The ITT List

Tuesday Nov 8, 2005 11:19 am

Is this what 12-steppers call the ‘denial’ phase?

By Silja J.A. Talvi
In Panama City, President Bush told the Panamanian press that the U.S. is pursuing terrorists "under the law." He emphatically denied that U.S. forces--including the operators of overseas secret CIA prisons--engage in torture of detainees.


"We do not torture," President Bush stated flatly.


Bush, of course, stands behind VP Cheney in his attempt to exempt the CIA from the proposed Senate ban on torture.


Somehow, all of this must make perfect sense in their heads. Either that, or they're just betting on more collective denial from a dysfunctional country.


We'll be meeting for the intervention in the Oval Office, everybody ... don't let on that anything's going on. Be gentle but firm. Step 1 for Bush & Co. is to get them to say the following: "We admit that we are powerless over our addiction to war, and we're really, really making a mess of things."


p.s. "We really do torture people."

15 comments  · 

Comments

Apollo 9 Nov 2005
7:44 am

Alright… this is REALLY starting to irritate me.  At the very least, the measure still passed in the Senate 91 to 9 (I think)... but, in the words of John Stewart, “That’s right… NINE US Senators did not vote to ban torture.” (I may be paraphrasing)
How can we even BEGIN to talk about human rights when we condone these practices, and create secret prisons in which to commit these atrocities?

Dave 9 Nov 2005
1:09 pm

i agree that trying to undo the geneva conventions is the height of backwardness (altho, what the hell else have i come to expect from bush & friends?).  in the (i feel) highly unlikely event of some “countdown to doomsday scenario”, does anybody really think we wouldn’t be torturing the ass off the guy we thought might know something about how to stop it, regardless of whether it was “lawful”, or produced useful intelligence or not?  if the situation were really dire enough, i bet most people wouldn’t even raise a fuss, or it could be covered-up (which is what you’d expect from any halfway competent government anyway, isn’t it?), but this rewriting of laws to try to move us back closer to the dark ages is really sickening…i’m not even of the opinion that none of these prisoners deserve harsh treatment, but knowing that the government is in charge is knowing that some percent of those held are innocent…& what recourse do they have, or would you or i have (for these are only the first rosemarys baby-steps in an evil direction) when the rule of law (good, old-fashioned, bill of rights LAW) becomes just the law of whoever happens to rule?  (& if that’s not the truly frightening scenario, & you don’t think this country has any bigger problems than islamo-terrorists, & you don’t think the troglodyte ideaology of our ruling class will affect your american dreams….well, congrats, & maybe i’m just hitting the bong too hard….)

wolf 10 Nov 2005
8:24 am

What i would really like to see is for terrorists to *think* we will torture them. If they really thought we would, i suspect many (perhaps most) would crack from the *fear* of torture.
That said, i am against *actual* torture for several reasons. The primary is that i would not want us (the US government) to be closely associated with those who would actually inflict the torture. Another reason is that if the fear of torture is not sufficient, than i doubt that actual torture would be effective (i doubt studies have been done, but this is plausible to me). And there is always the nagging doubt that you might be torturing the wrong person. . .
Lastly, i think that smearing fake menstrual blood on prisoners, having women act seductively around prisoners, depriving them of sleep for many hours (48?), stress positions and use of threatening dogs (bark but no bite) does NOT constitute torture. Of course, these type of techniques should only be used on the worst of the group (such as the French/Algerian 20th (failed) hijacker).

Lester 10 Nov 2005
4:38 pm

Torture 101 - Course Outline.
“Oh, when first we do deceive….”
The “TORTURE” issue goes to the heart and soul

of the “conspiracy to lie” in support of justifying

attacking Iraq.  The torture is KEY to the mechanics

of the thing.  “Manufactured facts” in support of

the “Big Lie” of Joseph Goebbels and Adolph HItler

infamy is what underlies the entirety of the Bush

conspiracy.
If the White House loses its ability to “wash” false

and fraudulent “intelligence,” that has been deliberately

manufactured through employing torture at the field

level—the ultimate “source” of the manufactured

disinformation and lies in support of the war—this

white House will be unable to sustain the lies it

needs to survive.
Lies don’t “end;” once the lying starts, there is

always yet another lie that must be told to uphold

the last lie told.  Think of what the White House is

doing as something of a “disinformation Ponzai Scheme.”

ULTIMATELY, and in the end, the entirety of the house of

cards must collapse.
Bush and Cheney are so over the top, so hopelessly

mired in, and trapped, in their own web of lies and

deceit, that they have been put in the preposterous postion

of PUBLICALLY LOBBYING FOR LAWS TO LEGHALIZE TORTURE.
THAT’S how desperate they are at this point.  they are

on the verge of being “found out” and just don’t know

“what to do.”  Older criminal investigators call this

end-stage phenomenon the “Trick Bag.”
Wnen the target goes into the “Trick Bag,” no matter

WHAT he does or says, he only goes DEEPER into the

status of “being caught.”  Bush, Cheney, and Rumsfeld

are—at this point—“desperate men” and dangerous

as cottonmouth water moccasins.


THINK about it:  WHEN, in the entirety of American

History, have BOTH the President of the United States

AND the Vice President of the United States PUBLICALLY

LOBBIED FOR pro-torture laws???????????????  So, WHY

NOW??????????  WHAT DOES YOUR COMMON SENSE TELL YOU

THAT CHENEY WAS DOING OVER AT THE CIA, DAY AFTER DAY

AFTER DAY????  WHY DO YOU “THINK” DONALD RUMSFELD

SET UP A NEW AND SEPARATE “INTELLIGENCE ENTITY” INSIDE

THE PENTAGON?????????  They NEEDED a “credible

intelligence entity” to “rely on” and cite as “authority”

in order to “support the public lies” to trick America

into going to war.
The CORE co-conspirators are:  George W. Bush, Dick

Cheney, and Donald Rumsfeld.  EVERY MEMBER of the

Iraq Group inside the White House is legally a

co-conspirator who acted “in furtherance of” the

objectives of the conspiracy—i.e., to effect

a war against an oil power in order to derive

PROFIT—profit from the oil and profit from

the bogus rehabilitation of destroyed national

infrastructure in Iraq.
REFRESHER COURSE IN HOW TO USE TORTURE TO MANUFACTURE FACTS

TO SUPPORT A “BIG LIE:”
1.From the Office of the VP, let it be known, over

at CIA, or at some other “intelligence entity,” that

some “facts” are “needed.”
1.Capture a Mohammad.  “Any” Mohammad will do.
2.Employ some mild torture on Mohammad.  Mohammad

will say anything you want him to say, so long

as you do not hurt him any longer.
A.“Help” Mohammad “remember” some “details”

to BOLSTER Mohammad’s credibility.  An

intellience “report” MUST contain some

cross-checks and some “reality” or else

the report is no good.
B.If Mohammad does not pan out, get “another

Mohammad.”  Sometimes you get a stupid

Mohammad; but, if you keep at it long

enough, you can in fact FIND yourself

a “SUITABLE MOHAMMAD.”
3.AFTER you generate your “now credible” report, submit

it up through NORMAL channels—DON’T do anything

“unusual,” or “suspiciious,” that is “out of the

ordinary” and that, if discovered by a Congressman or

member of the Press, would cause the report to immediately

become “suspicious.”  Everything must “appear normal.”
4.Ultimately, of course, the bogus report wends its way

up through the ranks to the “man who needs it” —

in this instance, Cheney.  Just like Daddy Bush ran

the Iran Contra operation for an intellectually

challenged Ronald Reagan, so, too, Cheney is the

wise old man who is running the Iraq Caper for an

intellectually challenged George W. Bush.
The only problem here is that Dick Cheney is not

as smart as George H.W. Bush and does not possess

the intelligence skills of Daddy Bush, who really

DID run the CIA for a time; so Cheney will make

some stupid mistakes—like “getting scared and

lobbying for pro-torure laws.”  Remaining cool and

calm whilst in the middle of undertaking a criminal

endeavor to conclusion was never one of Dick’s

hallmarks.  Daddy Bush was the real deal; Dick Cheney

ain’t no decorated bomber pilot who got shot at; in

fact, Dick Cheney is a draft dodger six times over;

the idiot son, George W. Bush is also a draft dodger.  These guys don’t know what the term, “cool under pressure,” means.
5.Cheney reviews the report.  It must be co-ordinated with

“press” and “press conferences”—tested for

“credibiilty.”
6.If the report is not “tight enough,” the report is

sent back down, and poor Mohammad is dredged up

again from his holding cell and his feet beaten again.
A.Mohammad must be “helped” some more to

“remember” some “more facts,” “correct” some

details that he may not have remembered so

well the first time.
7.And so on, and so on, and so on, ad infinitum.  by the way, all this gets a bit rough on poor ole Mohammad; but Cheney and Bush, in the end, get some “facts” supplied by a credible “intelligence,” and with it, some “plausable deniability” to shove in a prosecutor’s face.
See how that works?  Simple.

Brian de Ford 10 Nov 2005
8:28 pm

Few, if any, have bothered to consider just WHY Cheney is pushing for torture when the intelligence agencies of every country admit that it is useless at providing accurate information.  Just WHY Cheney is willing to lower the reputation of the US even further in world esteem?  Just WHY Cheney is so DAMNED DESPERATE to keep torturing?
My answer to “why” is at http://briandeford.blogspot.com/2005/11/why-torture.html

Pink Ink 12 Nov 2005
8:03 am

Remember because they are connected at the roots, the aspens will all turn together.
Cheney’s ‘we do torture’ logic is the best way to get Libby to spill the dope.
And Cheney can continue to make winter jack-booted nazi fashion statements in famous torture camps like Auschwitz.

rmb 15 Nov 2005
9:45 am

What would really concern me is if this bunch begins to show an interest in LAMPSHADES

minerva 17 Nov 2005
2:43 pm

It’s nice to see that are at least 2 or 3 other people in this country that are becoming afraid of the agenda that we see in action on behalf of the ‘American People’, courtesy of the people you were foolish enough to elect. I won’t even comment on the apparent vote larceny that went on in the last two elections.
Inertia is the enemy here friends…sloth, procrastination, lack of initiative. Individualism to the point of insanity.
You elect these Cheney’s and Bushes into power, and then fret about the crass, evil, horrible, insensitive, ignorant acts they conceive of between golf sessions, fishing expeditions and prostate exams.
You vote for sharks and piranhas, and then despair over the fact that they act like sharks and piranhas.
What is wrong here?

wolf 17 Nov 2005
4:06 pm

minerva - i would hazard a guess that those most disturbed by this issue are people who did not vote for Bush.
I think that those who hold strong individualist viewpoints would be on both sides of this issue.
Do you think it is impossible to be informed and ethical/moral and still be for the war? In my case, while i would have rather stayed out of it altogether, i was very bothered by the deaths caused (mostly to children) by the UN/US sanctions. Worse, to have repealed them would have given Saddam the ability to pursue things that i would rather he not pursue (it was bad enough he was brutally killing his own people - some by shredding them! - and paying terrorists to kill Israeli’s).
Both leaving things as they were and going to war were bad alternatives. I really don’t know which was the worse of the two, even now (even before i knew how corrupt the food for oil program was). To this day, i have never seen an alternative that was clearly better than what we did. . .

minerva 21 Nov 2005
8:53 pm

I appreciate your sentiments…I think that the present state of affairs is a consequence of a long sickness….
what could be the cure?

wolf 22 Nov 2005
3:27 pm

minerva - i don’t know what the cure might be. But what i would like to see is a party rise up and reframe the discussion.
First i would like to see a champion of the “less is more” philosophy. Do we really need all the gadgets and gizmos we waste our dollars on ($400 for an X-Box!)? Do we really need to have massive numbers of cars that consume huge amounts of oil? Conservation has never been glamorous, but it has always be eminently practical. (On a personal note, i believe everyone that is not poor should save 10-25% of their incomes.)
Second, i would like to see the working and middle classes be more robustly supported, at the expense of the rich and the non-working lower classes. I think everyone should work if they are capable. I think it is a crime that people can pass on vast amounts of wealth to their heirs, and now without it even being taxed!
Third i would like to see a real energy policy. One that embraces renewable energy sources and uses nuclear, at least as a stopgap. We need to disengage from the Middle East and ALSO provide an alternative for the rest of the world to do so. This is a project worth funding in the 10’s of Billions of dollars, beginning tomorrow.
Fourth i would like to see more dollars for education at all levels. I would extend this to allow everyone a chit for a 4 year post high school education (including Vocational/Technical schools), if they got passing grades. Plus much better funding for the least of the schools, often found in inner cities.
Fifth i would like to see the US commit to a level of foreign aid much larger than it presently supports. Perhaps 3-5% of all tax revenues, not as loans, but as development projects throughout the world. A good will type of offering.
Next a serious discussion of national health care.
There is more, but neither party seems interested in issues like these.

minerva 27 Nov 2005
11:08 am

wow, I guess I should check my hotmail account more often.
Thank you for the humane and intelligent response…I am now very interested in hearing your thoughts on national health care. ( I am a Canadian nurse, working in the US on a Trade Nafta visa, so I have a perspective that is influenced by my own circumstance)

Tim Christopher 7 Dec 2005
4:49 pm

This entire Bush presidency has been torture. Lord, have mercy.

penis enlargement 7 Jan 2006
7:12 am

Three phrases should be among the most common in our daily usage. They are: Thank you, I am grateful and I appreciate.

minerva 21 Jan 2006
5:34 am

I went looking for the quote
“Three phrases should be among the most common in our daily usage. They are: Thank you, I am grateful and I appreciate. “
and, ironically found it attributed to several online personalities.
One was
size genetics
the other was
extender
and last, but not least, was our ITT friend,
penis enlargement.
You can find their website on a google serach.
Let me know how the One Handed Jelq works out for you pal.
Ha!

——-

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