Darth Rotor
Salted Sith Cynic
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2006
- Messages
- 38,527
Then why were you trying to associate yourself with this successful challenge to the government's policy?LOL. What did I do to personally influence the cases at GITMO? Nothing.
DR
Then why were you trying to associate yourself with this successful challenge to the government's policy?LOL. What did I do to personally influence the cases at GITMO? Nothing.
Sure, screw critical thinking and skepticism. Any CT will do.Of course, there is something else to consider here:
Iran does NOT swan around the globe telling other countries what to do and calling itself 'the Land of the Free'.
Nor does it insist on invading other countries, ostensibly to impose its way of life and 'freedoms' on them, when really its rulers are just after the invadees' natural resources (which is, after all, and as any fule kno, why all wars are started - to strengthen and perpetuate the initiating society's rulers' grip on power and wealth).
As a subject of a country that used to do both of the above, I can recognise hypocrisy when I see it.
Not according to what I understand.Sorry...
Mamdouh Habib, an Australian citizen, was kidnapped in Pakistan and given to Egypt for a while..then on to Gitmo. He was released when no evidence was produced of him ever doing anything . He was not a combatant , he was a fruit shop owner from Sydney.
Yes. They do now..after years of pressure and law suits.
Your stupidity amazes me.
Keep it up. You just might qualify for a Darwin award.
The Ayatollah Khomeni was the leader of his government (at least the Islamic High Council element of the Islamic Republic) while Pat Robertson is not a member of any government. Ayatollah Khomeni had to power to assign government assets via official channels to whatever hit he ordered. Pat Robertson could only suggest a hit, or try to hire his own hit men out of his own pocket, which I suspect he was too cheap to do.
Is that distinction clear enough for you?
DR
I already quoted where you suggested it, and then I asked whether that’s actually what you meant. Do you have an answer, or are you just going to duck the issue with dishonest personal attacks?
Why should I bother to dig up a cite when you’ve already shown yourself to be dishonest jackass?
Tell you what. You admit that you acted with blatant disregard for the truth, and apologize, and I’ll give a cite that the concept of illegal combatants predates the Bush Administration.
And by “repeat”, you mean “ask for the first time”.
You were the one who mentioned them, not me. Perhaps you should see a doctor to be screened for dementia.
And by “refuse to answer”, you mean “not read my mind and give an answer to a question that I haven’t even asked yet”. And by “simple”, you mean “based-on-false-premises”.
I asked for proof, not circumstantial evidence.
Sure, screw critical thinking and skepticism. Any CT will do.
...the issue that the inmates of Gitmo are being held in a legal limbo where they are 'not in any legal jurisdiction' - i.e held beyond the safety of the Law.
So if those captured in Afghanistan were wearing green uniforms they would be allowed Geneva Conventions protections? I didnt realize it was that simple.
The detainees at Guantanamo Bay Naval Station are not being held beyond the safety of the law nor in legal limbo. You may not agree with the Commissions Act but it is the law. The US Supreme Court has ruled some years ago that citizen-detainees at least are under the jurisdiction of US federal courts though that jurisdiction need not be enforced to satisfy the Due Process Clause of the US Constitution. The Bush administration had argued that they were under the exclusive jurisdiction of the military tribunal system.
You just insult people, don't you?
You cannot offer any actual debate or evidence to back up your viewpoints, so you just throw insults at your opponents in the hope that no-one else will notice your absolute inability to debate anything.
Thank you for playing.
Any time we allow a person to be held indefinately without charge,
Actually, more than your statement about POW's - after all, there are NO 'POW's at Gitmo -
I don't suppose you can show the Congressional Authorization for Use of Military Force for the "war on drugs"?Except this isn't a real war. That's why they aren't POWs. You can't just grab people, many of whom have silm to no evidence that they were combatants, say we're in a war, then not define the terms of the war in such a way that you can really definitively say it's over at some point and then hold them indefinitely. After all, we're at war with drugs. Why not just lock up everyone who had dreads and see if we can get them to confess to dealing. It may take a few years and require some unusual methods, but hey, we're at war.
I don't suppose you can show the Congressional Authorization for Use of Military Force for the "war on drugs"?
Didn't think so, but thanks for playing!
You can't just grab people, many of whom have silm to no evidence that they were combatants,
I see a sarcastic dismissal of a metaphor, but no actually adressing of any points. If this is a war, despite a lack of actual declaration of one, when is it over? After all, it was mission accomplished years ago. Should everyone at Gitmo be released as soon as Congress withdraws authorization?
Sure you can; its written in the Geneva Conventions.
Perhaps you should read it.
And I never called it a real war, nor did I call them POWs.
Mission accomplished? Why are we still fighting?
You're referring to talking points, made by a politician who is not actually fighting. I will let the troops involved in this 'war' raise the mission accomplished banner.
I did. This fourth Geneva convention seem to prohibit this. There is a distinction between civilians and combatants and it isn't up to the warring parties to decide what that is.
I specifically said you didn't. If it isn't a war, how is the rule that combatants are held to the end of a war relevant?
Troops never make this sort of decision anymore than they make the decision to go to war in the first place. It's always politicians.
You're not very good at this, are you? There were separate AUMF's for Iraq and the terrorist war - for all intents and purposes this is a declaration of war. I don't think there's anyone in Gitmo as a result of the Iraq war, captured insurgents get turned over to the Iraqi government. And you may be shocked to find that a war isn't over because some admiral hangs a banner on his ship.I see a sarcastic dismissal of a metaphor, but no actually adressing of any points. If this is a war, despite a lack of actual declaration of one, when is it over? After all, it was mission accomplished years ago. Should everyone at Gitmo be released as soon as Congress withdraws authorization?