Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
All the more reason that decisions should not be based on emotion in the heat of the moment. And being upset or scared is no excuse for committing a crime.Actually, I am not arguing in favor of torture per se. I am arguing in favor of recognizing the mitigating circumstances for those accused of torture. It has always been my position that the virulence with which the Bush administration has been attacked for torturing the likes of KSM could only have been possible many years removed from the horror of 9/11 (and the associated fear of another attack). My main point is that most of the people who are so against torture now would have been in favor of it in 2002. One piece of evidence is that Nancy Pelosi and Diane Feinstein were gung-ho for enhanced interrogation in 2002, and now they're some of the staunchest critics of the program.
I've seen no evidence for this.My theory is that most people who were against torturing terrorists to get information a week ago are far more amenable to the idea today.
As you have provided no argument or evidence that their conclusions were biased by the "moral issues", your opinion can be safely rejected as immaterial.Meh, their discomfort with the moral issues colors their views of its efficacy. I don't trust them to give an honest assesment.
You don't trust their assessment because you disagree with the conclusion. It's as simple as that.
Whereas,
...you appear to have your own biases at play. Your opinion of torture seems to have less to do with torture itself and more about partisan loyalty.Well, yes, that is my main point actually.
