I'd love to write about something else, like the early bills filed at the Lege or Houston city charter revisions or something similarly compelling, but no.
That's an admission of guilt to a war crime, as defined by the Geneva Convention accords.
Torture did not work, the CIA lied about that, some in the CIA questioned the use of torture and the value of the intelligence it was (not) providing, and were told to shut up and keep doing it. And the only person in jail at the moment is a former CIA agent who tipped off a reporter about the torturing.
Oh, and the executive director of the ACLU thinks the torturers should all be pardoned. Which is just the latest, freshest steaming pile of shit for the rest of us to eat, served on a silver platter by the above-and-beyond authorities running things in this so-called free country.
“What I keep hearing out there is they portray this as a rogue operation, and the agency was way out of bounds and then they lied about it,” (Dick) Cheney said in a telephone interview with the New York Times on Monday. “I think that’s all a bunch of hooey. The program was authorized. The agency did not want to proceed without authorization, and it was also reviewed legally by the Justice Department before they undertook the program.”
That's an admission of guilt to a war crime, as defined by the Geneva Convention accords.
Detainees who were tortured, in turn, provided interrogators with the information they wanted to hear, including fictitious connections between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein, which the Bush administration later used to bolster its case for invading Iraq. Those connections proved to be false.
“It is also important to note that some detainees who were subjected to enhanced interrogation techniques attempted to provide false or misleading information,” former CIA Director Leon Panetta wrote in a letter to Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) in 2011, disputing Bush administration claims that torture helped capture bin Laden. “In the end, no detainee in CIA custody revealed the facilitator/courier’s full true name or specific whereabouts. This information was discovered through other intelligence means.”
Torture did not work, the CIA lied about that, some in the CIA questioned the use of torture and the value of the intelligence it was (not) providing, and were told to shut up and keep doing it. And the only person in jail at the moment is a former CIA agent who tipped off a reporter about the torturing.
Oh, and the executive director of the ACLU thinks the torturers should all be pardoned. Which is just the latest, freshest steaming pile of shit for the rest of us to eat, served on a silver platter by the above-and-beyond authorities running things in this so-called free country.
This issue is not separate from the killings by police around the country. It's just more evidence that America is stuck in a period of lawlessness and brutality that we seem unable to face. It is endemic in federal agencies, in most if not all law enforcement at Ferguson level right up to 935 Pennsylvania Avenue, and in, of course, Congress -- in Cleveland, West Florissant Avenue, and Staten Island...Lawlessness is rampant in every level of our justice system, from corrupt local prosecutors to the connection between big money and our highest court.
Sooo... what do you think the rest of us should do about it?
2 comments:
It was just "folks"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIiyDiyUZ2w
So we shouldn't prosecute anybody, of course.
This is the same ACLU that last month said Citizens United is good.
Folks, if you want to donate to a charity of this type, it's called the Center for Constitutional Rights. No money to the ACLU.
I've got yet more reasons, on the ACLU's decade-long decline, at my blog.
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