April 5, 2007

Today's Mideast fashion news.

I'm looking at the front page of the NYT and glad to see the British hostages have been released, but can we talk about the clothes? The men have all been given gray suits (which they're wearing without ties), but the poor woman -- Kaye Turney -- must stand for all the news photography in something you'd be embarrassed to wear to the grocery store.

And it's not so much the headscarf. I didn't want to talk about headscarves today. That was the subject yesterday. I mean I'm still getting traffic from this post on Mahablog, which copied one of the several points I had just made in a post that supported Nancy Pelosi wearing a headscarf. Mahablog nevertheless insulted me and linked not to my Pelosi post but to that old, irrelevant post about feminist bloggers posing with Clinton. The pathetic blogger Amanda Marcotte followed on with this embarrassing post, trashing me, under an image of a gravestone. She begins:
So, the latest wingnut scandal is that Nancy Pelosi went on a political trip and didn’t show off enough of her womanly attributes. Ann Althouse wants Pelosi to be a little bit more of a sexbot.
She linked to the Mahablog rather than to me, so it was pretty obvious that she simply assumed she knew what I'd written and got it absolutely backwards. I updated my post:
Here's Amanda Marcotte's summary of this post: "Ann Althouse wants Pelosi to be a little bit more of a sexbot." Whaa? Marcotte seems to be pulling in signals from outer space. Just flat out nutty, Amanda. Or did you even read this post?
After I wrote that, she got a clue and tried to cover up her embarrassment, by inserting a parenthetical (without noting that it was a later insertion):
(To be fair, she does grant that it’s done out of politeness, but generally revolts against covering. I agree with her that mandatory covering is crap, and that’s why I dislike it when she tells women to hide our breasts in public. I typed this up a little fast, and got lazy. Apologies. I recommend the first link on this page if you want to read some non-lazy blogging on this subject.)
Oh, yeah, Amanda, that's really fair. How did I "generally revolt against covering" other than in exactly the way you have to be opposed to it too? Or is it "fair" because you hate the old Clinton-and-the-bloggers post so much you're entitled to lie about me whenever you feel like it? When did I ever "tell[] women to hide our breasts in public"? Clue: I never did. You are simply a liar. Or is that okay because you were in a hurry? Should I just type up some fast sentences about you because I don't really think you're worth much time? What a pathetic, lame excuse for shoddy thinking and bad writing!

Several of her commenters pointed our how badly she misread me (and continues to misread me). An anonymous commenter noted the parenthetical and wrote:
So basically what you’re saying is that you agree with Althouse’s post but because you don’t like other things she’s said, this post indicates that she’s an awful person?
Here's her response:
Not really, anon. I elucidated further and now have spent about twice as long on this lazy post as I intended. I think the obession [sic] with the headscarf is kind of weird, mostly.
So you trash me, but because you meant it to be one of your "lazy" posts, readers are supposed to leave you alone about it? Especially after you went to all that effort to "elucidate further"? And never mind that "anon." was referring to the added parenthetical. One wonders if Amanda knows what the word "elucidate" means. You can't further elucidate unless you've elucidated before and you're elucidating now. Any more Amanda-style elucidating and we'll be groping around in total darkness. But, oh, well, I'm tired now and you're kind of weird.

Anyway, back to today's fashion statement from the Mideast. Here's a picture of Kaye Turney back in her Royal Navy uniform and out of that astoundingly frumpy light blue pantsuit. And horrible long knit top with all the horizontal stripes! It's one thing to insist on modest clothing. It's quite another to force someone to appear in photographs to be seen by millions, maybe billions, of people wearing the most godawful pantsuit ever constructed. Talk about the exposure of women!

Couldn't she get a halfway decent gray suit -- like the guys? One that buttons closed over a white shirt? Why dress her in a way that you'd be ashamed to leave the house? Or does that last question answer itself?

93 comments:

paul a'barge said...

Someone needs to tip off Kaye to the Atkins diet.

Sloanasaurus said...

There must be so much hate and rage in Marcotte. She sits at home boiling and fuming all day, hoping that she can tear someone down with lies and half-truths. I understand why you have to respond to her, but it's an unfortunate waste of time. Oh yeah, I would not be offended if you advocated that women cover up while they are wandering around in public. It seems more civilized....

I agree about Turney's weight. Isn't she supposed to be in the military. Overall this event shows a bad image for the British military. It makes them look soft: from the soft bodies to the televised confessions.

The Drill SGT said...

I was amazed to learn that 2 of those 15 are Officers. a Marine Captain and a Leftenant of some flavor, could be a Navy O-3 (same grade as the CPT) or a Marine O-1 or O-2.

I'd think they have some answering to do to the RN for their seeming lack of leadership while in Iraq.

the Brit Press seems to be making some of the same comments.

Ann Althouse said...

Those who supply the clothes have the obligation to provide something flattering. Giving her those horizontal stripes was just wrong.

The Drill SGT said...

Ann,

that was a joke right?

have you seen what the NVN had McCain in for 5-6 years?

The Iranians may have seen the opportunity to gain even more advantage and they took it at every opportunity. I don't like it, but they keep working all the angles.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Those who supply the clothes have the obligation to provide something flattering.

Not necessarily, when you consider that they really don't like women much and would rather she be covered up with the equivalent of a couch throw. Your question of why they dressed her that way does answer itself. It doesn't explain the bad disco suits for the men, however.

On the other hand, those bags with the wooden handles are quite stylish. I wouldn't mind having one of those :-)

MadisonMan said...

That blue scarf looks like something QEII would wear.

Did you notice that she was front and center in the photograph? But she isn't posing just so.

Sloanasaurus said...

These soldiers have a chance to redeem themselves if they publicly declare that Iran forced them at gunpoint to make these televised confessions. If they do not, the ones that made the confessions should be dishonorably discharged for the dishonor they have brought upon the Royal Navy, their fellow soldiers, and their country.

KCFleming said...

Kaye's suit was rather Mao-ish.

Marcotte's entry wasn't just lazy, it was indecipherable. She writes based on her assumptions about what others are likely to have said, but didn't actually read any of it.

"Lazy" isn't the word.
I think she meant "false".

Anonymous said...

"I think the obession [sic] with the headscarf is kind of weird, mostly."

So I guess the feminist obsession with all manner of grand or trivial minutiae of everyday life and its underlying oppressive patriarchal origin, signification and purpose just doesn't apply to the brown people.

Racist? Kind of weird, mostly.

Freder Frederson said...

Those who supply the clothes have the obligation to provide something flattering. Giving her those horizontal stripes was just wrong.

My God, I hope you are kidding!

This country is torturing detainees and depriving U.S. citizens of fundamental rights, which you apparently have very little problem with, and you are getting all bent out of shape because Iran gives people ugly clothes.

Freder Frederson said...

I agree about Turney's weight. Isn't she supposed to be in the military.

Have you ever seen our own Navy personnel? The Navy has the most lax weight standards.

Fen said...

Freder: This country is torturing detainees and depriving U.S. citizens of fundamental rights

Name them. Which citizens, what torture, what rights. Proof, links, not speculation.

[Freder "forgot" to be outraged by Brits being tortured, coerced with threats of rape, or having their Geneva Rights violated]

patca: So I guess the feminist obsession with all manner of grand or trivial minutiae of everyday life and its underlying oppressive patriarchal origin, signification and purpose just doesn't apply to the brown people.

Nope. Marcotte et al don't really believe in the things they lecture us about. They just use feminism as a tool to bash the people they hate.

KCFleming said...

Re: "...torturing detainees and depriving U.S. citizens of fundamental rights..."

Yeah, Ann. Iran is so about human rights! All they want is to kill a few Jews, and establish sharia in the Eurpean Caliphate. So what's the big deal?

And I am so sick of US soldiers handling the Koran with white gloves, so as not to have an infidel touch the book that says the infidel needs to die. Plus we even didn't flush it down a toilet that doesn't flush, but it sounds true.

Freder Frederson said...

If they do not, the ones that made the confessions should be dishonorably discharged for the dishonor they have brought upon the Royal Navy, their fellow soldiers, and their country.

If I recall correctly, you have no military experience. So don't presume to judge the actions of these marines and sailors. First of all, Britain is not at war with Iran, so the restrictions against POWs providing propaganda for the "enemy" do not necessarily apply. So I think you need to stfu and let the British military decide if these men and woman did anything wrong.

Smilin' Jack said...

Those who supply the clothes have the obligation to provide something flattering. Giving her those horizontal stripes was just wrong.

They should all get used to wearing stripes. If the Brits have any kind of military code of conduct, they'll be doing some serious brig time. The exhibition they put on in Iran was disgraceful.

J. Cricket said...

You left a few labels off that post!

Meme, martyr, NPD

KCFleming said...

Re; "you have no military experience ...So I think you need to stfu..."

Damn that FDR. Who the hell did he think he was, gettin' all military and buuullshit. Chickenhawk. Shoulda jus' stfu, the cripple.

Freder Frederson said...

Freder "forgot" to be outraged by Brits being tortured, coerced with threats of rape, or having their Geneva Rights violated]

I already expressed outrage at their Geneva rights being violated. But sorry, I haven't seen anywhere that this group was mistreated. The only Geneva violations I have heard of is the denial of access to both British consular officials and the ICRC. Like you constantly demand of me, please provide a link.

As for the torture of U.S. citizens, Jose Padilla of course. You may disagree with whether the treatment amounts to torture, but that the treatment occurred is not disputed.

The Drill SGT said...

here is a quote from the Times of London

Colonel Bob Stewart, who became famous as a hard-hitting commander of British peacekeepers during the Bosnian war, said today that he had been "disquieted" by the captives' TV appearances.

"In the old way we didn't used to say much when were taken as a captive - name, rank number, date of birth," Colonel Stewart told BBC Radio 4's Today programe. "I know things have changed and I know they were not prisoners of war, but I'm a little disquieted about it."


I assume their current CoC looks a lot like ours

Sloanasaurus said...

I dont know if the UK has a code of conduct similar to the US code of conduct. The actions of the Brits would not be consistent with the US code of conduct.

That is a good point. If the british soldiers were esentially "ordered" by their superiors to do what ever it takes to stay alive (including making false confessions) than their actions would not be dishonorable. However, I have a hard time believing that such behavior is part of any code of conduct. A soldier making public confessions for the enemy is dishonorable conduct. If one is tortured into making such confessions then they should report and provide evidence of their torture to the public after they are released. Anything else is dishonorable.

Galvanized said...

A horizontal-striped pantsuit is probably the one time that I would opt for a burkha.

Bruce Hayden said...

This country is torturing detainees and depriving U.S. citizens of fundamental rights, which you apparently have very little problem with, and you are getting all bent out of shape because Iran gives people ugly clothes.

I too want to have more details here. Which detainees were tortured, how and when? And which citizens were deprived of basic rights? Again, please document the who, how, and when.

If you don't provide such details and documentation, I think that we can all assume that this was a liberal talking point, as usual, devoid of factual basis.

Sloanasaurus said...

You may disagree with whether the treatment amounts to torture, but that the treatment occurred is not disputed.

The treatment was not torture.

You just like to pretend that it is so you can use the word "torture" knowing that most people associate the word "torture" with what it really means... things like the medieval stretching rack or the cutting off of fingers.

However, if you use the word "torture" long enough to describe things like keeping people awake for 24 hours, eventually your watered down version of the word "torture" will take hold and people will start associating the word "torture" with things like keeping people awake for 24 hours rather than the medieval stretching rack. At that point, using the word "torture" will be useless to you and your ilk because it will no longer envoke a cruel meaning in your intended audience. At that point you will have to come up with a new word such as "mutilate" or "crucify" to describe things like keeping people awake for 24 hours in order to reinforce your intended point that America is an evil Country and we abuse the world.

I am not buying it. Does anyone else here?

Freder Frederson said...

A soldier making public confessions for the enemy is dishonorable conduct.

A soldier trying to defuse a tense international situation is not dishonorable conduct. They were obviously ordered not to resist when they were captured (which would ordinarily be against the code of contact since you should resist until it is no longer reasonable). So to judge their conduct as though they were POWs rather than the center of a international standoff between two nations not at war is unfair.

MadisonMan said...

Isn't the Jose Padilla case the one for which the Government -- oops! -- lost a key dvd of his last "interrogation session?" Gee, I wonder what that would have shown. Certainly not torture, by sloan's definition.

(It was very hard for me not to modify definition by tortured, by the way).

Complete isolation for two years. Sleep deprivation (I'm curious why you limited it to 24 hours, sloan -- I've seen no such stated limit). Extremes in temperature. Stress positions. Oh, but that's not torture.

What is it?

David53 said...

If an Iranian guard threatens to torture you unless you write a letter would you believe him?

How far down that road would you go until you wrote the letter?

If they refute their actions while captured fine, if not then dishonorably boot them.

And yes feder I did my 15 years so I am entitled to comment about this.

Freder Frederson said...

The treatment was not torture.

Well, thank you Prof. Yoo for clearing that up. Unfortunately for you, and whoever you might get to agree with you on this site (along with your right wing minions like Hannity, Rush and O'Reilly), the vast majority of legal scholarship, the international human rights community, and even the U.S. government (at least until this administration) doesn't have the same limited definition of torture as you do. Sleep deprivation, stress positions, even prolonged standing are all recognized as torture under certain circumstances and are routinely cited as such when our very own government condemns other governments for torture.

You, and anyone who agrees with you, are simply an uncivilized barbarian no better than the terrorists you condemn, if you think that "torture" consists of such a limited set of barbaric acts. You are a disgrace to the legal profession.

And as I have pointed out repeatedly, even if your disgusting and inhuman definition prevailed, U.S. and international law still doesn't permit the deprivations alleged. Simply "not torturing" detainees is not good enough. The standard of treatment is much higher.

The Drill SGT said...

another quote from the Telegraph this time:

First, there is the apparent incompetence of the Royal Navy in providing insufficient protection to lightly armed inflatables, at a time when relations between Iran and the West were particularly volatile following the imposition of UN sanctions. Second, the seized personnel lost no time in admitting to having trespassed and in apologising for their mistake. The old military practice of giving name, rank and number, and no more, has obviously been abandoned.
...snip...
No one would pretend that it is easy to deal with a nation that, since 1979, has shown itself prepared to treat norms of diplomatic behaviour with contempt. However, the steps that led to the seizure of the 15 on March 23 must be thoroughly investigated.

It appears that the Royal Navy has a lot to answer for.

dbp said...

The rules under which British Military members act may vary a bit from ours. But here are our rules: I have been out of the Marine Corps for more than 15 years, but still find the below words stirring.

Article I
I am an American, fighting in the forces which guard my country and our way of life. I am prepared to give my life in their defense.


Article II
I will never surrender of my own free will. If in command, I will never surrender the members of my command while they still have the means to resist.


Article III
If I am captured I will continue to resist by all means available. I will make every effort to escape and aid others to escape. I will accept neither parole nor special favors from the enemy.

Article IV
Should I become a prisoner of war, I will keep faith with my fellow prisoners. I will give no information nor take part in any action which might be harmful to my comrades. If I am senior, I will take command. If not, I will obey the lawful orders of those appointed over me and will back them up in every way.


Article V
When questioned, should I become a prisoner of war, I am required to give name, rank, service number, and date of birth. I will evade answering further questions to the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my country and its allies or harmful to their cause.


Article VI
I will never forget that I am an American fighting for freedom, responsible for my actions, and dedicated to the principles which made my country free. I will trust in my God and in the United States of America.

David53 said...

Complete isolation for two years. Sleep deprivation

Sounds like you are describing supermax.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

Complete isolation for two years. Sleep deprivation

You've just described the experience of almost every mother trying to cope with a newborn child.
Extremes in temperature. Stress positions.

My office environment. Carpal tunnel.

I demand my Geneva Convention rights!!

Hoosier Daddy said...

Those who supply the clothes have the obligation to provide something flattering. Giving her those horizontal stripes was just wrong.

Well consider the source. I mean it's Iran we're talking about so I think you need to cut them some slack on fashion. I mean it's not like there are a whole lot of Iranian fashion shows. I think you can have your burqa in any color you want as long as its black.

Now if say, the Italians nabbed them, they'd be outfitted in some nice Versace digs and a nice Gucci swag bag.

dave™© said...

Another misogynist post from Blithering Misogynist Idiot. Ho hum.

Really, lad, your "problem" with young women is getting very dreary...

dave™© said...

However, if you use the word "torture" long enough to describe things like keeping people awake for 24 hours, eventually your watered down version of the word "torture" will take hold and people will start associating the word "torture" with things like keeping people awake for 24 hours rather than the medieval stretching rack. At that point, using the word "torture" will be useless to you and your ilk because it will no longer envoke a cruel meaning in your intended audience.

Tell you what - let's subject you and your "ilk" - er, I mean family - to this.

Then you tell me what it is.

Freder Frederson said...

According to the geneva conventions of which both the UK and Iran are signatories, the British Sailors and Marines would be considered POWS. The GCs do not require a declaration of war--only armed conflict.

I don't disagree that they were entitled to be treated with all the rights and privileges of POWs by Iran (and that Iran's treatment fell short of this because they denied access to the ICRC and British consular offices). What we are discussing is whether the actions of the Marines and Sailors was dishonorable (which it obviously would have been if Iran and Britain had actually been at war). I think those who are so harsh to judge these military personnel are judging them as though Britain is actually at war with Iran, which it is not. If they had been at war they would have never been captured in the first place because they would have offered resistance. So any subsequent action should be judged in context of the diplomatic situation they were placed in.

MadisonMan said...

I think the best test on is it torture: What would you call it if the Soviets were doing it to an American Soldier ca. 1964 in Hanoi?

Putting people in unflattering clothes, in contrast, is not torture.

Hoosier Daddy said...

Complete isolation for two years. Sleep deprivation (I'm curious why you limited it to 24 hours, sloan -- I've seen no such stated limit). Extremes in temperature. Stress positions. Oh, but that's not torture.

Obviously you never had to raise infants.

I would probably call that inflicting discomfort but hardly torture on the scale of ripping out someones fingernails or doing a Casino Royale scene on someone's genitals.

I agree that the term torture has been dumbed down quite a bit. There were complaints that female interrogators were pressing thier breats in detainees faces which amounted to torture. Heck, I have to pay money for that kind of treatment. This is not to say I agree with torture but rather with the current definitions.

Freder Frederson said...

You've just described the experience of almost every mother trying to cope with a newborn child.
Extremes in temperature. Stress positions.


Don't try and belittle the very serious and abhorrent tactics this government has used in our name that has diminished our standing as a champion of human rights.

Anonymous said...

If they do not, the ones that made the confessions should be dishonorably discharged for the dishonor they have brought upon the Royal Navy, their fellow soldiers, and their country.

As an American, you are certainly entitled to express your opinion, but what you (or I) think is irrelevant. The government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland shall decide what, if any, disciplinary action shall be taken.

Anonymous said...

Don't try and belittle the very serious and abhorrent tactics this government has used in our name that has diminished our standing as a champion of human rights.

I don't and I' wont. I also don't spend hours and hours obsessing over them to the point of being incapable of rational thought.

Sloanasaurus said...

if you think that "torture" consists of such a limited set of barbaric acts. You are a disgrace to the legal profession.

You miss my point. The reason why you use the word torture, is because you know it invokes the vision of those few barbaric acts in most people. Most people do not interpret the word using a legal defintion. They understand the word in the vernacular to mean things like the medeival stretching rack. Thus when you claim that "we torture," you hope to get an emotional response out of people based on this common view. You hope that this emotional response will lead people to your cause. However, you also know that most people would not see common interrogation techniques as torture, including waterboarding - especially when we subject our own people to the technique (we do not subject our own troops to the stretching rack). Therefore, you try to change either their opinion of the morality of these specific techniques or change their opinion of the government in general through the abuse of the english language rather than actually describing what the techniques actually are or what the government is actually doing. It's an old political trick - played on the minds of the uninformed and the weak. Why you continue to use the argument on this board is beyond me. Most of the people here smart enough to see through the facade and to recognize the charlatans who perpetuate them.

That is my point.

Freder Frederson said...

I think that something should have to be likely to do lasting biological damage to be considered torture.

You do realize that "stress positions" (oh that doesn't sound so bad, making someone stand in an uncomfortable position for a few hours) can cause fluid to build up in the extremities (and in extreme cases the skin will literally burst from the pressure) and can cause blood clots (remember Cheney was hospitalized just for sitting on his ass on a plane for too long a couple of weeks ago) and ultimately death. That Army investigations found that some detainees were locked in closets four feet by two feet by one and a half feet for up to a week at a time (about the size of a file cabinet), only let out for interrogation? Or that "extremes in temperature" can cause induced hypothermia (which also causes hallucinations, confusion, and delusions, so how it can be an effective aid in interrogation is beyond me), which can lead to rapid loss of body temperature and death (which indeed happened to at least one detainee in Afghanistan).

Or that continued combination of these methods and sleep and sensory deprivation can literally drive a person insane (of course Maxine believes this is impossible). Which is apparently what we have done to Jose Padilla.

But of course none of this is torture, because there are no physical scars or broken bones.

Freder Frederson said...

However, you also know that most people would not see common interrogation techniques as torture, including waterboarding

I will give you a chance to clarify this statement. Are you really saying that waterboarding is a common interrogation technique?

Dust Bunny Queen said...

remember Cheney was hospitalized just for sitting on his ass on a plane for too long a couple of weeks ago

So by this standard the people who are confined to several hours on the tarmac followed by a flight to Hawaii are being tortured? It has also been claimed inhumane treatment and repressive to have the mere presence of women near Muslim men prisoners. I guess they think they will catch terminal cooties with the nearness of a menstruating woman or the glimpse of an uncovered head.

If we want to discuss the definition of real torture and witness the actions of a brave man during interrogation we have to look no farther than John McCain. As far as I can tell the captured Brits are a bunch of weenies.

MadisonMan said...

Obviously you never had to raise infants.

Riiiight. My kids came out as toddlers.

I'll rephrase my question: If news had come out that American Soldiers were treated in Hanoi by Soviet captors in a manner that's similar to how Jose Padilla has been treated, and LBJ or RMN used the word torture to describe it, would you have said to yourself Whoa partner! They're not being tortured!!?

Freder Frederson said...

So by this standard the people who are confined to several hours on the tarmac followed by a flight to Hawaii are being tortured?

No, it was meant to demonstrate that those of you who dismiss forced stress positions (like Donald Rumsfeld) as being harmless and benign as being complete idiots who ignore the basic facts of human physiology.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Sloanasaurus suggested Marcotte has a lot of rage and anger in her.

I agree, Amanda seems to be trying to be the Rosie O'Donnell of the blogosphere.

Sloanasaurus said...

I will give you a chance to clarify this statement. Are you really saying that waterboarding is a common interrogation technique?

Most people would argue, with good reason, that practices we perform on our own people in training exercises is not "torture."

They would argue that "torture" is something we would never do to our own people: such as the stretching rack, severing limbs, burning eyes out, etc...

Because our own troops are submitted to waterboarding, it is not "torture."

We know you don't agree. But, as discussed before, you have a different definition of what "torture" is, a definition that is out of the mainstream for common use.

Bea Arthur said...

You're kidding. Fatso's in the Navy?

Torture? I'm all for it. Porky the Sailor Gal looks like she could use a little food deprivation.

She doesn't need a pantsuit. She needs a mu-mu. She could wear it while shopping for Ho-Ho's at Wal Mart. Just make sure she wears flip-flops to complete the outfit.

It's nice to see some fat slobs from other countries. Makes me feel less isolated. We're all becoming one plus size international family.

But I agree, there must be something in some treaty prohibiting horizontal stripes on her. Plus it's dangerous. With stripes on, she could be mistaken for a road barrier, and a terrorist might run her over trying to crash his truck into Big Ben or something.

Hoosier Daddy said...

Sleep deprivation, stress positions, even prolonged standing are all recognized as torture under certain circumstances and are routinely cited as such when our very own government condemns other governments for torture.

Do you think there is a difference between torturing someone for a confession or just for the sake of torture as opposed torture in the ‘ticking bomb’ scenario? I ask because barbaric or not, I think if there was an imminent threat, say a nuke on a cargo ship, bio-weapon attack what have you, I think a gentle question & answer session is not appropriate. I’d hope that if there was credible evidence that a nuke was en-route to Baltimore harbor, certain niceties would be set aside in the interrogation process. Now if we’re just whacking kneecaps for sadism’s sake then I agree with you wholeheartedly.

Now I know there are some who think Bush and company are simply evil people who welcomed 9/11 just so they could turn Gitmo into our version of Lubyanka and that’s their opinion. I personally tend to have a wee bit more faith that the current administration is acting on good faith in that they are doing these things to protect me and mine and not to satiate some primal desire to inflict pain on people. If it ever comes out that we were unable to prevent another homeland attack because we could not glean the information from some Uzbek sheepherder because it would violate his human rights, I’d hate to be the one to make that admission.

Freder Frederson said...

Most people would argue, with good reason, that practices we perform on our own people in training exercises is not "torture."

I don't know who these "most people" are, do you have some kind of citation to demonstrate that "most people" don't consider waterboarding torture, because it is news to me.

Even the president refuses to admit that we have used to admit that we have used waterboarding or that it is an approved technique. It is certainly not an approved interrogation technique for use by the military (in spite of the fact that it is indeed sometimes a part of the more intensive SERE programs).

Earlier I called you Prof. Yoo for a reason. You seem to have fully embraced the definition of torture put forward in the infamous torture memo. A memo which the Administration had to explicitly renounce when it was almost universally denounced as being completely wrong on both the law and the accepted definition of torture (while ignoring the larger point that, as you continue to do, that simply "not torturing" is insufficient). So when you say "most people" define torture the way you do, you are simply wrong (unless of course, you mean most people in Al Qaeda).

You also miss the more important point. Even if we accept your definition, and waterboarding isn't torture, it is still illegal, because it is cruel and inhuman, which is the treatment that is prohibited. To say that as long as we don't torture people we are following the law just does not meet the statutory requirements.

Freder Frederson said...

Do you think there is a difference between torturing someone for a confession or just for the sake of torture as opposed torture in the ‘ticking bomb’ scenario?

So far there has been no "ticking time bomb" situation alleged to justify the use of these techniques. I refuse to consider circumstances that have not even been alleged by the government to justify events that did not involve such circumstances.

Ask me the question again when the President actually tries to justify torture with such a situation.

Hoosier Daddy said...

I'll rephrase my question: If news had come out that American Soldiers were treated in Hanoi by Soviet captors in a manner that's similar to how Jose Padilla has been treated, and LBJ or RMN used the word torture to describe it, would you have said to yourself Whoa partner! They're not being tortured!!?

Wouldn’t American soldiers be covered under Article IV of the Geneva Conventions as prisoners of war? I wasn’t aware Jose was a serving member of some armed forces at war with us.

Again, I don’t approve of torture; I simply disagree with what is considered torture nowadays. I agree with Sloan in that I think people think of torture of being beaten senseless in a dark dank concrete cell with a single light bulb hanging overhead. If you’re basically saying that we can’t use any kind of coercion whatsoever to glean intel from terrorists who would like to see mushroom clouds sprouting over every city in the US then we may as well just call it quits now. I’m not saying we get out the thumbscrews but I certainly don’t advocate reading them Miranda and having a gentle interview.

The point I was making with the infant crack is that most parents go through that for the first six months after their kids are born. Sorry if the tongue & cheek attempt at humor was lost.

Sloanasaurus said...

You seem to have fully embraced the definition of torture put forward in the infamous torture memo.

Argue all the legalisms you want, but you know I am right about the word "torture," and the definition it invokes in most people.

Another trick played by the left (alluded to in a post above) on the "torture" issue is the failure to put torture into context. For example, they will say "America tortures!" Or "America Tortures its own citizens;" or "America Tortures Detainees." These statements are half truths meant to imply that we are interrogating people for no reason or that we are trying to get a false confession. Torture (like the evil rack kind) is not in itself immoral. It depends upon why it is being done. Just as killing is not immoral if done in self defense. Torture can also be done in self defense, such as the ticking time bomb example, or even to find the location of the enemy before the enemy finds you.

Thus, if the Left cried, "oh my god, America tortures Al Qaeda detainees to obtain information about plans to kill American civilians..." their audience of outraged people would shrink significantly. Imagine if they replaced "torture" with "keeps up for 24 hours," the outrage would alomst dissappear (except for themselves).

PatHMV said...

On the subject of whether the British sailors should have resisted the propaganda "confessions" more fully (and remember, we have no idea what was actually done to them... waterboarding leaves no visible evidence of trauma), I've written a thorough analysis at StubbornFacts.us. The U.S. Army has 2 sets of rules, one for POWs and one for soldiers held captive or detained as hostages by foreign governments during peacetime. While the seizing of the sailors might have been a good reason to start a war, given that there was at the time and currently is not a state of armed conflict between Iran and the U.K., the rules for POWs don't apply.

The rules for hostage behavior are less severe than for POWs. The latter are ordered to resist to the utmost, regardless of torture or anything else. But hostages are simply to exhaust "reasonable" efforts to resist the hostage-taker's demands when it comes to providing propaganda.

Those are the U.S. rules. Don't know if the British do it differently or not.

Freder Frederson said...

Humor is wasted on Freder. He never gets it.

I don't find anything the least bit funny about torture.

Argue all the legalisms you want, but you know I am right about the word "torture," and the definition it invokes in most people.

I play games? You use an illegitimate definition of torture (which the U.S. government has explicitly rejected) to justify techniques that are indeed torture. Then you completely ignore the fact that even techniques that fall outside the definition of torture are still prohibited.

If you’re basically saying that we can’t use any kind of coercion whatsoever to glean intel from terrorists who would like to see mushroom clouds sprouting over every city in the US then we may as well just call it quits now

That is not what I am saying at all. I have made my position clear repeatedly on this site, yet it continues to be distorted. I think that the interrogation and treatment standards laid out in the Army Field Manual (which was revised just last year) should be the standard for the entire government when it comes to foreign detainees. I have linked to it several times, so I am not going to bother here.

Freder Frederson said...

Torture (like the evil rack kind) is not in itself immoral.

Now, this is where we get to the real issue, isn't it. Apparently, moral relativism lives on the right after all.

Freder Frederson said...

Feder: You have a history of making stupid comments without thinking, but you better think three times before you ever slur my service again.

What the hell are you talking about?

eelpout said...

I'm betting these same armchair warriors laughing off torture now would be shitting themselves in about 10 seconds and would be the shortest interrogations in human history.

Fatmouse said...

I don't find anything the least bit funny about torture.

Clearly, you've never tortured a clown.

Apparently, moral relativism lives on the right after all.

Of course there's relativism, you ass. Shooting someone because you want their wallet is a crime. Shooting someone because they're going to hit you with a crowbar is justified. Putting someone on the rack just to punish them is horrible. Putting them on the rack to find out where bombs are planted may be an unpleasant necessity.

Scenario, Fee: You have captured a terrorist in Iraq. You know absolutely that he is part of a group planning on setting off a car bomb somewhere in Baghdad, but don't know where the bomb is or where his conspirators are. What are YOU willing to do to find this information out? And when a dozen innocent people get blown to shreds because you weren't willing to use anything besides harsh language, will you simply say, "Well, at least _I_ have the moral high ground...."

Jesus H. Monkeyballs. It's like arguing with a college freshman who read Nietzsche for the first time.

Freder Frederson said...

Scenario, Fee: You have captured a terrorist in Iraq. You know absolutely that he is part of a group planning on setting off a car bomb somewhere in Baghdad, but don't know where the bomb is or where his conspirators are. What are YOU willing to do to find this information out?

Apparently you are willing to do more than is permitted by the U.S. military.

KCFleming said...

Re: "armchair warriors laughing off torture "

If torture worked to save american lives, it might be useful. The evidence I've read suggests it may be counterproductive, and worsen the treatment of our own soldiers once captured (although bad treatment seems the rule whenever US miltary men were POWs regardless).

One has to be open-minded enough to conceive of the idea that it might be useful, but immoral anyway. Or that it should be limited to psychological techniques alone. It's too easy to dismiss entirely out of hand, but I wonder if, in the end, the negatives outweight the positives.

So for my own opinion, I say kill them all in the field, to destroy their ability to fight again, and remove the temptation to commit torture.

Sloanasaurus said...

If torture worked to save american lives, it might be useful. The evidence I've read suggests it may be counterproductive, and worsen the treatment of our own soldiers once captured

This is a fair point, which is why being President is hard. We need to evaluate whether waterboarding KSM and potentially saving American lives is worth the possibility for exemple that European citizens will stop buying American products, which ultimately leads to lower economic growth which leads ultimately to the loss of American lives.

The solution... have a Democratic president. That way the press won't care about waterboarding and the Europeans won't find out about it.

Ann Althouse said...

If I were about to get my picture taken in those clothes, to be shown to millions or billions of people and I were given the alternative of a subdued gray suit that covered the tops of my thighs and closed over a neutral colored suit but the second alternative would require me to go without sleep for 24 hours, feel hot and cold temperatures, and stand in an uncomfortable position for hours, I would go through the hardship to get to the better clothes.

Iran used those clothes were used to humiliate the woman as a woman, and Iran maintains a legal order in which clothes are used to subjugate women. If you don't think it matters, explain why.

An Edjamikated Redneck said...

Sleep deprivation, stress positions, even prolonged standing are all recognized as torture under certain circumstances and are routinely cited as such when our very own government condemns other governments for torture.

Sounds like USAF basic training to me, circa 1978. Was I being tortured, and didn't know it?

I have always questioned defining things (like torture and cruel and unusual punishment) from the eyes of society, as we tend to be more civil than the criminal.

We, as society, may question the cruelty in a lethal injection, while the murderer we are contemplating injecting didn't see anything cruel about slitting the throats of half a dozen innocent people.

We may (possibly justifiably) see prolonged standing or forced positioning as torture. Does Ahab the Arab, based on the fact that suicide bombers will take out a dozen with a bomb constructed to do extensive bodily injury as normal behavior, and will probably view our definition of torture making us weak as a nation?

Hoosier Daddy said...

I think that the interrogation and treatment standards laid out in the Army Field Manual (which was revised just last year) should be the standard for the entire government when it comes to foreign detainees. I have linked to it several times, so I am not going to bother here.
Yes, I’ve read it. While I have heard that torture results in unreliable information, what conclusions do you draw as to why we have not used the guidelines specified in the Army Field Manual and instead have resorted to torture? I’m not baiting, I am honestly curious because it seems if the methods outlined in the Manual will produce results superior to torture, than the only conclusion I can draw is we have decided to torture them for the sake of it as opposed to obtaining usable intelligence.
The main thing I drew from the Manual is that it really doesn’t describe actual procedures but is pretty heavy on the generalities. Take for instance this excerpt on interrogating hostile/antagonistic sources:
As a rule, at lower echelons, it is considered unprofitable to expend excessive time and effort in interrogating hostile and antagonistic sources. When time is available and the source appears to be an excellent target for exploitation, he should be isolated and repeatedly interrogated to obtain his cooperation.
So when exactly is the target and excellent source for exploitation? Seems to me if I’m a detainee, and I know you are not going to do anything that could hurt, cause discomfort or otherwise violate my human rights even though I’d behead my captors at first chance, under what circumstances would I become an excellent source for exploitation?
Again, not saying we get out the thumbscrews and Iron Maiden but the Manual seems to be more of a list of what not to do rather than how to obtain useful intel and considering it forbids you from doing essentially anything to them, they can pretty much tell you to **** off and you have to hand them their Koran and prepare a nice halal meal.

Ann Althouse said...

Mike: If they are unimportant, why are they used so extensively for the purpose of controlling and subjugating women? Or are you saying that the subjugation of women is unimportant?

Sloanasaurus said...

Iran used those clothes were used to humiliate the woman as a woman, and Iran maintains a legal order in which clothes are used to subjugate women. If you don't think it matters, explain why.

While I tend to lean in your direction regarding this Althouse, it could also be that the people who were in charge of getting the people dressed chose the outfits from their own personal taste eminating from their own way of doing things. It seems unlikely that the Mullahs would pay attention to such details. Their instructions were probably something more like "make the infidels look proper." Maybe in Iran, the ridiculous outfit is considered "neutral" rather than ridiculous.

Anonymous said...

Classic liberal definition of torture:

Stale bun served with tofu burger.

Off Topic

Ann. Just for you and the other naive sympathizers:

From the NY Post

"Democratic White House hopeful John Edwards' team has been collecting e-mail addresses from supporters who've sent his cancer-stricken wife, Elizabeth, notes - and using them for fund-raising requests, aides acknowledged yesterday.

The link on Edwards' campaign Web site invites people to "send a note to Elizabeth and John" and features a sad letter from the former senator penned just after the couple found out her breast cancer had spread and is now incurable.

But people who've been sending such well wishes have been hit with e-mail solicitations from Team Edwards, asking for donations just as all candidates are looking to post big online fund-raising numbers."

Sloanasaurus said...

Ann, that kind of question is beneath you

Yes Althouse, you still have time to take that one back.

Smilin' Jack said...

If they are unimportant, why are they used so extensively for the purpose of controlling and subjugating women? Or are you saying that the subjugation of women is unimportant?

She's also probably wearing a bra, which as we all learned from the bra-burnings of the 70s is another fiendish tool of the patriarchy.

But I'd guess that since at the time Turney had been kidnapped and was being held at gunpoint, the matter of horizontal stripes was not high even on her list of concerns. So yeah, maybe there are more important issues at stake here.

Re torture, I'm surprised that the anti-torture zealots aren't praising Bush rather than condemning him. After all, would you rather be a prisoner in Bush's Abu Ghraib...or Saddam's? In fact, whatever the American standard for torture may be, I'm sure it's a lot more pleasant than that prevailing in most of the Arab world, so if minimizing torture is the goal, we've got a lot more invading to do.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

and Iran maintains a legal order in which clothes are used to subjugate women. If you don't think it matters, explain why.

I think it matters and matters a lot. This was my argument yesterday: that Western women and feminists who tacitly go along with allowing the garments of subjugation to be worn without protesting, much less wear them themselves are forfeting any claims to caring about the equality of women.

We can't go in and forcefully change the rules of another culture, but we can and must protest when people in our own society subjugate and demean women by marking them with these types of demeaning clothing styles. If people like the when in Rome analogy for Pelosi in the Middle East, how about when in Rome, Georgia.

MadisonMan said...

Putting them on the rack to find out where bombs are planted may be an unpleasant necessity.

Yes, 'cause we all know that people on the rack being tortured tell the truth.

Ann, I'm not sure where the sleep deprivation is just 24 hours of no sleep meme comes from, other than from sloan. I doubt Jose Padilla's watchers said at hour 25 "Okay, that's enough wake time! Have a nice bit of shut-eye now!"

Bissage said...

Does anybody remember Slaughterhouse-Five?

From the script, as follows:

English Officer: “WHERE DID YOU GET THIS ABSURD GARMENT?”

Billy Pilgrim: “THEY GAVE IT TO ME.”

English Officer: “WHO?”

Billy Pilgrim: “THE GERMANS.”

English Officer: “THEY DIDN'T GIVE YOU A COAT, YANK, THEY GAVE YOU AN INSULT.”

Edgar Derby: “HEY, SON. OVER HERE.”

English Officer: “DO YOU UNDERSTAND WHAT I'M SAYING? JERRY TRIED TO HUMILIATE YOU. NOW YOU MUST WEAR THAT COAT AS IF YOU WERE PROUD OF IT. TEACH HIM A LESSON. IT'S TERRIBLY IMPORTANT THAT YOU UNDERSTAND THAT.”

chrisn2000 said...

This post supports my half-assed, unresearched theory that women really love to talk about other women, and their clothes, and their relationships....
Here are some bogus numbers and foolish generalizations:

%10-15 of women will enter the military

%25-40 of women will enter and finish law school. While at work, they will be competent adversarial advocates. At home they will enjoy talking about women, their clothes and their relationships.

***Note***if law schools rise to %90 women, the remaining men who don't go to war will build a blanket fort with NO GIRLS ALLOWED.

Freder Frederson said...

Iran used those clothes were used to humiliate the woman as a woman

You are comparing wearing ugly clothes to torture. And I am criticized for overreacting to our mistreatment of detainees.

Previously, you have appeared unconcerned about the treatment Jose Padilla.

I am just stunned.

Freder Frederson said...

For all those enemy-lovers like Freder that freak out about "interrogating the enemy" and continue to claim info gained is "useless" - why then have every military since the dawn of history assigned some of their smartest and best officers to interrogate the enemy?

As usual, you deliberately mischaracterize and distort what I have written.

Steven said...

Freder? Why don't you go be stunned somewhere else?

Beau said...

'Iran used those clothes were used to humiliate the woman as a woman, and Iran maintains a legal order in which clothes are used to subjugate women'

I think Iran was making a PR point against the UK in that none of the servicemen were released in their military uniforms but as 'civilians'.

Craig Ranapia said...

Amanda Marcotte has just crystalised something that really bugs me about political bloggers - and politicians too, for that matter.

What the frak is so hard about just saying, "You know something, I was just WRONG. There's no excuse, and here's an unqualified apology and now let me put it right"? I have as big an ego as anyone, but there has to be a point where you can't keep defending the indefensible and splitting semantic hairs out of sheer bloody-mindedness.

Fatmouse said...

MMM:

Yes, 'cause we all know that people on the rack being tortured tell the truth.

This is correct, which is why we're not stupid enough to say "Thanks for the help!" and let them go when they confess. We explain very clearly that if the bombs aren't where he said they'd be, horrible things will be done to his testicles when we come back.

Unknown said...

These posts become quickly unreadable because a few crazy posters take everything way, way too seriously.

Revenant said...

Previously, you have appeared unconcerned about the treatment Jose Padilla.

I assure you I have every bit as much concern for Jose Padilla's well being as he had for the well-being of Elio Evangelista. :)

hdhouse said...

Cedarford...you talka too much.

Jacques Albert said...

Freder Frederson:

Throw your "chickenhawk" taunts elsewhere, as well as your lib-left equation of "torture" as humiliation of prisoners (punishable only in Western countries, mind!).

I must, however, put in a word for the burqa--great idea when fishin' and the skeeters 'r bitin'! Got one fer me-self! (I did!)

As for Amanda Marcotte, "Iowahawk" did her good, now didn't he? (this reference got me banned from one of AM's appendages' blogsites, just as I's banned by his Serene Mandarinity, Michael Berube ["Broob"]--seems Broob's got something against traditional scholars--probably their Greek and Latin . . .). But AM?--"Maladetto e distrutto sia da Dio lo primo punto ch'io incontrai di quella . . ." (to paraphrase the 12th/13th c. rival of Dante, Cecco Angiolieri).

Thanks to Professor AA and her apparently passionate moderation a la Professor Susan Haack . . .

Dr James Albert DeLater, Life Member, VFW (Post 1224, Hamburg, MI)

Ann Althouse said...

Freder Frederson: "You are comparing wearing ugly clothes to torture. And I am criticized for overreacting to our mistreatment of detainees. Previously, you have appeared unconcerned about the treatment Jose Padilla.I am just stunned."

What is your view of the way prisoners at Abu Ghraib were photographed in undignified clothing? Is it "stunning" to criticize that as comparable to sleep deprivation and uncomfortable standing positions? I'm guessing that when the Americans perpetrate humiliation through improper clothing you understand the seriousness of the problem.

Freder Frederson said...

What is your view of the way prisoners at Abu Ghraib were photographed in undignified clothing? Is it "stunning" to criticize that as comparable to sleep deprivation and uncomfortable standing positions? I'm guessing that when the Americans perpetrate humiliation through improper clothing you understand the seriousness of the problem.

Yep, this treatment is equivalent to this. Abu Ghraib was all about the inappropriate clothing and being forced to wear ugly shirts.

Fen said...

As a rule, at lower echelons, it is considered unprofitable to expend excessive time and effort in interrogating hostile and antagonistic sources. When time is available and the source appears to be an excellent target for exploitation, he should be isolated and repeatedly interrogated to obtain his cooperation.

"So when exactly is the target an excellent source for exploitation?"

To me, the quote seems to be saying "let the professionals handle any interrogation."

Fen said...

/bump

Freder: This country is torturing detainees and depriving U.S. citizens of fundamental rights, which you apparently have very little problem with, and you are getting all bent out of shape because Iran gives people ugly clothes.

Bruce Haden: "I too want to have more details here. Which detainees were tortured, how and when? And which citizens were deprived of basic rights? Again, please document the who, how, and when.

If you don't provide such details and documentation, I think that we can all assume that this was a liberal talking point, as usual, devoid of factual basis"

Freder Frederson said...

If you don't provide such details and documentation, I think that we can all assume that this was a liberal talking point, as usual, devoid of factual basis"

I did, you fucking moron!!

And btw, as usual, my original point was distorted. I didn't even claim that American citizens had been tortured. But since it was brought up, I found evidence that Padilla had indeed been tortured. So by misquoting me, you actually the government appear worse than I even contended (although you turned out to be right).

pjcaper said...

"If people like the when in Rome analogy for Pelosi in the Middle East, how about when in Rome, Georgia."

Even in Rome, Georgia, women don headscarves before heading out to church services on Sunday morning.

Fen said...

Freder: I did, you fucking moron!!

Could you do it again? I don't see it. Not the pics I hope? Some were found to be fakes from porn sites.

Lookng for: Which detainees were tortured, how and when? And which citizens were deprived of basic rights? Again, please document the who, how, and when.