Corolinth wrote:
Khross wrote:
The real problem here isn't what our government has done, it's that our government pretends to be above its Machiavellian behavior.
No, the problem actually is what our government has done. The problem is people like who you sit around and say, "The United States does it too, and always has."
We have a hard time appreciating this today because it's gone away in recent generations, mostly since the Cold War, but there was a time when we really were better than other nations. The "international law" that prohibits certain behaviors such as torture? That exists because of the United States. There are families in the United States that are here because Grandpa or Great-Grandpa was captured by American soldiers and sent overseas as a POW to a farm owned by German immigrants who taught him English. He met a girlfriend, saved up money, became a U.S. citizen, and bought land of his own. That wasn't what was supposed to happen to you back then when you were a POW. You were supposed to be tortured and used as slave labor.
We are the reason Europeans today think torture is a terrible crime. They didn't invent the idea by themselves. We are the ones who told them. Europeans were happily torturing each other until the United States showed them otherwise. The United States army set an example for Europe during the first half of the twentieth century that the nation has failed to measure up to ever since. The Greatest Generation left their country in the hands of lesser men.
The problem, Khross, is that we don't have the cajones to follow in the footsteps of our grandparents. When confronted by our failure and cowardice, we make excuses about how it's too hard, too dangerous, and how the world is a different place. Yes, the world is a very different place today. It's not at war. Today we don't have the courage to face the ugly truth about ourselves, admit it's a problem, and fix it.
No, we didn't because we had complete penetration of Japanese and German encryption via Enigma and other programs.
We interned tens of thousands of our own citizens out of fear of their ethnicity, we firebombed cities, and deployed nuclear weapons to obtain complete surrender.
Despite all this, we were the good guys. We were the good guys because we were better than our enemies, and not by just a little - although we did have an ally that was hardly better than they.
Good is not perfect. We are far from perfect today too. We are still the good guys, no matter how much Europeans might like to whine about it. Our enemies are still appalling by comparison to us.
The difference now is that in WWII your grandpa and my grandpa
went. Even my grandma went; I still have her records. She outranked my grandfather when they got married. Those that didn't go either couldn't, did something at home that was indispensable, or were publicly shamed.
That's not the way it is now. Unlike your grandpa, you do not have to go. You will not be shamed, nor drafted.
that's why it doesn't mean a whole lot when you complain about torture. It meant something coming from your grandpa. It meant something coming from John McCain. It doesn't mean a whole lot coming from you. It doesn't even mean a lot coming from me. My war was cake compared to Grandpa's or Senator McCain's. We live in the luxury built by doing the ugly when necessary.
If you want to argue "It wasn't necessary", go ahead; there's probably a case to be made there. Just sitting there and piously acting appalled at it though is pretty spoiled.
By the way, it's "cojones". There's no "a".