We, are Americans. Americans vote in free and fair elections, Representatives to speak and decide issues for them. So, when elected leaders send troops off to fight, kill, capture, and torture enemies, whatever is done TO those enemies has been done by "Us."
Therefore, either willingly or through complacancy, "We" are indeed torturing people. Our soliders or C.I.A. agents are "dipping witches", i.e. "waterboarding" and stockading prisoners i.e. bound uncomfortable positions on a VERY regular basis. The V.P. has made no bones about these procedures, and their willingness to continue the practices.
Beyond that, "We" have stripped prisoners and subjected them to hypothermic conditions, denied food and water to prisoners, taken pictures of them naked and stacked into human piles, and even dog collared them to be pictured in inhumane positions. "We" would claim that OUR soliders were indeed 'tortured' if we saw and or heard from their lips that they were subject to these conditions.
I KNOW "We" have done these because I have either heard first hand accounts of these things within congressional oversight committee hearings, or seen the pictures myself. The soliders who committed these atrocities may very well have been punished, but the damage they did to our reputation and global standing has already been done.
I would hold, that receeding the defination as to what is torture is a step backwards. AND that such actions insure that enemies will fight to the death, rather than surrender to capture. A WWII vet told me that close to the end of the War, that German troops would surrender more easily than they did at the War's onset BECAUSE they heard how 'good' we treated POW's. I know the evidence is anecdotal, but I think it makes a good point. When your enemy KNOWS that surrendering will result in torture, fighting to the death makes more sense...
Steverino & ghost707, you guys are as wrong as hail.
"We" aren't just putting underware on people's head. Although I can't prove it, I heard that U.S. Intelligence officers have actually electricuted a man's testicles until one them blew up. And that no less than a dozen 'enemy combatants' died at Abu Girab, while under U.S. control. Redefining the Geneva Conventions to allow waterboarding isn't a step forward...
Do the two of you believe that the End DOES justify the Means?
Moreover, do the two of you believe that 'some people', be they terrorists or enemy combatants, are NOT Equal to other Men and endowed with certain inalienable rights?