Culls from the morning read
Does this guy look like a tough guy - James Bond type?The US government thought so they Waterboarded him 183 times. I guess 182 times just didn't give them the info they needed or he just decided to give in.Online reporters studied the memos released by the JD and the documents showed waterboarding was used 183 times on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who admitted planning the 9/11 attacks, the New York Times reported today.
You want email, say something controversial. The Governor of Texas did just that here. One action generated 4,300 emails some are quite revealing.
A story about some Police methods. In the UK debate has hotted up about the methods used by Police in controlling crowds. Four weeks ago a man, walking through the demonstration was hit by Police and collapsed and died on the spot. Police said he attacked them but video, shown later and taken by a spectator showed differently. Last week a video appeared where a Policeman was seen hitting a female demonstrator. Both incidents led to investigations. A senior Police Official wrote in a report the following, which appears to sum up the differences in policing ideology. Perhaps civil society may be a little more civil if the report was adopted.
This aggression is no doubt linked to the government's nasty habit of writing laws that prefer the convenience of security forces to the rights of free citizens. But the police are public servants, not government enforcers. Their job is to keep the peace, not clear the streets of dissent.
President Obama has created a firestorm by releasing the memos, that exist in the Justice Department, that allowed the use of questionable interrogation techniques, some say torture, used in the aftermath of 9/11. Some of the Press, on Sunday morning op-ed shows agree that torture may be advantageous. However what struck me was the way one technique was justified - head-banging on a wall. A quote from Britt Hume
"What we really need is to have all these techniques at our disposal... they talk about the banging of the guy's head against the wall. It turns out to be very controlled and it's a soft wall that gives way... I'm not at all sure that's torture."The program's host, Chris Wallace, agreed with Hume's assessment of the "soft wall" technique -- "it strikes me as fairly cautious and careful."



