I've taken the position on this forum in the past that the United States should not torture people in its custody, partially because it's ineffective -- someone being tortured will tell you anything to get it to stop -- and partially because we just shouldn't, that it is beneath us as a nation.
I am, however, willing to make an exception for these guys:
One of my biggest problems with torture, apart from the fact that we lose the claim to any moral high ground when we do it, is that it allows the captor to take the place of the justice system, effectively punishing someone before they've been adjudicated as having actually done anything wrong. When someone like this comes out, though, and basically says, "Hey, we did it, we're happy we did it, and we'd do it again," I'm not that concerned about what happens to them -- especially when they're not citizens.
I suppose that makes me a hypocrite of sorts, but under the circumstances, I'll take it.
I am, however, willing to make an exception for these guys:
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – Five men charged in the Sept. 11 attacks mock U.S. authorities and proclaim themselves "terrorists to the bone" in a war crimes court filing released Tuesday.
One of my biggest problems with torture, apart from the fact that we lose the claim to any moral high ground when we do it, is that it allows the captor to take the place of the justice system, effectively punishing someone before they've been adjudicated as having actually done anything wrong. When someone like this comes out, though, and basically says, "Hey, we did it, we're happy we did it, and we'd do it again," I'm not that concerned about what happens to them -- especially when they're not citizens.
I suppose that makes me a hypocrite of sorts, but under the circumstances, I'll take it.
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