No-one, I think, has argued that waterboarding is "light-years more egregious" than what you have described.
No?
Better check with ANTpogo
No-one, I think, has argued that waterboarding is "light-years more egregious" than what you have described.
Because varwoche leaped before he looked?
No?
Better check with ANTpogo
Ah, well, obviously that makes a huge difference.
No.
I read his posts: I advise you to do the same.Better check with ANTpogo
Well, since Raychill Maddow erroneously claimed Japanese convicted of "waterboarding" at the Tokyo Trials were hanged, I guess I should be sanguine that at least varwoche got the sentence correct if not the time served.
Oooh, so close, and yet so tragically far.
No, it's because I already pointed out to you that MacArthur releasing prisoners early without commuting or overturning their sentences does absolutely zip to the fact that these men were convicted of torture that explicitly and specifically included the exact same waterboarding technique used by the CIA at Guantanamo and were sentenced to serve anywhere from 5 to 25 years of hard labor by an American-led war crimes tribunal.
And yet here you are, trotting that same cut-and-pasted comment out yet again, as if it means something.
Seriously, did this thread just jump back in time?
Cicero, we covered why it doesn't matter what Maddow said way back on, like, page SEVEN.
It "diminishes the brutality of his actions"?Cut & Paste argument? These are facts. Manson and three of his followers were sentenced to death. The change of the death penalty in California after their incarceration allowed them to be eligible for parole. Tex Watson was then able to marry and have three children while behind bars. Does this change his original conviction? No, but it sure does diminish the severity of his original punishment and, by so doing, the brutality of his actions.
Cut & Paste argument? These are facts. Manson and three of his followers were sentenced to death. The change of the death penalty in California after their incarceration allowed them to be eligible for parole. Tex Watson was then able to marry and have three children while behind bars. Does this change his original conviction? No, but it sure does diminish the severity of his original punishment and, by so doing, the brutality of his actions.
It "diminishes the brutality of his actions"?
Did some of his victims come back to life or something?
You mean, someone on the internet is wrong about something?Apparently it does matter since her erroneous information is taken as fact by people who post the same idiocy on the internet.
Apparently it does matter since her erroneous information is taken as fact by people who post the same idiocy on the internet.
Why, because YOU say so?
And if I say in an argument that the US government shouldn't murder people in Satanic rituals by pointing out that Charles Manson was sentenced to death for the same thing, do you really think saying "Hey, they later changed the death penalty so he's only spending life in prison now" is some kind of mitigation or justification for the original murders?
BAC, read about integrity.
Least it be missed by those who sorely need to read it:
The torture proponents on this board should be ashamed of themselves. These guys faced down the freakin' Nazis during a much more difficult war than we are currently in and they never...
Well, in their own words:
Feel free to crawl back under the nearest rock.
I'm sure Howard Zinn, a WWII veteran, also objects to waterboarding the three detainees. Is that supposed to be the definitive answer that ends the discussion? There were 16 million Americans in uniform during WWII. How many do you think have a difference of opinion with Zinn, Henry Kolm, Peter Weiss, Arno Mayer, George Frenke, etc?
Paul Tibbets was excoriated by some vets after the war for dropping the A-Bomb on Hiroshima. He may have been nonplussed about their opinions, but he always maintained he didn't lose sleep over his actions.
But Kolm's chess playing with Hess must have done something to the man. In 1940, he flew a Bf-110 to Scotland for a meeting with the Duke of Hamilton.
You misunderstand the importance of what these men were saying.
These veterans had the same job to do during a worse period of our history. They are speaking not of preference, but out of experience. Their opinion does out weight those vets who were not interrogators because they are speaking with authority on the subject. And they say that torture is not only not necessary, but not as effective and degrading to the honor of the US.
They did what you and BAC seem to think is impossible: both saving lives and upholding the moral high ground at the same time.
A hundred of you two aren't worth one of them.
Members of the OSS are also veterans of WWII, and they used the waterboarding technique on Wehrmacht and Schutzstaffeln personnel captured during the war.
Of course the OSS wasn't in the cozy surroundings of Fort Hunt Virginia when they questioned their captives. They were in Sicily/Italy/France when they needed to get information in a hurry. Do their actions invalidate your notion that the U.S. held the moral high ground in WWII?
You didn't read the article, did you? These men were interrogators during one of the most difficult times in our country's history since the Civil War, including our current situation. They interrogated Nazis and had the integrity to not stoop to their level or that of the Japanese.
I'm embarrassed for the both of you.
eta: The truly ironic thing here is that it is the conservatives (nut jobs, I'll grant you, but still conservatives) who are actively trying to change what it means to be an American rather than preserving it.
So ... how did it make his actions less brutal?Noooo. But he was allowed to have a life while his victims lives were cut short.
So now you are incredulous that MacArthur reduced these sentences by one-third in 1950.
Are you that desperate?
Thanks for the correction. (with the caveat that I've no idea who you're quoting, and that's a bit of a problem especially given your track record)Actually, he didn't serve 15 years.
"On March 7, 1950, MacArthur issued a directive that reduced the sentences by one-third for good behavior and authorized the parole of those who had received life sentences after fifteen years."
"By the end of 1958, all Japanese war criminals, including A-, B- and C-class were released from prison and politically rehabilitated."
We know that G.I's shot enemy POW's. We also know that the OSS, their operatives, and independent Guerilla forces did not always operate by the Geneva Convention.