Cheney ♥ Waterboarding: “It’s a no-brainer for me,” Cheney said at one point in an interview.
Note that in WW II the US stated that waterboarding was a war crime— when practiced on US troops by the Japanese.
Cheney ♥ Waterboarding: “It’s a no-brainer for me,” Cheney said at one point in an interview.
Note that in WW II the US stated that waterboarding was a war crime— when practiced on US troops by the Japanese.
President Bush signed the disgraceful Torture Bill yesterday.
The campaign to repeal the Bush Torture Bill, aka the Military Commissions Act of 2006, begins today. (So does the legal battle.)
There are lots of theories about how we ended up in this sad position. Here’s mine: the problem with the opposition to torture, just like the opposition to the war, is that it isn’t visible enough.
I was a kid in Washington DC during the Vietnam War.
One thing I remember vividly about those times was how visible — in your face — the opposition to the war was. I don’t mean just the demonstrations, although those were important. I mean the small things, in a day-to-day way. People wore anti-war buttons. They put peace signs on their cars. They wore black armbands. The war was an issue in the home, in the school, in the community, on TV.
Today, in big media, Keith Olbermann stands almost alone; radio and to a lesser but real extent TV and even print avoid the major issues of the day in favor of fluff and missing white women. And the coverage you get is deeply inadequate: even after the fact the New York Times, for example, treated the resolution of the faux McCain-Bush division on the Torture bill as if the administration had conceded something significant while in fact the final bill that emerged from the Senate reflected the original administration wish list in almost every way that mattered. If you rely on the big news media for your information, you would not believe in a visceral way that the opposition to the war, to Bush, or to torture, is anything near as big as polls suggest it is.
And that means that people don’t speak out as much as they might because they don’t appreciate how many of the people around them are receptive. I’m not talking about activists — I’m talking about ordinary voters and non-voters. They are the new silenced majority.
We cannot repeal this bill without Democratic majorities in both houses, and a President (probably, but not necessarily a Democrat) open to repeal. That means, among other things, someone who didn’t vote for it.
But, as too many of the Democrats in the Senate have proved by voting for this bill, they (along with John McCain) cannot be relied on to do the right thing without outside pressure. And that pressure requires, more than anything, that the opposition to this attack on the fundamentals of decency and democracy be visible in a daily and constant way.
To make that happen requires a symbol. It has to be something visible. It has to be something simple that you can make at home — it shouldn’t depend on finding a supplier or waiting for an order to turn up.
The perfect symbol should be
I propose an armband. Not a plastic wristband — a real armband that you wear on your upper arm, over a shirt or jacket. Armbands are unisex, are easy to make, can be worn over almost anything, and are visible without being overly distracting or offensive. Buttons are a more traditional way of communicating a political message, but you have to buy the button from somewhere, it’s not something easily made at home.
So, an armband. But what color armband?
Around the time of the Moratorium, people wore black armbands. Those are easy to make — most people have some black construction paper or black fabric around the house. But they’re not unique: they carry both good freight (black is the color of mourning) a other freight that is not always helpful (Iraq is not Vietnam; many people who either supported the Vietnam war, or who today don’t want to be associated with its protestors would nonetheless oppose torture).
In any case, I think that mourning isn’t quite the right sentiment; something more active would be better — something which suggests that wearers want to reclaim basic American values. That might suggest that the ideal colors would be red, white, and blue, symbolizing the desire to return to traditional American values — no torture, fair trials. But the trouble with a red, white and blue armband is that it is a lot more trouble to make than a monochrome one. I am sure if I tried to make one with three stripes out of construction paper it would fall apart.
So that brings me to white. White is a practical color for an armband — everyone has white paper or fabric. Traditionally, it’s the color of purity, something we’d like to reclaim by removing this stain in the statute books. Again, though, there’s a uniqueness problem: the white band has been adopted as a symbol by many groups in the past and even the present. For example, Make Poverty History has an ongoing White Band Campaign — although theirs is one of those plastic things..
So at present I’m leaning towards a white armband. I’d appreciate comments, though, as to
It is of course a great faux pas in current political discourse to suggest that just maybe the Iraqi people are even worse off today than they were under Saddam.
I would guess that the Kurds may be better off (so far); my sense is that in many other parts of the country it’s not so clear at all given the physical destruction of a good chunk of several cities, the damage to the oil and electrical systems, the escalating casualties, the slide into civil war, the new enjoyment of civil liberties such as freedom of the press (not) and, now, news of widespread torture by the Iraqi government and others.
Time to dig out my Edwin Starr and my Bruce Springsteen. (Wikipedia suggests that “War” is one of the most popular protest songs ever recorded..)
Thanks to David Markus, I have an e-copy of Padilla’s motion alleging outrageous government conduct. Have it in the original .rft or in my conversion to .pdf.
(Earlier post: Padilla Torture Claims Detailed.)
Maybe it begins?
The Agonist, Movements and Parties:For one Congressman, at least, torture doesn’t seem like an issue he really wants to engage in. In fact, when the candidate I work for (Bob Johnson … DrBob around here) forcefully challenged John McHugh on torture using the language of morality, well, there’s no other way to put it: John McHugh freaked out.
…
That’s some reaction, hm? He isn’t attempting to plead the need for torture – he’s trying to deny it happens under this bill.
Yep. He wants as far away from the moral implications of torture as he can possibly get. Because Americans would freak out at some of the techniques.
They were torturing before. They will torture again. And if a bill that outlaws torture came through, Bush would castrate it with a signing statement.
But politically – Republicans, in all their fun and excitement about making liberal heads explode, got a little carried away. They just married the issue shortly before election day without knowing precisely and specifically which techniques they authorized.
Now it’s time to start telling the American people what techniques Republicans potentially just authorized in loving and specific detail (ouch for the Dems that crossed the aisle, but it’s called “collateral damage” and it serves them right).
Handled right it’s a baby seal hunt. Wear clothes that don’t stain.
Personally, I’m a bit more dubious about the ease of getting the message out, and I find the baby seal image somewhat disturbing and inappropriate, but I do like the energy and optimism here.