post 491, reply 1 (of 2)
Yow! The thread is on page 27 already. I, on the other hand, am still back on page 13.
I dislike posting without having read all the posts in a thread. Earlier in the day, while preparing to reply to some posts on page 13, I read up through the then-current last page, 24. But the thread has grown another 3 pages since then.
There's quite a bit I want to reply to on pages 13 - 16, so I'm going to catch up on posting before I catch up on reading.
I gave lefty more than sufficient information to locate instances where torture worked quite effectively to save lives.
And there you have put your finger on the problem. The reason why lefty and others keep asking you to provide
evidence is that you keep on refraining from providing it. As you yourself acknowledge by your words in this post, what you are providing is
locations where you think evidence is located.
If evidence is indeed located in these places, then by all means dig it out and present it. Until you do, the evidence remains un-presented.
It is not up to lefty to dig up your evidence for you. It's up to you.
The tactic you are using is the same one used by believers in reincarnation, believers in psychic detectives, believers in conspiracy theories regarding the Kennedy assassination, and many others. They will wave a link, say that the evidence to prove their claims can be found in the articles, books, or web sites linked to, and then say that unless and until the skeptic goes to those sites, reads everything there, and refutes it, that their claim must be accepted. That's a good way to "prove" anything, regardless of its merits -- which is why it is
not a method acceptable to skeptics in attempting to determine what is true and what isn't.
If you have evidence, then presenting it is an easy thing to do. When people fail to do so, and play games the way you are doing, it's very often a sign that the evidence to support their case won't stand up under scrutiny.
Providing evidence is not some kind of punishment.
It is when you are asked to provide the same information over and over...
The reason you have been asked over and over to provide the information is that you still have not provided it. (As you yourself acknowledged, all you have done is provide "clues" to where it can be found.)
All you need to do is provide the evidence. If the evidence to support your points can be located at the places where you say it can, then by all means go there, locate it, and present it for the rest of us to see.
Once you have presented the evidence, then those of us who have asked to see it will be able to examine and evaluate it. If it stands up to scrutiny, then your work is done; if not, you can go back and try to find some evidence which will stand up to scrutiny.
If you still don't understand the difference between providing a
location where you think evidence can be found and providing
evidence, let me illustrate.
1. Here is a claim backed up by link-waving:
Waterboarding is torture. Link.
No evidence has been presented for the claim. It is simply a claim, backed up by a link at which evidence may or may not be found.
2. Here is the same claim, backed up by evidence.
Waterboarding is torture.
Malcolm Nance, who was chief of training for the US Navy SERE program, describes it thusly:
Waterboarding is a torture technique. Period. There is no way to gloss over it or sugarcoat it...
Waterboarding is a controlled drowning that, in the American model, occurs under the watch of a doctor, a psychologist, an interrogator and a trained strap-in/strap-out team. It does not simulate drowning, as the lungs are actually filling with water. There is no way to simulate that. The victim is drowning. How much the victim is to drown depends on the desired result (in the form of answers to questions shouted into the victim’s face) and the obstinacy of the subject. A team doctor watches the quantity of water that is ingested and for the physiological signs which show when the drowning effect goes from painful psychological experience, to horrific suffocating punishment to the final death spiral.
Waterboarding is slow motion suffocation with enough time to contemplate the inevitability of black out and expiration –usually the person goes into hysterics on the board. For the uninitiated, it is horrifying to watch and if it goes wrong, it can lead straight to terminal hypoxia. When done right it is controlled death. Its lack of physical scarring allows the victim to recover and be threaten with its use again and again.
Same claim, same link. But in the latter example, the evidence is laid out clearly for others to see. This makes it easy for others to examine what is being claimed as evidence and to see if it stands up to scrutiny.
Evidence, it should be noted, is not the same as proof. Unless a matter is extremely trivial, we should expect to find evidence which will support conflicting views. Therefore, in order to determine whether a claim is valid or not, we need to examine the evidence, see how much weight to assign to the various pieces, and see which way the balance tilts.
It is the weight of the evidence, considered as a whole, which determines whether we accept something as true or reject it as false. So just because I have submitted
a piece of evidence that water-boarding is torture doesn't mean that water-boarding necessarily is torture. Nor should you assume that because you submit
a piece of evidence that torture is effective at obtaining useful information that proves torture is effective at obtaining useful information.
But it's a start. And if your claim is true, you and those who agree with you should eventually be able to present sufficient evidence to show it.
Of course, if what a person is saying is BS, then it's understandable why the person might want to be a bit more evasive in presenting evidence and either to present it in hard-to-read forms or to come up with excuses for not presenting it.
Well, first, as a recent post by me to you proves, I do have sources that will back up the claims I've made. I always do.
Really? Which one?
I suspect you are referring to your
incorrect claim that Kiriakou said conventional interrogation was "
totally ineffective" (
your words, not his) in getting information from Zubaydah and KSM. If so, you need to learn to read more carefully.
Nowhere in the article which you cite did Kiriakou say that conventional interrogation failed to provide useful information in those instances. (Nor would he have said that, since it isn't true.)
I'll demonstrate the difference between what you think he said and what he actually said two posts from now, in a reply to
post 534 in which you repeat that incorrect claim.