people like you have who have absolutely no perspective.
I reject this argument entirely. Looking to the lowest common denominator and striving to be "a little better than they are" is sickening. We should strive to be the best at everything and look to the best at any given thing for our ideals. Anything else results in not reason, but rationalization of wrongdoing. "Someone else is still worse," is no excuse for wrongdoing.
The Government has no authority to perform cruel and unusual punishment on any person. They are explicitly forbidden to do so by the Constitution.
This is true, but neither are these documents meant to be suicide pacts and there are cases where extraordinary circumstances, such as high probability that a captured suspect has specific knowledge of an eminent attack that will kill thousands, dictate that such methods might be justified as the lesser of two evils once all other measures that can be practically applied to uncover the plot before it reaches fruition, with time remaining to thwart it, have been exhausted.
I reject this argument entirely. Looking to the lowest common denominator and striving to be "a little better than they are" is sickening.
Wow, did you think of that strawman up all by yourself? Definitely not, since it's used 100 times in every slashdot discussion. I am NOT using that logic nor am I striving for what you claim. I am not saying America is beyond criticism because it is "better than most". I am saying that people are forced to use that argument ("We are better than 90%...") in reponse to equally stupid arguments like "America is terrible in regards to free speech..."... and then someone (you) comes barging in with the classic strawman. The same three posts happen in every discussion... If the original statement wasn't so completely ill-worded, it wouldn't require the statement that you can so easily turn into your strawman.
Next time you reject my argument, try to understand it first.
Like a lot of things ... it depends.
The problem is that we recognize that our governments' sovereignty over its own citizens stop once they're outside the territory. The US, on the other hand, expects its citizens to obey American authority worldwide.
This is a mixed blessing. For example, it allows the US to charge pedopholes for having sex with kids in Thailand.
The CIA didn't fire her, BAE did...
Swedish plasma phys. PhD student; MSc EE; knows maths, programming, electronics; finance interest; seeks opportunities
Oh, it was on a BLOG on an INTRANET - guess that must make it newsworthy. Feh - this is partisan posting and nothing else.
A) What the hell happened to America to make whether or not torture is wrong a partisan issue?
B) A taxpayer-funded government agency charged with the protection of our homeland fired someone for expressing the opinion that agency policy was immoral. That should be wrong no matter what the issue is and no matter what your political affiliation is unless it's Totalitarian.
Since when did support of torture and of suppression of dissent become core Republican principles? Whatever happened to the party of Barry Goldwater?
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Normally, I would agree with you. However, our Bill of Rights hasn't prevented recent and current administrations from enforcing "free speech zones," which is a clear violation of our First Amendment. The Second Amendment says the "right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed," yet we have laws against certain types of weapons and no Constitutional Amendment to repeal the Second. The IRS may demand your personal or otherwise financial records be handed over for review by an auditor under penalty of imprisonment; however, this is a violation of the Fourth Amendment.
The Fifth Amendment says, "No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation." Where does it say this applies only to American citizens? How can there even be an argument over whether "person" refers to all humans subjected to prosecution (under American control) or just humans with American citizenship?
The Eighth Amendment doesn't even specify that only humans are to be protected by it. That must be implied, but I believe it would be a stretch to say it only applies to Americans.
When was the last time the Ninth Amendment had any teeth in court?
Almost as weak as the Ninth Amendment, the Tenth Amendment is constantly ignored by the federal government, no matter which party is in power. Amazing!
So, what where you saying about our "Bill of Rights?" Where are the punishments for officials and governments (state, local, federal) that blatantly disregard them?Wow, did you think of that strawman up all by yourself?
I thought up this statement all by myself. Please go learn what a "strawman argument" is. Why the term is so horribly misused on this particular forum is beyond me.
I am saying that people are forced to use that argument ("We are better than 90%...") in reponse to equally stupid arguments like "America is terrible in regards to free speech..."
You can't judge the relative quality of human rights until you actual look at how it is applied. The US is nowhere near "better than 90%." We're mediocre. You're the one who defended that it is acceptable to compare us to those worst as justification for wrongdoing.
I totally disagree.
I don't believe that there is high enough probability to justify torture. Nor do I believe that any such determination is made by a competent authority on the persons who are being abused. Nor does any such "ticking time bomb" factor exist for people who have been detained for four years.
So, no. The black letter law of the Constitution says "No torture." It does not say "No torture, unless you can't come up with any better ideas."
It is absolutely appalling to me that there is any discussion whatsoever on this topic. Torture is always, always, the greater of two evils.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
Canadian constitutional applies to everyone, citizen and non-citizen alike, just like the rest of the laws.
Good. The US was founded, after all, on the concept that "all men are created equal." Not "all citizens of this country."
IMO when Bush condones doing anything to a non-citizen that he wouldn't do to a citizen, he's breaking his pledge to uphold the constitution. But then again, maybe he would do any of this stuff to a citizen, too.
The purpose of the 14th Amendment, if you will recall, was to ensure that blacks were given equal rights to citizenship and equal access to protection under the law.
The 14th Amendment was a response to various Jim Crow laws in the South that essentially treated blacks as lesser humans, and thus gave the authorities in those states 'legal basis' to treat them like shit - and deny them the vote.
The 14th Amendment was intended to clarify who could be citizens, and prohibit the kind of discrimination that the Southern states were enacting.
In short: it defines who is a citizen, and what protections they have under the law.
It is not intended to limit or restrict in any way, provisions in previous Amendments - it is intended to add clarity to the word 'citizen' in a legal context.
The word 'citizen' does not appear anywhere in the Bill of Rights - because the founders believed these were inalienable rights of all men - not just of citizens. (men, women, white, black or otherwise, not relevant to the issue at hand). If they had meant citizens, they would have used the word citizens.
We are the fire that lights our world.. and we are the fire that consumes it.
I'd say it's all coming from you, my man.
I know I'll get modded down for this. I have dared to go against the slashdot group think, and I dare to contradict a post that states "George W. Bush represents the real threat to the American way of life." Oh well, sometimes you must "speak truth to power", as they say.
The first is the lovely moral equivalism between what an elected leader does based on personal beliefs - last I checked, leaders were still allowed to use their personal beliefs, religious or otherwise - with Sharia law. One can only assume this stems from a complete ignorance of Shari'a and its various applications that the parent, were he objective in the slightest, would likely deplore.
Perhaps it sounds like, and perhaps it is, a tired cliché that they "hate us for our freedom", but I'd argue there's more than a grain of truth in it if one bothers to read and understand Al-Qaeda, et. al. and actually comprehend their message rather than attempt to make them something like the next Che Guevarra. The Jihadi ideology represented by many insurgents in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere is obsessed with imposing its will on various parts of the world - and for some, the entire planet. Democracy is the enemy to them because it usurps "true" government come from Allah. Read Sayyid Qutb's "Milestones" and other inspiration for Jihadis around the world. This is a very different enemy we're at war with, and attempts to tie some sort of moral equivalence between stem cell research and those who believe it is their god-given duty to "smite the necks" of those who don't happen to follow their particular brand of Islam - which includes an overwhelming majority of Muslims - and to do everything they can to make the old Caliphate a reflection of the Taliban in Afghanistan - hardly a regime that respected human rights.
"Oh, so those weren't soldiers, not part of the a regular uniformed force. Well, according to our president they couldn't be prisoners of war and not covered by the Geneva Convention. And besides, there are a few morons in every bunch, right?"
Yes, but you conveniently neglected his other example of the other U.S. soldiers who were tortured, killed, then decapitated all on video - all in clear violation of Geneva Conventions, as if the other side considered them to be of any importance. Not to mention the various non-combatant civilians who have met a similar fate. Or is that excusable? Is sawing off the head of a live civilian trying to install cell phone infrastructure excusable? Is there moral equivalence between shooting an innocent woman who works for an aid agency in the head on video tape and the things that happened at Abu Ghraib? I don't think so. Not to defend the simply inhuman acts of Abu Ghraib in the least - they deserve the strictest condemnation. The difference is that when U.S. soldiers and others in uniform do things like that they are punished, Jihadis believe it is the normal way of war and commendable.
Please, if you can, provide one example wherein the insurgents in Iraq have afforded all - or even most - Geneva Convention rights to anyone they have captured.
I cannot say the U.S. is by any means close to perfect - I can only say it is better than the alternative. Yet you seem to find no difference between those who are willing to directly kill human beings by the bushel for their cause and elected officials who dare to use their position to do something you disagree with.
If anyone represents a threat to the "American way of life", I would argue that it is your ilk that is "painfully ignorant" of the west's enemies and does nothing but try to to prove that, somehow, we are just as bad.
*** You may now mod me flamebait, off topic, or troll as you wish... also feel free to respond saying I'm the real threat to America. I always get a kick out of that.
So...the natural response to a stupid line of reasoning is another stupid line of reasoning?
I don't get how someone else saying something "stupid" (which is subjective) forces anyone else to say something stupid.
Maybe I'm just stupid though.
"Maybe if you want to keep your job you should keep your mouth shut and not criticize your employeer. There are plenty of people who can fight the fight for you"
When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.
When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.
When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.
When they came for the Jews,
I did not speak out;
I was not a Jew.
When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.
--Pastor Martin Niemöller (1892-1984)
--R.J.
Electric-Escape.net
A dominant geopolitical society that did not have the military might to back their rule. Please don't whip out some tribal artifact either. I'm talking G8 superpower.
Can't do it without the guns and bodies. It's a sad matter of fact.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Wow. What, if anything, would someone have to do to rise to your threshold of what is unacceptable? Aparently torture is not bad enough. At least not waterboarding -- most victims don't actually die when being "interrogated" by a skilled torturer. Murder? Genocide?
To me, that's enough reason to "violate classification", whatever that means. It's reason enough to do a lot more than that. Can you believe that there are people around the world who act out of conscience? Do these folks strike you as starry-eyed dreamers, living in a fantasy world?
Count me in with the dreamers and the idealists. The CIA is someplace I'd be proud to have been fired from.
I am not a crackpot.
I'm not sure what time frame you are using when considering that "The US used to be civilized", but remember that less than half a century ago, black and white people weren't able to share the same bus seats, drinking fountains, etc. in the United States. Even though things have gotten better, to this day there is a large amount of institutionalized racism in many parts of the country. I'm not trying to use this as a justification to claim that people who are non-citizens shouldn't have the same rights as those who are citizens, but to consider that the US "used to be civilized" and somehow isn't anymore is flat wrong. Just like any other country in the world, the United States has a long way to go until it becomes land where all are treated equal. Will that ever happen in even the most "perfect" society? I don't think so, but that shouldn't stop us from trying to do so.
P.S. - I don't like Dubya and his goons.
I don't know...but, aren't there more people in the US than in Canada? If so, then of course there would be more murders due to more people to kill or be killed.
I think you also have to take into the culture of the US vs other places like CA or Europe. There still is a bit of the, and I hate to use the cliche, 'cowboy' mentality...our country was born with this self sufficient, independent mentality. And, tho is has faded a bit, it is still there. People tend to take things into their own hands, whether for bad or good. In the old west, if someone did you wrong, you got them back. I think often that is the case here, a good example is the gang wars. One gang hits another's gang member, the other gang immediatly retaliates.
Again...I don't have much knowledge on where the stats hit on the high # of murders in the US, but, I gotta believe the majority of them are gang and/or drug related. I mean, even in New Orleans (pre-K)..sure, we had a high murder rate, but, chances are, you were pretty safe from it, as long as you weren't in the projects trying to buy crack. If you looked at the murder stats...they were clearly drawn almost exclusively in very dense proportions...around the drug dealing areas of the projects.
And to tell the truth...I almost think like others...let the criminals shoot each other...just don't let innocent citizens get caught in the crossfire.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
To report an offender:
Call your Commander-In-Crime
Have a day,
Kilgore Trout, C.I.O.
Dude. That's pretty messed up. Read up more on the subject.
Salient points to consider:
- People think they're drowning to death. The terror response to this is wired into the most primitive parts of our brain. It's the mental equivalent of hitting below the belt.
- The average person lasts 14 seconds before caving in.
- The toughest prisoner they had lasted two minutes before begging them to stop.
- This isn't "getting a swirly" in a high school locker room. This is being convinced that people who hate you are in the process of trying to kill you.
You have to be completely lacking in the human trait known as empathy to consider this "sissified." I'd love to see how well you hold up to this kind of treatment, especially if no one's taught you that it's unlikely that you'll actually die from the water you're inhaling while struggling to breathe.People subjected to this can be traumatized for life afterwords and may develop phobias of water from it.
(Note, once again, that even people taught what the procedure is rarely last more than a few seconds under it.)
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Nah, now they are forced to suicide like Turkey makes its females that violate honor.
Really? Girls that go to school in Afghanistan are forced to kill themselves? Or the mothers that take them there are? Please kindly supply a link to that effect. Maybe you'll find that sort of information here, or here, or here, or here. That last one documents the yearly doubling of girls attending school there. You can just cut to the chase by linking to an article showing that the rate of those girls' mothers being forced to kill themselves has also doubled. Or you can just STFU and grind your "Afghanistan was better under the Taliban, and Mullah Omar just needed a little more time to really show some progress" axe in some other way.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
As I understand this...the wording and much of the purpose for this was to ensure that former slaves were indeed incorporated as full US citizens, which I do wholly applaude.
However, I think it is time we change this wording...where at least ONE of the parents themselves is a full US citizen. We've got to stop this shit of people running into the US with broken water dripping....so they can drop their kid on US soil, and have it be automatically a full citizen.
From what I understand...that is more how other countries do things...but, that might help some with the current 'invasion' problems we in the US are experiencing. We need to take away the incentive for illegal border crossings, and make the legal way a more attractive option.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
I thought up this statement all by myself. Please go learn what a "strawman argument" is. Why the term is so horribly misused on this particular forum is beyond me.I thought up this statement all by myself. Please go learn what a "strawman argument" is. Why the term is so horribly misused on this particular forum is beyond me.
You are arguing with a position I do not hold. You have created a strawman argument and are now beating up on it. I am not misusing the word. It is a _very_ accurate portrayl of what has occured... I tried to point this out to you, and instead taking a moment to realize you misinterpreted my argument, you presumed that I don't know what the word 'strawman' means. Then you proceed to continue beating up on him. You don't need me in the conversation if you want to argue with phatoms.
While I abhor what the US did in Abu, and think those responsible should be punished, I still gotta think when you make statements like above comparing it with what Saddam, and other countries do, I gotta say "Come On...it ain't even in the same ball park"!!
Stacking some people naked, or making them wear panties on their heads is in no way comparable to having electodes hooked to your testicles or having your tongue cut out. Hell, there people in the world that would pay good money for the stacking and panty treatment....
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
Only on Canadian Soil. The government is free to act as it pleases outside our country, same as the US.
I take it you've never heard of the Somalia Affair. This led to murder charges, a major public inquiry, the resignation of top military brass, and the wholesale disbanding of an entire military regiment. All for the torture/killing of one thief.
Some countries do hold their soldiers and governments to higher standards.
I agree with the substance of your post There is a problem with the "all men are created equal" part. The Founding Fathers of the USA did not actually mean that all human beings are equal. They meant that all white, male, christians of a certain seniority, income and social standing are created equal. The 'equality' part has been gradually extended over the years to include young, poor white males, women (sheesh!) and non-whites. If one wants to be picky, the line should read "all men are created equal except..."
This culture of exception to the rule is still prevalent. The US is obliged to adhere to the Geneva Convention except, says the administration, in Guantanamo. The administration is obliged to adhere to the US Constitution except, says the administration, when that makes things awkward. The US prizes Free Speech except, says the American People, where that speech is used to criticise the US (case in point the firing of the blogger for criticising the administration's torture policy
I find it odd that in a nation that was born in a struggle for self-determination and to hold its rulers accountable, people are so ready to abrogate that responsibility. The citizens of the US have a constitutional obligation to hold their government to account and to make that government justify its actions.
Lastly I agree with your comment about comparison. My wife does the same. Whenever she has been caught doing something wrong, her response is to find something that can make the accuser 'even wronger' thus forcing THEM to apologise so she doesn't have to. This also seems to work on a global scale - "If it wasn't for whiny, liberal people like you we wouldn't need to break the Constitution - you made us do it"
Travelling forward in time at a rate of 1 second per second.
So...the natural response to a stupid line of reasoning is another stupid line of reasoning?
No. The reason is NOT stupid. If someone says "The USA is barbaric"... and your goal is give them examples of true barbarism you might say "The US doesn't kill Christian converts nor execute adultresses in public execution in soccer stadiums". Their goal is to show that the original post lacked perspective, and attempt to actually clarify the use the word 'barbarism'. The person who then jumps in and says "Oh ok, so as long as you better then the worst, than everyhting is ok!" has created a strawman. The middle person never said it was OK... he just was trying to show the original statement was poor.
"Let the criminals shoot each other", hu? Have you forgoten that they are people, too? What if it was your brother that was involved in drugs, or you son, or ever your parent? Because the people you talk about have brothers and mothers and children, and people care about them.
You also forget that these people are redeemable. O Henrey, a renound and classic writer, wrote some of his best stuff in prison. Many have gotten out of a life of crime, and added something great to society.
But in the end, the best arguement is that many of these people were conditioned by there enviornment to be criminals from children. These people weren't even given much of a chance to avoid crime; they were born into it. And it is unfair to condem people to death because of where they were born.
Before you condem them to death, try to understand there plight. You can't know a person untill you walk a mile in thier shoes, as the saying goes.
I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
I'm not sure what time frame you are using when considering that "The US used to be civilized"...
I pretty much consider the current peak of our civilization to have been the late 90s. We were moving towards a more tolerant society. We were widely respected for the freedom of our culture. We worked with the international community to end a civil war and genocide in Kosovo. We looked to the future with hope and expectation, and there was always a sensation that America was moving forward towards fairness and justice, and to me that forward motion IS civilization.
Civilization is ethical, moral, and cultural growth. Stagnation is just decay. One of these days we might reach a plateau where everything is as fair as it can be, and I'd have to change my definition of being civilized, but we are centuries or millenia away from that point if it's even achievable.
Post 1999-2001, the nation has changed. We actually have news and media personalities that try to convince people that torture and detention without fair trial is a good and just thing. We stoke up fears about Arabs and Mexicans daily. We are widely hated for arrogant policies that have stalled and actually reversed the world's progress on human rights. We are bogged down in an occupation that is leading to a civil war that is killing more people than the evil dictator we displaced had done in over a decade. The future is now something to fear and dread instead of something to hope for.
America has done better, and I think that it can do better again, but people are going to have to come face to face with what we've become and act with determination to save our nation's very soul.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
What's the best way for a covert group to get maximum embarrassing exposure? Oh yes, try to hush it up. When justified [1], it works. When not, it can backfire spectacularly, as MI6 (the UK's sorta-equivalent to the CIA) is learning (or not), yet again through Richard Tomlinson - http://richardtomlinson.typepad.com/
[1] Cos sometimes it really is, this sort of debacle notwithstanding.
"Ah, the Hitler card:"
Yes, the "Hitler card" as in the "all jews must die" mentality coming from Iran's Hitler, or did you not hear that from the Iranian President?
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
I think you'd have a hard time finding any ranking system that puts more than 20 of them above the US.
Really? Try a Google search for "human rights report." The US usually ranks behind most of Western Europe for human rights in general.
The phrase murder rates generally refers to the number of murders per capita, usually expressed as number of murders per 100,000 population. In other words, it should have been obvious that the GP was taking population into account.
Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
Maybe this will clarify for the GP...
"No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."
Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
Not necessarily....for instance, I often hear on the local news for the city where they say we have the murder rate for X city has increased dramatically, from 56 to 120 murders.
In that case, they are using murder rate, in a context to where you assume from one year to another under normal condiditons, population is rather stable, and per capita would not play into it.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
You are arguing with a position I do not hold. You have created a strawman argument and are now beating up on it.
I responded only to direct quotes from your post. If you do not hold the position you said you did, it is your error not mine. You defended taking the lowest common denominator as an appropriate comparison because you claimed "people like you" needed it for a proper perspective.
My opinion is that the proper perspective is looking up at ideals.
Now had I claimed that you think we should not compare ourselves to the worst when you did not write that, and then attacked that, it would be a strawman argument. But you did say, " The reason he has to used honor-killings as a yardstick is because of people like you have who have absolutely no perspective." If that is not defending doing so, then you've badly misrepresented yourself.
You must admit there is the argument that a civilized society would follow it's own rules, which we don't. It isn't just the torture thing, either. Remember all that illegal wire tapping the NSA did? And the Patriot Act? Sure, the Patriot Act follows the WORDING of the constitution, but it doesn't exactly follow the spirit. Getting a warrant after the search? What if the warrant was unsupported, what recourse would they have? How does that comply with right "against unreasonable searches and seizures"?
I find it funny that, in trying to fight terrorism, we did the very thing they wanted all along. Disrupted our way of life.
Is the US a modern county? Yes. Is it civilized? Arguable.
I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
Sounds like the "Terrible secret of space".
Well, no, I know they are people too, but, there ARE bad people in the world...and we could do with fewer of them. If someone is redeemable, then hopefully they themselves or their family with interdict and get them out before they get killed or kill someone.
And as for being "born" into a life of crime, I dunno. Life is tough, and life is not fair, but, that does not give you the right or reason to be a criminal and deprive others innocent people of their life or property. I've read that many criminals out there...have genetic problems, like maybe XYY chromosomes, mutations. If some of them are raised that way and 'don't know better'...well, letting them take all themselves out is possibly like Darwin's survival of the fittest playing itself out, by taking out those with bad genes, or bad natures from perpetuating the cycle.
Sometimes I fear saving people from themselves, is messing with nature trying to let themselves take themselves OUT of the reproduction cycle.
I think occasionally, the gene pool NEEDS a little chlorine.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
Now that's a model US citizen.
*rolls eyes*
You also have to take into account that there is a gangster mentality, not just among kids in ghettos and street gangs, but the foundation of this country was based no gangs. Just watch gangs of new york, or watch a mafia movie. The cowboy mentality applies well to the south but then everywhere else you have the gang mentality.
Also, your statistic figures appear racist. Most criminals are not in the projects dealing drugs, those are just the criminals we want to catch. The criminals we don't want to catch commit crimes essentially for decades and nothing happens to them. Some people are above the law, only the small criminals get caught, usually the drug dealer types. No one really knows how many murderers there are in the US, but we do know the death tolls, the life expectancy, and things such as this. In general, the number 1 method of murder is through poisoning, not gun violence. Most violent crimes are not racial, this means you are more likely to face violence from someone who looks like you do, than someone who looks different from you. Most violence comes from a small percentage of aggressive minded individuals who like violence, and the majority of us simply go to work, pay our taxes, raise our families, and avoid the violent life. It's always been this way.
Our criminal justice system is too outdated to handle violence because we arent focused on violent criminals. Drug dealers arent violent criminals.
Of course it's horrid that there are spots in that country where that same attitude still exists. But the difference is that now there is no longer a "government" that directly embraces and celebrates that medieval nonsense by actually having government employees who run around and do that evil crap. It will be at least a generation before it becomes culturally embarassing, for more like a majority of Afghanis, to have that stuff happening in their more rural areas. But the difference is crucial: before, it was the law of land, and now it's not.
This is very well said. Afghanistan may be just as bad as under the Taleban in some places and backsliding in others, but the whole country isn't like this anymore, and that's a crucial difference.
Heck, there are women holding political offices right now! Their new Constitution enshrines equal rights for women. Our Constitution put equal rights for all men in the 14th Amendment but it took us over a 100 years to actually live it. As long as the current government doesn't collapse, then I think the future of Afghanistan is pretty bright.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Someone ate his Troll Wheaties this morning.
This discussion stopped being relevant three posts ago. To recap:
1. This is America, where you're supposed to be able to say anything (within reason) and get away with it.
2. Someone disagreed with the tactics approved by certain political leaders.
3. Someone got fired.
To quote Metallica...
"You can have it your own way, if it's done just how I say."
I don't think America is 'terrible in regards to free speech', but I see room for improvement and evidence of a decline in personal freedoms. This is just another example.
Really? Try a Google search for "human rights report." The US usually ranks behind most of Western Europe for human rights in general.
Do you even try this nonsense before you suggest it? The only "report" I see anywhere near that google search is from Human Rights Watch. It has no rankings.
> Yet, in spite of the fact that We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal,
> there is uncertainty over whether the illegality of torture applies to non-citizens.
All men are created equal, but if later in life they decide to become terrorists they've separated themselves from civilized society by their own actions.
No, wrong. When you can assume stable population and you are comparing for the same place, then you can extrapolate an increase in the number of murders as an increase in the murder rate. That doesn't make the absolute number of murders the same as the murder rate, no matter what you often hear from your local newscaster.
But when comparing two differently sized populations (i.e., the US vs. Canada) in terms of murder rate, it would be universally assumed that you are talking per capita numbers.
Momentarily, the need for the construction of new light will no longer exist.
It's too cold in Canada for all those cold blooded killers. They're all hibernating. Just wait until global warming kicks in, they'll be out in droves!
I was a contractor for IBM for a few years, doing business consulting. As a contractor on the client's premisis, we were held to very high standards. I know somebody who was removed from the contract for parking in a forbidden area. I also know employes of the client who were fired for mis-use of the intranet for communicating such things as items for sale, opinions not valid to the department, etc.
Okay, the Declaration of Independence argument is common, and though it is true, it is usually a little out of context. I wanted to set the record straight.
One- The argument is usually used how it was first intended: emotional appeal. If you think about it, it isn't a very supportable argument. "Life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness" are not exactly attainable goals, because someone can't really have absolute rights. Your freedom stop at the other persons rights. So it isn't as much a logical argument as an appeal to basic ideals, which brings me to my next point--
Two- The "rich white man" argument isn't really relevant, because the important part is what that means to people today that is important. Almost every child in the US sat in a classroom and was read the words of this document, and many of us are touched by them, tying them to our basic values. When people say "We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal," they are trying to call upon those values that are considered universal in our nation, to bring us back to our base. We make those words ours, and they are then important because they speak to us, not because they were said by a person 200 years ago.
I personally feel that most people read the words as they are written, and just sometimes forget about them because of all the mess. If I am wrong, I am not living in the nation I thought I was.
I agree with most of what you said, but I just had to point out that little flaw. It has been used a lot and I feel it takes away from the meaning of the words.
I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
How do you define "equitable". Israel has given 98% of what Palistine has asked.
That's a farsical assertion. Israel still wants to permanently keep some of the best land in the West Bank and to deny the Palestinians the use of East Jerusalem as a capital. They've built a wall through the West Bank that cuts off portions of the land belonging to Palestine to make a de facto land grab. The abandonment of Gaza was explicitly done around the idea of consolidating the hold over the West Bank.
Israel's version of peace and a Palestinian state leaves them with complete control over the airspace over Palestinian territory, the waters, and the borders, leaving them imprisoned. It takes away the best land and the capital that they have their hearts set on. It provides no sharing of access to the Temple Mount and the Dome of the Rock. They don't care to set up the travel corridors between the two segments provided for in the Oslo peace accord.
It also does nothing for the "right of return" that the Palestinians grudingly gave up in that peace accord. That isn't "98% of what they asked for" in the peace accords, much less 98% of what they actually want (and probably shouldn't get; I don't like the idea of right of return at this late of a date).
Personally, I think Israel has bent over backwards trying to live in peace with its neighbors. Meanwhile, the surrounding countries have people sworn to the destruction of all Jews.
Israeli settlers are also religious fanatics dedicated to the idea of displacing all the Arabs from the area they claim for Greater Israel. Some believe that the statements made by God in the Pentateuch and later books like Joshua and Judges are still in effect and that Israel must conquer all the lands given to them in those passages. Most Israelis are more reasonable than that, though.
So, please define "equitable" in terms that don't allow more bombs to be lobbed into a soverign state from its neighbors.
How 'bout a definition that doesn't allow either side to lob bombs into their neighbors.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Oh please. Muslims torture people too.
One more to ponder... History is only as long as last nights CNN headlines. http://www.usspueblo.org/
2 points:
"Hasn't been done" is not even close to "can't be done".
Having an army is different from having a gov't supported sect of criminal torture enthusiasts.
Do you even try this
Nope. I read some reports a while back, but have not done any research recently. You could try Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, International Freedom of Expression Exchange and Anti-Slavery International. If they don't have rankings now, most of them have at least within the recent past and the US sure hasn't been moving up the list.
Military tribunals ARE due process. They aren't a civilian court, but they would satisfy due process requirements. Our own military personel are subject to a different standard than a civilian. I don't see why that standard isn't good enough for a suspected "non-uniformed" combatant. What the GGP was saying is the "The People" are US citizens and/or legal residents. As opposed to just "people" or "persons". I know that's probably parsing the language somewhat, but given historical practices and our understanding of the intentions of the constitution as written, it's probably the most accurate way to read it. Of course I'm open to evidence to the contrary.
----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
The fact that he is not a "model citizen," of course, means that his testicles are subject to 220V treatment.
I don't care if he's purple, and has tree heads - if he's a US citizen, then god dammit, he has certain protections under the constitution. Period. End of discussion.
Anybody who violates those rights should go to jail.
"If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch have no rankings in regards to human rights that I can find, at all. The only rankings I can find on the entire anti-slavery issue is issued in a tiered format by the US government.. and I'm sure those won't mean much to you. IFEX helps with "freedom of the press" and some other rankings from FreedomHouse, and the one I found has the US in the low-teens for both (which is exactly what the GP said, and you told him to check his facts).
As the Americans learned so painfully in Earth's final century,free flow of information is the only safeguard against...
Consider this for our national strategy:
Terrorists attack America because they hate our freedoms. Rather than removing the terrorists, which any sensible person knows cannot be done, we remove the motivation, in this case, our freedoms.
1.) We deliberately leak information to the media that portrays us in a negative light, e.g. publicly firing CIA bloggers who dont like torture, or the whole rendition campaign. We advertise how much we muzzle dissent. We make ourselves appear incompetent and weak.
2.) We make ourselves out to be like any other old totalitarian state: we leak evidence of torture, make it sound widespread, argue that torturing is OK, and so on. Not only are we incompetent, we are also dangerous. Unknown unknowns are very frightening.
3.) We follow Kim Il Jongs tactics and appear to be completely irresponsible with our use of military force- the crazier we act, the less likely the terrorists will want to blow us up for fear that we will destroy their whole homeland... we add a bit of religious zealotry to make it sound authentic.
4.) Not only do we save America from terrorists, but we save America from Americans as well!
We disillusion the terrorists by convincing them that the freedom they want to destroy doesnt actually exist... then putting those insinuations into policy.
Conspiracy theorists can take over from here.
All in all, this policy sounds like it might work better than what we currently think our strategy is!
I don't know...but, aren't there more people in the US than in Canada? If so, then of course there would be more murders due to more people to kill or be killed.
The key here is murder RATES. Not just murders. Typically murder rates are per capita...you know like x number of murders for every y number people.
Uhhh, that's not proof. It might be begging the question. Of course you can't prove it. But it is worth noting that just because that is the way it has always been does not mean that it can't also happen some other way. We are using military might in situations that don't call for it (Iraq), at the expense of situations that do call for it (getting to Osama). Previous posts give plenty of reasons why torture is innefective at yielding good intel, as well as other interrogation methods that do yield good intel. Don't limit yourself to accepting as possible only that which you have seen or heard about.
Poverty has nothing to do with the criminal mentality, and everything to do with the chance you have of getting caught. Yes poverty can motivate a person to commit crimes to survive, but a greedy rich person will commit crimes to keep up with their rich neighbors and stay ahead just as quickly. The difference is, white collar criminals almost never get caught, and when they do it's a slap on the wrist. Tabacco drug dealers, and Pharma drug dealers sell drugs all the time which are harmful, like Viox, and none of them go to prison for it because they can pay a fine. Even the big marijuana dealers, who deal in tons, and who operate in other countries are immune for political reasons.
The end result is, only the stupid drug dealer, who sells drugs by walking up to people and asking "wanna buy some drugs?" gets caught. Stupid criminals get caught, smart criminals almost never get caught, and thats the only point to make.
I agree with you completely, I think we should elimate the drug laws, and regulate drugs on safety, as a form of quality control. The more money we spend going after marijuana dealers the more money we arent spending going after the murderers. In gangwars, most gangsters arent killers or murderers, they are just like you and me, but because of the environment they live in, the lack of oppurtunity, the lack of education and in some cases dyslexia and inability to read, their options are a life of McDonalds or a life of crime. Most people in these desperate situations have nothing to lose.
We also must remember, that the entire world is just a group of gangs, factions, groups, networks. Yes there are street gangs, but theres gangs of lawyers, doctors, and everything else. Basically everyone is in some sorta group or community, including the slashdotter open source community which could just as easily be labeled a gang by anti open source groups.
We have to start viewing street kids as people, and yes maybe they are just as scared of being shot as you, and maybe because they are living in such a violent neighborhood they join a gang out of fear. Once we can see that there can be someone just like us in any gang we can see that it's not gangs that are bad, it's violent individuals in gangs that commit the violent crimes. Perhaps we could have more success fighting violent crime if we just faught violent crime instead of fighting entire groups, gangs, etc and treating every member as a violent criminal. The average drug dealer, does not support the murderer in their community anymore than you would. The average thief does not support the murderer. The non-violent criminals are not in some sorta suicidal alliance with the violent criminals, it's more that the non-violent criminals fear both the violent criminal, and the police, and they side with the violent criminal because they know the violent criminal better than they know the police. Maybe if there were better community policing, and maybe if there were better communication between kids in the hood, or ghetto, or gangsters with the outside world, this wouldnt be such a problem.
Why are there no websites on gangs from a gangsters perspective? It's nothing like those rap videos. Perhaps it is due to the code of silence, as all mafias have a code of silence, but in any case even with a code of silence, without any form of communication to the outside world, those who are inside this world are trapped.
The simple way to deal with violent crime is to track people who commit violent offenses or who are carrying a gun. If someone is a gang member, and we can see they carry a gun using advanced surveillance technology, we can track just these gun carrying persons. If someone is known to get into lots of fights and commit assaults we can track people with this criminal history. The violent criminal database would solve this problem. what do you think?
In the case of the 6th ammendment, we aren't dealing with a domestic criminal trial. They aren't being chared with a crime under domenstic law. So the 6th Ammendment is moot here. You could make an argument that operatives like Richard Reed (shoe bomber), who was caught on US soil, ought to be entited to more protection than those captured on a battlefield, but precident isn't in your favor here. German saboteurs during WWII weren't treated as criminals either, they were treated as combatants and dealt with in military tribunals. The only time I believe civilian courts ought enter the picture is to determine if combatant caught on US soil is, in fact, an operative of a foreign power at war with the US. If they determine he is, then the facts of the case are tried in a tribunal setting, like all other combatants. If he is not, then he would be tried as a civilian.
----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
"If someone is redeemable, then hopefully they themselves or their family with interdict and get them out before they get killed or kill someone." Did you mean to say "will intervene"? because as it stands that sentence made no sense at all. I'm not trying to be a grammar or spelling nazi, I just honestly am not sure where you were going with that. Aside from that, I can only partially agree with what you are saying. There certainly are BAD people, but it's not necessarily the crack-smuggling kids on the street that are the worst. What about the white -collar criminals that are stealing from the people and causing much of the poor conditions these kids live in? I'm all for shooting them; what about you?
A man walks into a bar. The bartender says, "What is this, some kind of joke?"
mythbusters examined water torture.. it is real torture if youre strapped down or confined while you were dripped on..
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
No, its more fundamental then that, and has little to do with politics at its core.
The CIA is a *JOB*. The president is your *BOSS*. If you dont agree with the boss and speak out against him ( or the company ), you can/should be fired. Regardless of what industry you work in. Be it flipping hamburgers, building cars or protecting the country.
its pretty simple. Dont like the opinions of managment, find another place to work.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
I was not aware of that. I'll have to do a lot more research into what the article means by "full constitutional rights did not automatically extend to all areas under American control."
I'll just have to add that to my list of Supreme Court decisions I think were blatantly pandering to the government desires of the times instead of to the intent of the framers.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
http://vaw.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/5/2/16 46 4) 206%3C12%3ACHIFSH%3E2.0.CO%3B2-4
http://vaw.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/7/9/9
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0899-2851(199821
http://polyzine.com/arabwomen.html
I wasn't really speaking of Afghanistan, but I believe that now that the US is preventing their tradional means of killing of those that violate their usual morals that they'll adapt like these other neighboring countries and you'll see these honor killings happen there as well. You don't get it. I'm not saying that they are worse off. I'm saying that the girls are in more danger once they actually start acting westernized or sexually active and living what we'd consider and normal teenage life. I bet it isn't happening right now because most are more afraid of the US than of the women. Give it 5-10 years while most have forgotten Afghanistan or Iraq and see how those female suicide rates have climbed. I was first made aware of this through an AOL news article (happening in Turkey) and was surprised. The families were using every means at their disposal to make the female feel that their life was worthless and that to do the best for their family that they should kill themselves. I've just tried searching for any data concerning Afghanistan suicides or honor killings and haven't yet found anything. That only means that the data or news reports aren't open to you or I. It doesn't mean these things aren't happening over there.
No employer is ever going to spell this out, but part of your job is that you implicitly support whatever the employer does. All of it.
If you ever get to the place where you don't support some of it, you have reservations, etc., you're already (internally) half out the door. You will probably eventually have to quit, or be fired, or else learn to adopt the employer's way of seeing things, or worst of all (this is the classic corporate soul-sucking, spiritual death option) learn to live with the conflict and "take the money".
I feel sorry for the lady. At the same time, offering advice on intelligence gathering tactics were not part of her job description. You can always expect to get slapped or worse for entering into things that are not part of your brief, especially in a vertical and compartmented authority structure like government or a big company.
Which raises an interesting question: why do canadians prefer rifles, and why does the US prefer handguns? I would suggest that rather than "stupid people with guns kill", it is perhaps more a matter of "violent people prefer handguns and are more likely to kill". It would appear that my country is the most violent, per capita, on the face of the planet. Except during the Clinton administration, when the FBI's list tracking violent crimes showed a decline, the level of violence has increased every year since my birth. And this is the true, central, core question: why?
A good part of the rest of the world has considerable doubts about how civilized we are. For example, our insistence on capital punishment offends many people in the numerous countries that have abolished it.
it is BAE you jackass. People always confuse the two. BAE is MUCH bigger.
Way to miss the point, bud.
This parent might be Redundant, but I don't see how the statement fits any definition of flamebaiting. Is the expressed idea (mistakes may be made, persons misidentified as having information worth torturing for are in fact tortured) so far removed from the plausible?
Slashdot? Oh, I just read it for the articles.
Wow, I had never heard of that or the USS Liberty incident. Very informative link. Thanks!!
...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
"I dunno. Life is tough, and life is not fair, but..."
You speak of rights in the same sentence that you stipulate that life is unjust. Life is unjust, but don't move against the (unfair) system. Victim's of injustice must remain a victim, because that's just the way it is...life is unfair. But is it *supposed* to be unfair?
I suspect invoking genetics as a cause is likewise an attempt to believe that "that's just the way it is." Social systems evolve at far faster rates than genetic systems. We can, and do, modify our institutions over time. We should. Rule of Law is one of the greatest (and worst) of human achievements, depending of the system of law implemented. At the very heart of this, my rant, is a belief that when discretionary powers come to mean whim, when "you are either for me or against me", when it is "my country, right or wrong", then evil has taken control.
You aren't supposed to be able to say anything and not be affected. You are supposed to be able to say anything. The government can't arrest you for saying something, but you are still accountable for what you say.
It is in no way an infringement of rights if an employer fires someone for saying something they don't agree with. Unfortunately, in this case the employer was the government, which brings up all sorts of political issues.
Stupidity is like nuclear power, it can be used for good or evil. And you don't want to get any on you.
From my experience life is much the same (crime wise) between suburbia in the US and UK. Unless you're a crack addict or a street thug, you really have to remove gun related crime from gangs or similar types of people to get some sort of gun crime equivalency.
>torturing people to save your own skin
Do you truly believe that's why the government is torturing people?
Why do you believe this?
Torture does not provide information. It provides whatever the interrogator wants to hear.
So you are both right. It does use the word "citizen", and then it specificly switches to "person" when it states: "nor shall any State deprive any person of life , liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." So apparently our US law applies to people and not just citizens.
According to the linked article they're now up to 16,000. Given that Afghanistan's population is around 30 million, they're up to something like 1 out of every 2,000 people in Afghanistan.
On the topic of whether women are better off now then they were under the Taliban, it probably depends on the women. Some women/girls now have a couple years of education but then some women have lost friends and family in the violence associated with the US invasion. On the whole, most women are probably in about the same situation they were before. I mean, it's not like all 15 million or so women in Afghanistan are suddenly PhD CEO's making 10 million a year.
The hope, of course, is that women might end up being much better off decades in the future but, then again, the presence of foreign troop could eventually generate so much resentment that the whole country dissolves into civil war. Even without the invasion it is also possible that Afghanistan would have become gradually more progressive and within a few decades women would be better off than if the US invaded and had to deal with the resentment to foreign troops.
That raises the question: where is the bar for one country deciding to invade another country. Is it enough that the one country thinks it can possibly slightly improve the situation in the other country? Looking at 9/11, people really don't like it when they are killed violently so it seems to me that the bar should be pretty high. On the other hand, people that thought 9/11 was no big deal might favor the use of military force in a lot more situations.
No, hand guns have little to do with it as some of the most violent areas in the US have the strictest gun laws (unless you're rich or have political pull but that is another topic). On the other hand the Midwest which is most similar to Canada in culture and so on has comparable homicide rates despite decently lax gun laws.
And of course than there is Britain where after hand guns got effectively banned people found out that knives are almost as effective for killing people.
The constitution states that treaties shall be the supreme law of the land. No ifs, no buts, no jurisdiction stripping, the supreme law of the land
And article 3 of the Geneva convention absolutely prohibits use of torture without exception. It is irrelevant what status the administration claims the prisoners have, the convention recognizes no exceptions.
And waterboarding was one of the favorite tortures of the Spanish inquisition, Torquemada himself describes its use. Ergo there is no doubt whatsoever that the administration has been illegally using torture and that the President, Vice President and Defense Secretary are unindicted war criminals.
The crimes are war crimes because the US has a specific law that states that crimes against the Geneva convention are war crimes.
The broader picture here though is that torture is a near useless form of interrogation. It is easy to make someone talk, impossible to work out whether they are telling the truth or not. Forget the ticking bomb scenario, the interrogation subject will lie.
Every victim of torture is a new potential terrorist. Al Zarqawi was merely a petty thief until the Jordanian secret police tortured him and gave him the grudge that he acted on for the next ten years after his release.
The reason that we won the cold war is because even the communists knew that the West had the moral high ground. Senior communists would defect or pass intelligence because they knew that the West had the moral cause and the Soviet Union was a tissue of corruption, lies and oppression. The pictures of the actions George W. Bush is responsible for at Abu Graihb, the knowledge that the same actions took place and take place today in the Guantanamo gulag, those attorcities serve as daily recruitment sargents for our enemies and the result is that we are not only less free we are less safe.
If you do the math it is impossible for the Democrats to win a sufficient majority in the Senate to convict after impeachment without Republican support. Every day it appears that the the administration gives new reason for Republicans to convict.
The administration has demonstrated a degree of incompetence, ignorance and stupidity that is without comparison in US history. They failled to complete the elimination of Al Qaeda and the Taleban because they were more interested in starting a new war in Iraq.
This is what evil looks like.
Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."
The rights that we have are not ours because we're citizens of the US, they are unalienable rights of all human beings.
It's sad that we've forgotten that. It's sadder still that this used to be considered not only true, but "self-evident". I guess it wasn't as clear as all that.
I yearn for you tragically. A. T. Tappman, Chaplain, U.S. Army.
Yes, the "Hitler card" as in the "all jews must die" mentality coming from Iran's Hitler, or did you not hear that from the Iranian President?
Iran's president denies the Holocaust, he wants to eliminate Israel, and he institutes discrimination against Jews in Iran. He may also sponsor terrorism against Jews elsewhere in the world. That makes him an evil man, a demagogue, and and opportunist, but none of that puts him in the same league as Hitler.
In any case, the problem of people like you is that you escalate rather than deescalate. People like you think because Iran's government is evil (which it is) and because other people who happen to share your religion have been badly mistreated in the past (which they have), you have some sort of special license to do whatever it takes to reduce your risk and survive. That stance is not only ethically unjustifiable, racist, and plain evil (in a banal sort of way), it also simply doesn't work.
Israel isn't being destroyed by Iran or the Palestinians, it's being destroyed by people like you, on both sides of the conflict.
The stats for both countries are based on murder rates per capita, so the difference in population is irrelevent.
As for "being safe from it", check out these stats from the Centers for Disease Control:. htm
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/ss5003a1
Or this ...
. html
http://www.now.org/issues/violence/043003pregnant
You're hardly one to talk. The news article about you would include quotes like these:
It is believed that Anonymous Coward thought about killing a police officer who
ticketed him for going 78 miles per hour when he knew he was doing only 73.
His neighbors said that he "seemed to be a nice guy, but kept mostly to himself",
raising questions among some about the likelihood of sexual deviancy and the
safety of neighborhood children. An elderly interviewee who requested anonymity,
fearing for her life, stated that strange sounds were often heard coming from his
house in the evening hours, and feared connections to gang-related violence, perhaps
stemming from drug use.
I'd say that you need to be strapped head-down to a board with a cloth held
tightly over your face and to have water poured over it until you confess.
>where is the bar for one country deciding to invade another country[?]
That's easy: The prevailing doctrine in global politics has been shown to be "Might Makes Right."
If you can invade a country and no other nation lifts a finger to defend it, then it is justified. The whole world has voted on this one, pretty much unanimously. The USA gets the blame because they were the most recent to successfully test the idea, but today Israel is following through on the same premise.
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
Duh, there are how many countries in the EU?
And if we add the old (white) commonwealth (Canada, Australia, New Zealand)?
(Not that I necessarily agree that an EU country is automaticaly better than the US on human rights grounds, but it's an arguable case - death penalties, inhuman prison system, imprisonment rates comparable to china...)
Watch this Heartland Institute video
Well, *yeah* there's *him*, but he's a brown-skinned muslim terrorist! He certainly doesn't qualify as a citizen, and barely as a human. No we really meant a *real* American citizen... you know, an All-American boy with a good background. I mean, *jeez*... that one used to be a gang member. Those people kill each other in the streets like filthy animals, you know!
;) ]
No, we really only need people here who Think Like We Do, embody Family Values and Defend Our American Way of Life. All the rest aren't Patriots, they Hate America and should go back to wherever they came from. Michael Savage had the right of it... wouldn't you rather sacrifice (murder) 100 million foreign muslims than THOUSANDS of innocent Americans!!
And besides, that's the BBC, and they're European anyway... how about something Fair and Balanced?
[ I'll be here 'till next week
When I grow up, I want to have Christopher Walken hair.
Barbarians don't speak Greek. Most Americans don't speak Greek. Most Americans are barbarians.
Civilised people live in cities. Most Americans don't live in cities. Most Americans are uncivilised.
Watch this Heartland Institute video
She'd fall for this trick....
"It will happen this way. You may be walking. Maybe the first sunny day of the spring. And a car will slow beside you, and a door will open, and someone you know, maybe even trust, will get out of the car. And he will smile, a becoming smile. But he will leave open the door of the car and offer to give you a lift. "
Duh, we're talking about drowning people to make them talk (waterboarding), not "stacking some people naked, or making them wear panties on their heads".
And if you didn't notice that some people were beaten to death in Abu Ghraib maybe you need get an ear and eye test.
Watch this Heartland Institute video
But in a nation born from the struggle to fight wars and refuse to pay the taxes necessary to pay for them?
Watch this Heartland Institute video
Little digging around and I find this on Wikipedia (Pulled up the 1840 page and looked under "literature").
Democracy in America (De la démocratie en Amérique) by Alexis de Tocqueville I assume thats who you were refering to.
Torture is terrorism.
It is useless as an information gathering tool, as any cop could tell you. But it's a great way to scare people.
Watch this Heartland Institute video
The author is obviously joking. Only a drooling tard with neofascistic tendencies could seriously make these statements in a public forum.
Tech Public Policy stuff
I'm sure I'll be modded down on Slashdot for saying this and marked as Troll for giving my non-bleeding-heart-opinion, but I think my karma can handle it.
Have you forgoten that they are people, too?
Anyone who kills someone in cold blood pretty much stops being a person in my eyes. There's a lot of grey area here, of course, and it greatly depends on how you define murder. If you're morally bankrupt enough to think it's okay to shoot someone because they're wearing your favorite color, then aside from the sad fact that you share the same genetic makeup as me, I find you to be pretty much not human.
What if it was your brother that was involved in drugs, or you son, or ever your parent?
I would be really, really, really heartbroken and wished I had intervened more in his or her life. In the end, people make their own choices and must face the consequences of those choices (including myself, for letting my son/daughter/sister/brother/whatever for slipping away like that).
Because the people you talk about have brothers and mothers and children, and people care about them.
Which is, again, heartbreaking, but that's life. But they have to face the consequences of their actions.
You also forget that these people are redeemable.
Redeemability is certainly subjective. Manslaughter due to negligence is redeemable. Gunning down a classroom of children is not. No, they aren't all redeemable.
O Henrey, a renound and classic writer, wrote some of his best stuff in prison.
Good for him. Should we let Stephen King kill people because he writes great fiction?
Many have gotten out of a life of crime, and added something great to society.
Most don't. Especially most people heavily involved in drugs/gangs/whatever. What great things would the people murdered have added to society? Unfortunately, they don't get an appeal process.
But in the end, the best arguement is that many of these people were conditioned by there enviornment to be criminals from children. These people weren't even given much of a chance to avoid crime; they were born into it. And it is unfair to condem people to death because of where they were born.
Woah there, double check your logic. I feel safe in saying no one has ever been convicted of being born in a certain area and thus sentenced to death. Sorry, I disagree that just because these people were born in an undeniably BAD situation that they automatically recieve a Get Out of Jail Free(TM) card. Granting a group of people special rights under the law because they were born in a specific geographic location or match a specific demographic is totally unconstitutional in the US (read the 4th amendment). "Because I was raised in bad environment x.y.z" is definitely not an excuse to comitt a crime.
Before you condem them to death, try to understand there plight. You can't know a person untill you walk a mile in thier shoes, as the saying goes.
Ah, my favorite logical falacy: appeal to emotion. I don't need to know their plight to condemn them to death and in my ever so humble opinion their plight has ZERO to do with wether or not they're guilty of committing a crime such as murder.
It's the 21st century. If you can't resist the urge to kill someone because he's wearing a red bandanna then you have no business in living our society, period.
That's a nice out. Unfortunately it's not legal.
no way comparable to having electodes hooked to your testicles
:P
Errr, wasn't that what we were doing?
In Socialist Canada you talk to your doctor about the voices in your head.
In Capitalist America your gun talks to you.
Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
>The CIA is a *JOB*. The president is your *BOSS*. If you dont agree with the boss and speak out > against him ( or the company ), you can/should be fired. Regardless of what industry you work in. > Be it flipping hamburgers, building cars or protecting the country. Damn straight. Years later when you're asked about your time at the company, you want to be able to say that you were "just following orders."
I'd say you forgot your tag, but you're an Anonymous denial Coward, so it's obvious you've forgotten your straitjacket.
The US and our CIA certainly do torture. Of course that doesn't mean that Iranians, N Koreans, Taliban, Saddamists, Palestinians and Lebanes don't torture, any more than their torture means we don't. You've got your insane kindergarten rationalizations confused: you're supposed to say "everyone's doing it, we can too".
We need to stop all these evildoers by getting rid of Bush, who's helped stoke them to their worst violence in your lifetime. And we should get rid of you, too, by forcing you to learn what the hell you're talking about rather than just vomiting rightwing talkradio blabber like "stand by our president and Israel" when adults are busy talking.
--
make install -not war
Heck yeah! We're not an uncivilized country. It's the cretins who wish to go against every principal this country stands for. We are a civilized country being controlled by uncivilized people
WTF? So, we are civilized to our own people, but not to "fur-inners"?
You may have a point in that Western Europe should have freedom of speech laws, but they do have something we don't. They have a law saying you have the right to a fair trial, and they enforce it.
Be careful with this point. The scariest thing I've seen lately is the idea that we can justify ourselves by saying we are better than some evil dictator. Saying "i'm better than Hitler" doesn't say much, but if that is our country's only ambition, to be slightly better, then we will never have any morale authority as a nation.
Thank you. I think I will
Per capita, Canada has more firearms, but WAY less hand guns, than the US. There's the causative difference - pretty much unregulated hand gun ownership.
If you think that your unsupported conclusion is somehow causative, you need to go back to school and learn a bit about the scientific method. Especially that part about "empiricism".
According to the FBI, in 2004 16,137 were murdered in the United States. That's a murder rate of 5.5 per 100,000 people. Note that these are actual murders, which do not include manslaughter, suicides, accidents, or justifiable homocide (e.g., killing someone that's trying to kill you). More than half of these murders were committed with what are known as 'weapons of opportunity', which means whatever blunt or sharp object happens to be available at the time.
In Canada during that same time their were 548 homocides, for a murder rate of around 1.67 per 100,000 people.
Taking just these two bits of data in hand, it's rather clear that even if you removed every single hand gun from every single citizen in the United States, and assumed that deprived of a handgun the people who committed murder by firearm would suddenly decide NOT to commit murder (a ridiculous notion at best), the murder rate in the U.S. would still be far higher than it is in Canada. Realistically we'd have to assume that many of the murders that took place via handgun will still be committed by 'weapons of opportunity', or by other kinds of firearms, since my countrymen seem to be far more fond of killing each other than the citizens of other First World nations are. We're the paragons of domestic peace in comparison to just about any Third World nation on the planet, but rather violent by, say, Dutch standards.
Handguns aren't causative here. Handguns don't incite folks to start killing each other any more than hunting rifles or steak knives or baseball bats do.
Handguns do, however, even the score. Without handguns the larger, heavier, stronger person can do pretty much anything they please to smaller, lighter, weaker people. Arm both parties and the odds suddenly shift; strength, size, and the ability to take physical punishment no longer matter for shit. A bullet kills Arnie just as easily as it kills your 80-year-old Grandmother. To paraphrase someone rather famous: "God created Man, Smith and Wesson made them equal".
Which could explain why more than 60% of all handgun sales are made to women in the United States. Perhaps they're well aware of this fact, and don't care to leave their personal safety up to the whims of men, or of society, or of law enforcement. It might also explain the quickly climbing upward trend of single women in Canada purchasing and carrying illegal handguns; perhaps they, too, realize just how much at the mercy of others they are, and are no longer interested in playing victim just to appease their easily-frightened neighbors.
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
It would appear that my country is the most violent, per capita, on the face of the planet.
No, it's the most violent First World nation on the planet. Most Third World nations have us beat hands-down when it comes to any sort of violent crime.
Except during the Clinton administration, when the FBI's list tracking violent crimes showed a decline, the level of violence has increased every year since my birth.
According to the FBI, violent crimes have been declining in the U.S. since the '80's (google is your friend here). The Clinton administration years are not atypical. The press, however, is far more likely to play it up these days since their primary goal now seesm to be fear-mongering in any form.
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
the right to freedom of expression
Yeah, just so long as it doesn't upset or offend anyone. Just try talking about the Nazis in a positive light in Germany, or engaging in any of the various "hate speech" topics in Britain - you'll see the inside of a jail right quick. For these two countries it's "the right of freedom of expression except for anything on the appended list, subject to change at the whim of the government...."
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
Can you provide a single example of an American citizen being dragged from US soil to be held as an enemy combatant without due process? A link to a reputable news source would be sufficient.
How about Slashdot?
this is well-written and cogent.
I'd say you forgot your SNARK tag
No, I was being serious.
but you're an Anonymous denial Coward,
And you're a Doc unpatriotic Ruby.
so it's obvious you've forgotten your straitjacket.
No, a straightjacket could be considered torture, and we've already established that Bush doesn't do that.
The US and our CIA certainly do torture.
You linked to Google, and it is a well-known fact that Google's pageranks show a left-wing bias. Since Google can't be trusted with good, conservative values, I call BS on your link.
Of course that doesn't mean that Iranians, N Koreans, Taliban, Saddamists, Palestinians and Lebanes don't torture,
I'm glad we agree on something.
any more than their torture means we don't.
Then again, maybe you really are an absolute "the US is all wrong" crackpot.
You've got your insane kindergarten rationalizations confused:
Considering the self-contradictory stuff you're posting (once again the link to Pinko Google), it is you who seems to have failed kindergarten. Bush supported education in the 2000 election, so educated is what the correct right are.
you're supposed to say "everyone's doing it, we can too".
Oh am I? Now you freedom-haters are trying to decide what I should think?! Things aren't so black and white that we upstanding conservatives are supposed to condone torture. Only the Sith deal in such twisted absolutes.
We need to stop all these evildoers by getting rid of Bush,
No, that would help the evildoers. Since the Bush administration is doing its best to fight them, "getting rid of Bush" would only take out one of the forces trying to keep these cold, heartless souls from taking away our freedom.
who's helped stoke them to their worst violence in your lifetime.
In case you haven't noticed, this is WAR! Of course there will be violence!
And we should get rid of you, too,
And why on earth would we get rid of a good conservative citizen?
by forcing you to learn what the
Pay close attention to the word that comes after that. Don't say words like that in the future. Please think of the children.
you're talking about
As proven above, you're the deranged one.
rather than just vomiting rightwing talkradio blabber
The fine men who work talk radio should know far better than you - they are educated conservatives just like I am.
like "stand by our president and Israel"
Which we should do. The president is there to stop evildoers, and Israel is on the same side. To question that is like questioning whether we should have risen to stop the Nazis in World War II.
when adults are busy talking.
I'm mature enough not to use that H-word, unlike somebody we both know.
Now, I'm off to play Rainbow Six like a good American.
And you need to go back to school and learn how to count higher than your toes. The FBI stats say a different story than what you claim.
Your "More than half of these murders were committed with what are known as 'weapons of opportunity', implying that these weren't people who were shot to deathm is a total load of crap, according to the very first link I downloaded from the FBI. http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/03cius.htm
Go grab the spreadsheet - get "an edumication": http://www.fbi.gov/filelink.html?file=/ucr/cius_03 /xl/03tbl2-10.xls
Total murder victims: 14,408
FIREARMS: 9,638 THE # 1 CAUSE - 66.89% OF ALL MURDERS
Knives and cutting instruments: 1,816
Blunt objects (clubs, hammers, etc.): 651
Personal weapons (hands, fists, feet, etc.) 946
Poison: 9
Explosives:4
Fire: 163
Narcotics:41
Stangulation: 184
Asphyxiation: 128
Other or not stated: 828
In other words, your #1 "weapon of opportunity" is ... no surprise here ... a gun.
It's easy to kill with a gun. Its a LOT harder to kill with a knife or a baseball bat. Get rid of the guns, and you get rid of the "easy kills", as well as making it a lot riskier for someone to try to kill someone else.
either you're retarded or you're a very good satirist
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/06/29/do_mess_w
[...]
Denying trials is forbidden by the Fifth Amendment: "No person shall be
Torture is forbidden by the Eighth Amendment: "Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted." The restriction is unconditional. Torture is something else that the government simply cannot do legitimately. Period.
[...]
-
Also the Treaty Against Torture binds United States: http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/instree/h2catoc.htm
Any claims that torture is legal is pure bull. The U.S. President would have been hanged for what he has done in Nüremberg.
Forget the link; here's a direct quote from the 2004 crime reports I cited (rather than the 2003 report you used):
"The UCR Program collects weapon data for murder, robbery, and aggravated assault offenses. An examination of these data indicated that most violent crime (30.7 percent) involved the use of personal weapons, such as hands, fists, feet, etc. Firearms were used in 26.4 percent and knives or cutting instruments were used in 15.5 percent of violent crime. Other dangerous weapons were used in 27.3 percent of violent offenses. (Based on Tables 2.9 and 19.)"
You'll note that NON-FIREARM weapons were used in 73.6% of all violent crimes.
It's easy to kill with a gun. Its a LOT harder to kill with a knife or a baseball bat. Get rid of the guns, and you get rid of the "easy kills"
Oh, what fucking twaddle. You have no proof of that claim whatsoever other than your dubious assertion that somehow removing guns from the hands of every single citizen in the United States would magically make those who want to commit murder less inclined to do so. None. Nada. Zip. People kill just fine with blunt and sharp objects. Those who want to kill, can and will do so. And it's far easier to protect yourself from them if YOU are armed.
as well as making it a lot riskier for someone to try to kill someone else.
No, it'll make it incredibly easy to kill anyone who's smaller and weaker than you are. Which covers just about every woman in the U.S., compared to the average man. And as for evidence, I present the ENTIRE FUCKING HISTORY OF THE HUMAN RACE for your perusal. Guns level the playing field. Good for women, bad for fucking twats who think that owning a pair of balls gives them the right to do as they please to anyone who isn't as large as they are.
In any event, you still haven't provided a single shred of evidence that handguns promote violence. Not one.
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
Torture is a type of "crime against humanity", just like genocide is. Did you forget nuremberg ? Anybody being given such order should disobey them. And anybody accidentally getting a whif of such things happening should also loudly denounce them, clearance or not. Do you want us to go 60 years back and use the "I did not knew it" or "I was ordered to do it" excuses ?
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
Who has the right to determine who gets "chlorinated", as it were? You? The State? President Bush? Who should have the right to choose whether someone else lives or dies?
Here's a hint: There's no adequate answer to that question other than nobody.
It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
- E. Debs
Alternatively be a hypocrite and talk about what Christian morality one the few occasions it happens to suit you!
Let me look at a few key Christian teachings:
Lets start with "give all you have to the poor" (Mark 10: 21, Matthew 19:21), "it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of heaven" (Matthew 19:24, Mark 10:25, Luke 18:25), "blessed are the poor" (Matthew 5 and Luke 6:20) .and "woe to you who are rich" (Luke 6:24). Would you say the Bush administration is composed of people who act like they believe those?
Next what about: "blessed are the peacemakers" (Matthew 5:9) and "don't resist him who is evil, but whoever strikes you on the right cheek turn to him the other one also" (Matthew 5:38 and Luke 6:29).
Is that enough for starters? I could find more but I do not want excessively long quotes and explanations.
Because Jesus's teaching were about how to live your own life, rather than on how to run a country it is hard to find a Christian stance on public policy purely from the bible. However there is a Christian consensus on many issues and the right wings opinions are not usually in line with the consensus - on the death penalty for example.
A final thought. The behaviour of the early church was often quite socialist: "All who believed were together, and had all things in common. They sold their possessions and goods, and distributed them to all, according as anyone had need." Acts 2:44-45. Monasteries, convents and rligous orders still function this way.
Muslim societies don't do honor killings. It's like saying American societies practice murder; it's a heinous act that's illegal and condemned by the vast majority of the population.
Actually, under the equal protection clause EVERYBODY (including non-citizens) that resides on US soil is entitled to constitutional protections. The supreme court ruled on this literally over a hundred years ago.
yeah right!..
When you fell for the Fear Card, and gave up Due Process, and tortured your very first prisoner to death, you became EXACTLY as Evil as any Nazi was.
The ONLY differences being the methods and bodycount (so far.)
Do you think to the VICTIM it matters one bit if it's one, or 12 million?
Technology -- No Place For Wimps! Grateful Dead and Jerry Garcia Chatroom -- http://www.wemissjerry.org
If you are talking about illegality, then your quote isn't relevant--it's not a quote from any legal document of the United States.
Using this data, I summed the categories and plotted the totals. I see noise around a constant value from 1979 thru 1982 with a modest decrease for one year in 1983 that doesn't look like noise, followed by a *large* increase starting in 1984 and which peaks in 1994. The Clinton violent crime decline is significant through 2000, but then the slope flattens (but still declines.) The radical decrease during the Clinton administration is pretty amazing. It was during the time when the slope had begun to flatten that this trend came up in class. Without doubt the Clinton years where atypical, and to suggest that the crime rate has been declining since the 1980s is contrary to fact.
I am willing to qualify my statement this far, though: It would appear that my country is the most violent, per capita, of any industrialized nation on earth.
Without taking either side on the issue of whether the government should torture people, I think it's interesting that the constitution disallows cruel and unusual punishment. Torturing suspected terrorists to obtain information is certainly cruel and unusual, but arguably it isn't punishment.
This instance of torture doesn't fulfill the purposes of punishment. It doesn't serve as a deterent to other would-be terrorists and it's difficult to believe that it would have a rehabilitative effect. If waterboarding were a form of punishment, wouldn't it be more widely publicized to fulfill the public's desire for retribution?
Ostensibly, the purpose of waterboarding is to find information that could prevent further terrorist activities, which isn't punitive.
Use of the words "good", "bad" or "evil" is almost invariably the result of oversimplification.
Germany, "Grundgesetz" ("Basic Law" = constitution),
France, "La Déclaration des droits de l'Homme et du citoyen" ("Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen", an older law that is acknowledged by the constituion),
Austria, "Staatsgrundgesetz über die allgemeinen Rechte der Staatsbürger für die im Reichsrate vertretenen Königreiche und Länder" (approx. "Basic Law on the General Rights of Nationals", an older law explicitly included by the original constitution, now superceded by the UN Declaration of human rights which also is explicitly part of the constitution),
Looking up Sweden's, Finlands, Spain's, Portugal's, The Netherland's, Norway's, etc., constitutions is left as an exercise for the reader.
"When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
Controversial. Waterboarding is a safer method of torture. Medically, brain cells die when near asphixiation occurs, optic nerves can be damaged, and a weakened heart, and blood clots can dislodge, and kill the subject.
We don't know what the torture deathcount is. When somebody is tortured to death, it is, perhaps put down to heart attack. People ill, beaten, or sleep deprived are foreseeably, and increasingly vulnerable to each next dose of 'treatment'.
Mouthing the 'T' word, is highy sensitive, especially since the courts ruled on tribunals, heck some of the 'non tortured' people might sue.
You know things are fucked up, when you can't tell if someone is being sarcastic or serious.
This text really really ought to be satire, but I'm just not that confident in americans anymore.
You expect us to believe you when you try to use the BBC as a source? The BBC has a well-known liberal bias.
For those who didn't get the joke.
-
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
You've thrown in robber and aggravated assault - two crimes where nobody is murdered.
"murder" != "murder + robbery + assault"
So, since you can't even tell the difference between a murder and a robbery, WTF should anyone give any credence to ANY of your other retarded pseudo-rationalizations?
Also, the 2003 report was the first one from google - I didn't "cherry-pick", and I resent the implication.
Link to comparable stats for 2004: http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/cius_04/documents/04tbl2-9a .xls
Murder - 2004
... everything else pales into insignificance ...
Total: 14,141
Firearms: 9,326, AGAIN, the #1 MURDER WEAPON, 2/3 OF ALL VICTIMS.
Even more interesting, of the 9,326 murders committed with firearms, 1,044 were with "firearm type not stated". Removing them from the stats, of the remaining 8282 murders:
393 were with rifles
507 with shotguns
7,265 with hand guns - almost 90%
Hand guns - the #1 choice of 9 out of 10 people who commit murder with firearms.
Instead of bloviating, read the stats. Your claim that most murders were committed with "weapons of convenience" as opposed to firearms in general, and hand guns in particular, is so full of shit it its not funny.
Hand guns ARE causitive, because they make it too easy to kill. Point and shoot. Deprive people of hand guns, and the people who use hand guns to get "justice" or revenge would have to go to the cops instead of taking the law into their own hands. The current murder rate would be unsustainable.
Most of the people who resort to guns have self-image issues to begin with. That's why guns are also "penis extenders", and we call them "gun nuts" for a reason.
You're splitting hairs. By what authority does the government even detain these people? They are not criminals. They are not enemy soldiers (which, since we've made this a War on Naughty Ideas, doesn't make much sense to me...). We've made up this notion of "enemy combatants", that until two weeks ago meant "We can do whatever we want to these assholes".
If it's not punishment, the Government doesn't have the authority to do ANYTHING. If it IS punishment, it may not be cruel and unusual. So, yeah, I still disagree with you.
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
O Henry? You're going to use HIM as an example?
Millions of schoolchildren would be better off if he had been killed in the street, and they never had to read his garbage.
I'm sorry, that was some of the WORST writing of all time.
a very good satirist
Why, thank you. I think this is the first AC compliment I've ever seen.
Yes, it was satire. I saw DocRuby's OP just asking for an ultra-right-wing response. Having spent a considerable amount of my life in a region that believes this stuff, I should think I would be quite qualified to satirize it. In other words, I couldn't resist the urge to troll an area I know quite well.
It's satire. I know because I wrote it.
What's sad, though, is that there actually are educated people who think this way. I grew up in southern Virginia surrounded by this sort of crap. My AP History teacher was exactly like this: Reagan and Nixon could do no wrong yet Carter and Clinton did everything wrong. These people will go on insane rants, contradicting themselves a zillion times; you try to argue with them and they just spew off a bunch of figures so quickly that you could not possibly verify them.
It's exactly this sort of attitude that is keeping the entire region down. While the north and east of the state are moving forward, this anti-progressivism is keeping us in the hinderlands.
And to DocRuby: I'm sorry to say this, but YHBT.
If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
Really, if you're going to disagree and suggest a way to find sources supporting your argument, you really ought to check that those sources exist, rather than just assuming you're right.
If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
yes, but many of those countries, such as Germany, have laws against hate-speech in certain mediums, and laws against denying the holocaust. Then, there are also laws similar to the U.S.'s fairness doctrine, which was repealed in the 80's, and which dictated that if one view is stated, an opposing viewpoint must be given equal time.
I'm not trying to defend hate speech, lies, or biased journalism, but, (in America, if nowhere else) we will gladly sacrifice our civil rights to see the scum of the earth imprisoned, claiming "oh, but they'll only use it on terrorists", or "they'll only use it to catch child molestors". Of course, we could preface those laws with phrases such as "in cases of suspected terrorism..." or "in cases of suspected child molestation...", but we don't put that much thought into the law (partly because the guy who opposes the most overzealous version is perceived as being pro-terror or pro-child-molestation), and such laws end up giving up all claim to whatever right is being infringed upon.
Also, maybe i will defend biased journalism, a little. As for the fairness doctrine, Fox news has shown us that any metric used to measure fairness can be manipulated to produce a biased show. Sure, a "fairness czar" could arbitrarily decide what is and isn't fair, but such a person is likely to be a political appointee who will do his best to enforce his own bias on the media. then, there is the bias of which issues are important. For example, when Sean Hannity argues "democrats are the evil sons of satan" and Alan Colmes uses his equal time to argue "we're not that bad", you end up with a biased broadcast. You will also end up with biased broadcasts if you have a debate of "universal public health-care vs. leave granny out in the snow" or "universal public health care vs privatized universal health care". Each argument is biased in the it leaves out a third option.
But I suppose I'm rambling. My point is that European nations do have laws against certain typs of speech, so their speech is not always 100% "free"
My point is that European nations do have laws against certain typs of speech, so their speech is not always 100% "free"
So does the US, and neither is all speech in the US free. In some cases (e.g., Holocaust denial in Germany) the limits might be tighter than in the US, but for those having no direct experience I might have to explain that of course the secret police does not pick you up as soon as you deny the Holocaust, or utter antisemitism over a few beers. If it did, the jails would be much fuller.
To get in conflict with the denial laws, you have to deny in some publication or big public assembly, and very clearly. Yes, this still limits free speech, and I do see it ambivalently. But you have to take into account that after the end of WW2, Germany was full of Nazis (surprise, surprise), and this remained the case for many years or even decades.
You just couldn't have those people go around denying their horrid crimes in the media and in big public displays. It would have been dangerous, as the lure of this ideology might have still been there, and it would have been insufferable for the victims/survivors. It also was simply not possible to argue with each and every one of the nazi assholes, and one point you just had to say, "you shut up now." There might come to time to changes these laws.
And as a side note, we have plenty biased journalism and there are now laws against it. There are however laws for the state-owned TV stations (in Germany there are two, to prevent them from becoming 0wn3d), who have to follow certain guidelines and, not surprisingly, produce much better program than the privately-owned ones.
"When I first heard Daydream Nation it quite frankly scared the living shit out of me." -- Matthew Stearns
Lars T.
To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck
What little I did find supported the "90th percentile" assertion.
Citation please.
The implication was "nature" does...and we seem to be thwarting natures work in many ways by going out of our way to save people from their own stupidity...that would often prove them to be taking themselves out of the gene pool.
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2006/07/19/usint13 767.htm
The average person lasts 14 seconds before caving in.
So, this scaring is not only simple, but effective.
As a Buddhist, I try to be as compassionate as possible. The mlecchas have caused more human harm over a millenium than even the Socialists of the 20th Century.
If one way to reduce human suffering is to scare the terrorists, then I am very, very much in favor of it.
You want to know what torture is? Check out what the Socialists did to Tibet!
No wonder the Leftards are whining about waterboarding: because it works, it must be torture.
BTW, if waterboarding is torture, and since waterboarding works, then the truism "torture produces bad intel" is proved false.
Here, we have a technique that seems every bit as effective as torture, if not moreso.
All it leaves is some bad memories and perhaps a phobia.
My exposure to country music has left me with an aversion to steel guitar. I am scarred and cannot enjoy the brilliance of Robert Randolph -- I hear him, recognize the amazing talent, and then the pounding headache sets in as I am re-traumatized, all that AM, all that country music, no escape, oh I hope I am not an antenna....
You should not assume hearing country music is the most life-threatening situation I have been in. The gangs were not as organized as they are now, but they were armed, and there was in fact a killing at one of the schools I attended. Oh, and school violence is not the only time people have tried to kill me. I think for myself, and people hate that.
As a Buddhist, I try to be as compassionate as possible. The mlecchas have caused more human harm over a millenium than even the Socialists of the 20th Century.
Try harder. Your post has been pretty much a refutation of the very principle of compassion. You're apparently not above racial epithets much less above thinking that it's okay to torture people. Maybe you should ask those people from Tibet what they think of torture. It might be easier to understand if people you consider to be actual people told you they didn't like it.
If one way to reduce human suffering is to scare the terrorists, then I am very, very much in favor of it.
This is essentially the essence of any argument in favor of torture. If hurting people saves more people, then it's okay. That's known in philosophy as utilitarianism.
By that logic any act of horror is justifiable as long as it (a) causes suffering to less than the majority of people (or to some acceptable minority and (b) somehow benefits those that it is not inflicted upon. Consider that oppressing Tibet for the benefit of China meets this measure.
The central flaw in even a utilitarian view of torture lies in whether or not (b) is true. Does torturing people rounded up in Afghanistan prevent terrorism, or does it only drive more people to terrorism? I point you to this excellent post for a suggestion on the answer.
Or does your tossing about of epithets like 'mlecchas,' your willingness to let potentially innocent people be tarred with the same brush as terrorists because of their religion and to suffer torture, and your belief that you being forced to listen to music you don't like is the same as 'mlecchas' being tortured just simply reveal that you're a racist who doesn't consider people who aren't like you to be actual people worthy of the same rights as you?
BTW, if waterboarding is torture, and since waterboarding works, then the truism "torture produces bad intel" is proved false.
No. Waterboarding is just effective at breaking people. In no way does it ensure that they won't make up stories or just tearfully agree to anything that you say that they did just to make it all stop.
The problem with torture's utility is not that it's ineffective at getting the truth out of people who know the truth but that it's extremely effective at getting nonsense out of people who don't know what you're looking for or who know that what you're asking about isn't true but just want the pain to stop.
You can get anything out of a guy being tortured. Anything you want. Sometimes, if you're lucky, it might even be the truth.
My exposure to country music has left me with an aversion to steel guitar. I am scarred and cannot enjoy the brilliance of Robert Randolph -- I hear him, recognize the amazing talent, and then the pounding headache sets in as I am re-traumatized, all that AM, all that country music, no escape, oh I hope I am not an antenna....
You really show, once again, your complete lack of empathy as well as sense of proportion if you think that listening to country music is the same as being imprisoned without hope of release by people who hate you and mock-drowned for information you may or may not have.
All it leaves is some bad memories and perhaps a phobia.
Having your genitals shocked repeatedly only leaves "some bad memories and perhaps a phobia." Being beaten with a rubber hose could only leave "some bad memories and perhaps a phobia." Being raped only leaves "some bad memories and perhaps a phobia" as long as you aren't be made pregnant from it.
But, hey, what's crippling madness and heart forged in fear and hate as long as it doesn't leave a mark, right?
Good luck on your next incarnation. You'll need it.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
You're kidding, right? First you tell me I'm wrong and I should find out how wrong by using Google, and then when I say what little is available on Google says I'm right, you demand citations? Well fine, here you go, ya' lazy bum:
Index of Economic Fredom (WSJ/Heritage Foundation): 9th out of 157
Freedom in the World 2006 (Freedomhouse): one of 49 countries scoring 1-1 (Political Rights-Civil Liberties) out of 192 total. Not proof of 90th opercentile, but consistent with it nonetheless.
This combined index shows the US falling one notch short of the highest possible score with 1-1-2 (only 19 countries out of 196 scored highest, 1-1-1), but the one "ding" bringing the US down out of the top is from the Reporters Without Borders ranking, where they're still pissed that the US Army doewsn't want to schlep bonehead reporters around through a war giving away sensitive operational info to al jazeera over satcom video phones.
If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
I mean simply put a tracking device in all the guns. Problem solved, every owner of a gun no matter where they buy it is tracked.
Normally, I post long informative helpful comments on slashdot (well, kinda). Not as long and helpful as the other guy that replied to you, but still, I like to think they're at least average, that they add a bit, that they occasionally entertain or inform.
Reading the above, though, I pretty much have to break my general habit. Here is my response:
You, son, are fucked up! Not just a bit weird. Not just kinda kooky. Not even Anne Coulter level. You have serious problems. If people really do keep trying to kill you, maybe you should just consider that, you know, a hint.
Ok, that sounded mean. But on the other hand, (up until you started on the steel guitars and gang killings) you came across as a psychotic, sadistic sociopath with a strong sideline in extreme right wing hate-politics and a side of racism. So, you know
Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
irst you tell me I'm wrong and I should find out how wrong by using Google, and then when I say what little is available on Google says I'm right, you demand citations? Well fine, here you go, ya' lazy bum...
The first is economic freedom, which I'm not sure qualifies as a human right and certainly does not correspond to human rights in general. You second citation places the US in the top 25% or so, but is not specific as to where (as you mention). The last shows the US as barely in the top 90%. I'll have to see if I can dig up the research I did back in the day. There were a lot more resources with "grades" easily available when last I looked. Perhaps the US has changed rankings or perhaps it is no longer kosher to be so statistical about abstracts.
Not in all people. Not all people are killers.
"Hmm our enemies took that position a _long_ time ago."
Your argument is doubtful, seen the fact that even in the 70ies, the CIA was 'educating' torture to police-departements of Pinochet. But even when taken as true; your argument is, then, because vile terrorists used it before us, we must now start using the same vile position?
"While I am against torture, I have a hard time feeling sorry for any of the people in Guantanamo,"
That's your lack of empathy: I feel sorry for *any* humans being treated inhumane, even if they themselves would have less moral scrupules. The whole point is of being *above their* level of acting. And not only do you show a lack of empathy and little sense of justice (which should be applied equally to all), you also make the awful generalisation that shows blind stupidity... Not for *any* of the prisoners? So not even for those who, after years, were released from prison, without being found guilty of anything? Well, good for you, sir. I guess you *always* sleep sound.
"and I find it amazing that people like you do. These people will kill you if they are given the chance and yet you stand by them. Amazing."
Yes, I'm sure it's amazing to people like you, who seem to think that human rights are only due towards some people, and not others. I, as well as the parent poster (I presume), stand by the rights of those people, not because we stand by their viewpoints, but because every human deserves basic rights, regardless of their actions. That's what the difference between a state with a rule of law, and a dictatorial state is all about.
I guess the difference is wasted upon you, as it is for the current USA government.
--- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
It's a reasonable point. But feel a need to reply, as I disagree.
The real problem here isn't morale or loyalty; in most other contexts the CIA's action would have been reasonable. The real problem is groupthink. In an intelligence context this matters a lot. Eliminating someone not "on mission" harms the integrity of your intelligence; this action strongly indicates the misordering of priorities for what is meant to be an intelligence agency. It's not as if Christine Axsmith criticised the agency to outsiders.
To quote Mark Twain "Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please".
Wikileaks, no DNS