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Sunday, September 15, 2002   
Do you remember?

Adolescence sucks: another entry in The Wayback Journal.

11:46:46 PM      

Guilt-o-matic

This arrived from G-:

I wonder if you knew I was in the World Trade Center on the morning of Sept.11, 2001, and I was freaked as the anniversary came closer knowing my upcoming further involvement, if you would have cut me a little slack for my mistake and late apology?   Probably not....

Once again, my mistake.  Where I come from, sometimes you grant a person one minor mistake if they apologize.

But you are probably right to put the kibosh on our getting together in any case.

Best to you as well.

Ouch.

But does it seem to you that he's claiming a monopoly on September 11th suffering, or what? I've considered replying to this, but I think I'm going to just let it go.

My buttons have, however, been thoroughly pushed and I'm feeling like a heel now.

2:54:49 PM      

What Price Survival?

Alan Dershowitz has written a book called Why Terrorism Works. In it, he proposes that we devise a new legal instrument, the torture warrant, in order to legalize the torture of certain prisoners in order to obtain information to track down and prevent terrorism.

Dershowitz reports on a 1995 incident in the Philippines, where a terrorist was tortured for 67 days until he provided information that may have prevented the crash of 11 commercial airliners. How many Americans would regret that the man wasn't read his Miranda rights? Dershowitz answers this question. When he asks audiences if they would support the use of nonlethal torture in a ticking-bomb case, ''virtually every hand is raised.'' He concludes that the real issue ''is not whether some torture would or would not be used in the ticking-bomb case -- it would. The question is whether it would be done openly, pursuant to a previously established legal procedure, or whether it would be done secretly, in violation of existing law.'' Dershowitz argues for torture warrants issued by courts to limit the practice and make it part of the public record.

What's next, public flogging for adulterers and medical hand amputation for thieves? And once you've decided "non-lethal" torture is okay, what's to keep you from claiming that potentially lethal torture may be necessary due to exigency? Sure, the "consitution is not a suicide pact." But when do the differences between us and our enemies become meaningless?

Right about the time we decide torture should be legalized, in my opinion. I'd rather die civilized than become the barbarian who kills me.

[via The New York Times]

12:01:25 AM      


© Copyright 2002 Pascale Soleil.
Last updated: 10/1/02; 12:46:47 AM.
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