[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I find the actions of these terrorists just as abhorrent as you do.
I doubt that since as far as I have seen until just now you have done nothing but defend them. > Not to mention that such actions are counterproductive. If someone > is tortured into confessing to a crime, it is always suspect. Yes, but that isn't exactly what is going on, is it? What's going in is called, if I recall correctly, the short time problem. You know something is going to happen, something horrible, and you know that the person you have has information that will stop it. Once that event passes their information is useless. They won't give it up. What do you do? Do you let hundreds of thousands of people die or do you get the information using all means short of those that incur long-standing harm? That's a decision that most people will never face in their lifetime and yet they feel they are supremely qualified to judge those who are in the unfortunate position to have to make that call. Confession of a crime is about what they did. We don't need torture to figure that out. We have all the time in the world to figure it out. What they know about what will happen, that's a different matter. That information is of limited value. We don't have the luxury of time. That is why matters of war and especially of this stateless conflict are not, and never have been, a police action. So how would you handle the short-time problem? More importantly, have you even thought to ask how other nations outside the US handle it? Or how about the other side? Or are you just content to pass judgment on those who have protected your right to pass judgment on them? -- Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream? PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do... -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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