Those who are responsible for this 
  policy of torture want to debate their right to torture people.  They wish to 
  bully their opponents into accepting the issues as they, the torturers, frame 
  them.  They start by trivializing the idea of torture, using euphemisms such 
  as ‘enhanced interrogation techniques,’ and then blatantly deny these 
  techniques are torture.  They challenge the integrity of anyone who objects to 
  their policy of torturing people by asking whether it is permissible to 
  torture someone when there is a ticking bomb somewhere in the belief that 
  answering this question in the affirmative justifies their policy of torturing 
  and terrorizing innocent people.  They claim it is permissible to torture 
  “high-value” detainees who might have “high-value” information that is “likely 
  to save lives.”  (Krauthammer)
  
   
  
  With this kind of twisted logic 
  they try to keep their opponents off balance and keep them from asking 
  questions of substance—questions like what does a hypothetical example of 
  torturing an imaginary terrorist and saving an imaginary world have to do with 
  torturing and terrorizing innocent people in the real world in violation of 
  our most sacred beliefs?  Are we supposed to believe all the people they 
  tortured were “high-value” or knew about ticking bombs, that no innocent 
  people were tortured, and that it was all worth it just because they say so? 
  
  
   
  
  The people who defend their right 
  to torture look us straight in the eye and tell us their enhanced 
  interrogation techniques aren’t torture even though there is no question in 
  the mind of anyone who has looked at these techniques they are torture.  (Mayer)  
  These are the same people who looked us straight in the eye and told us they 
  believed in less government and then increased the size of government when 
  they came to power.  They told us they were going to cut taxes on ordinary 
  people and then funneled virtually all of their tax cuts to their wealthy 
  friends.  (Krugman)  
  They told us deregulating the financial markets would lead to economic growth 
  and prosperity.  The result of their deregulation was
  wide spread fraud and 
  corruption, hundreds of billions of dollars profit for their friends, and a 
  worldwide economic catastrophe for the rest of us.  (Blame)  
  They told us we have to invade Iraq because Saddam had WMD and connections to 
  al Qaida and 9/11.  After we invaded Iraq we found there were no WMD or 
  connections to al Qaida or 9/11, and the result of their invasion was tens of 
  thousands of American casualties, hundreds of thousands of Iraqi casualties, 
  trillions of dollars wasted, and more billions of dollars of profit for their 
  friends.   (Mayer
  
  
  N Klein
  
  
  Chandrasekaran
  
  
  Isikoff
  
  
  Ricks
  
  
  Miller
  
  
  White
  
  
  Krugman)
  
   
  
  In other words, these people have 
  lied to us over and over again.  They cannot be trusted to tell us the truth 
  about anything, let alone about their torture program.
  
   
  
  Those who brought us to this point 
  tell us they have kept us safe and that if we just declassify a few reports 
  all of the good their program of torture yielded will be proved.  This is, no 
  doubt, a good place to start.  These reports should be declassified and 
  carefully examined.  
  
   
  
  The first thing we must look at is 
  the actual regimen of torture applied to their victims.  We know what the 
  torturers say they did.  What did they actually do?  Next we must find out how 
  much of the evidence for the good the torturers claim to have accomplished is 
  verified only by people they tortured, and how much of their evidence can be 
  established independent of the testimony they tortured out of their victims.  
  We must then find out how many innocent people they tortured to obtain the 
  results they claim to have found.  Was it in the hundreds, thousands, or tens 
  of thousands?  (Mayer) 
  
  
    
  
  After we have established these 
  facts we must examine to what extent their torture program has provided a 
  recruitment engine for religious extremist throughout the world, and how much 
  this has made the situation in Iraq and throughout the region worse.  And, 
  yes, we must also examine whether the same or better results have been 
  obtained without torture.  These are only a few of the gut wrenching facts 
  that must be established to put this matter to rest. 
    
  
  Republicans who defend their right 
  to torture people see all of this as irrelevant and believe there is no need to 
  establish these facts or answer these questions.  They tell us their policy of 
  torturing people is justified because the world is a dangerous place, and to survive in 
  a dangerous world we have to fight fire with fire.  If we don't torture people 
  we won't be safe.  We can't let terrorists have rights or they will attack us 
  again.  We have to be tough and make the hard decisions necessary to keep us 
  safe.  Fuzzy minded liberals are soft and weak and don't understand that it’s 
  a hard, tough world out there, and we have to be just as hard and tough as our 
  enemies in order to survive.  
  
   
  
  They have been telling us this 
  sort of thing for over forty years now, and when I hear them using this drivel 
  to justify their torturing people it turns my stomach.  It just reeks of 
  Himmler's infamous oration at Posen where he praised the SS for becoming 
  “hard” and at the same 
  time remaining “decent” as they went about their sordid tasks of torture and 
  murder and piled up bodies by the millions. (Himmler) 
  The men of the Third Reich who piled up those bodies along with the other 
  despicable men of history who have resorted to torture and murder to achieve 
  their ends did not become “hard” as they thought themselves to be. They became callous, and they did 
  not remain “decent,” they were and remained 
  sadist.   
  
   
  
  None of the great leaders of our 
  country—Washington, Jefferson, Lincoln, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, 
  Wilson, Eisenhower—believed in torture.  Churchill did not believe in 
  torture.  Even George S. Patton did not believe in torture, and none of these 
  great men resorted to torture.  Who are the men who have resorted to torture?  
  Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, the militarists in Japan, Franco, Pinochet, the 
  military junta in Argentina . . . .  The list of despicable people who 
  resorted to torture goes on and on. 
  
   
  
  Are those who turned our country 
  into a nation of torturers suggesting we should ignore the great men of 
  history listed above and follow the lead of the despicable men who have 
  resorted to torture?  Not only are they suggesting we do this, they actually 
  did this, and in the course of doing so they violated international law, United 
  States law, the Constitution of the United States, and they are now in the 
  process of vehemently defending their right to having done this.  None of this 
  should be a surprise to anyone who knows anything about the rise of National 
  Socialism in Germany during the 1920s and 1930s and has been observing the 
  rise of the Republican Party in the United States for the last forty years.  (Shirer
  
  
  Bullock
  
  
  Altemeyer
  
  
  Frank) 
  
   
  
  Virtually all of the Germans of 
  the Nazi era either claimed they didn't know what was going on, they were just 
  following orders, or they knew but there was nothing they could do about it.  
  These were the “Good Germans” of that era, many of whom were held accountable 
  for their actions in spite of these defenses, and all of whom were devastated 
  in the end when the Nazis took control of their country and destroyed their 
  entire society.  (Shirer
  
  
  Altemeyer
  
  
  Bullock)
  
   
  
  Those who were in charge within the Nazi 
  Party, however, did not resort to these defenses.  Instead, they defended the 
  “decency” of the Third Reich and their right to murder and torture people to 
  the very end.  Why is it surprising that those who were in charge in the Republican 
  Party who were willing to ignore international law, domestic law, and the 
  Constitution, torture innocent people and terrorize entire populations to 
  achieve what they consider to be a greater good—namely, to keep America 
  safe—are willing to defend their right to do so to the very end?  Why would we 
  expect Republican's to believe in their cause any less 
  than the Nazis believed in theirs?  (Mayer
  
  
  Altemeyer
  
  
  Westen 
  
  Krugman 
  
  
  Hayek 
  
  Mises 
  
  Friedman)
  
   
    
  
  The Obama Administration seems to 
  think that simply declaring to the world we are not going to torture people 
  anymore is enough.  That we should move forward to a better world and not look 
  into the past to bring out the truth and hold those who turned us into a 
  nation of torturers accountable for their actions.  Obama seems to think he 
  can deal with this situation by calming it down, appeasing the Republicans, 
  and pursuing a bi-partisan approach to solving our problems.  He has 
  absolutely no chance of succeeding at this.  
  
   
  
  Obama seems to think those who 
  turned to torture just made a mistake, and if we put the past behind us this 
  problem will be forgotten and go away.  The people who turned us into a nation 
  of torturers did not do this by mistake.  When someone makes a mistake they 
  own up to it.  The Republicans are defending their right to torture innocent 
  people to the end.  They truly believe in their right to torture people just 
  as they truly believe the unions, socialists, intellectual elitists, liberals, 
  foreigners, and blacks are the cause of all of our problems.  They truly 
  believe that the economic catastrophe the world is facing today—a catastrophe 
  caused by a bunch of rich, white Republicans—was caused by a bunch of poor, 
  black Democrats in spite of the overwhelming evidence to the contrary.  (Utopian
  
  
  Blame)
  
    
  
  These people cannot be appeased or 
  calmed down as Obama seems to think they can, they must be stopped, and the 
  place to stop them is when they start torturing people.  There is only one 
  legitimate response to those who torture and wish to debate the issue as well 
  as to those who wish to defend the right of their friends to torture people: 
  
  
   
  
  We are Americans.  Americans 
  don’t torture people.  Torture is clearly defined as criminal behavior in both 
  international law and the law of the United States.  The rule of law requires 
  that those who torture as well as those who are responsible for implementing a 
  policy of torture must be held accountable for their criminal acts.  
  
  
   
  
  For anyone who believes in the 
  fundamental principles on which our country was founded this is where the 
  discussion of torture must begin, and this is where the discussion of torture 
  must end.  That torture is wrong is a self-evident truth that is non-debatable 
  for anyone who holds our institutions dear, and no clearer line can be drawn 
  between those who believe in what America stands for and those who do not. 
  
  
   
  
  The place to debate the finer 
  points of torture is in a court of law where there is some hope of the truth 
  coming out, not in the public square where the fear and hate mongers can 
  inflame the mob and bully their opponents into submission.  After all, today’s 
  Republicans aren’t ordinary people.   They 
  think they have a right to torture people, and they are trying to justify torturing 
  innocent people in the name of keeping us free!  Think 
  about that!  
  
   
  
  It's time for men and women of 
  good will to wake up.  This isn't rocket science we are talking about.  This 
  is very simple stuff:  Republicans  think they have a right to 
  torture people!  Red flags don't come any redder than that.  
  It's not as if we have to wait until they lie to get us into a war, loot the 
  federal treasury to profit themselves and their friends, convert our nation 
  from the largest creditor nation in the world to the largest debtor nation in 
  the world, destroy the manufacturing sector of our economy by sending our high 
  paying jobs abroad, create a financial crisis that brings the world financial 
  system to its knees and threatens to
  destroy the world's economy, arrest and 
  hold people without charge, wiretap without warrants, ignore the law and the 
  Constitution whenever it gets in their way, and start torturing people before 
  we can make up our minds.  They have already done these things.  
  
   
  
  The time to stop them is now, 
  before it’s too late.  It is time to stand up and speak out against these 
  people. 
  
  Endnote
    
  
  
  
  [1] See
     It makes Sense 
    if You Don’t Think About It and How Propaganda Works.
  
  
  