the liberal equivalent of a mind
IF a terrorist knows the whereabouts of a ticking bomb that could kill thousands of Americans, would torturing him be permissible to prevent catastrophe?
The question was posed by Sen. Arlen Specter to three witnesses testifying before the committee that's conducting hearings on Attorney General-nominee Alberto Gonzales ?— a man the three consider ''dangerous.''
Harold Koh, dean of the law school at Yale: ''I think that my approach would be to keep the flat ban, and if someone ?— the president of the United States ?— had to make a decision like that, someone would have to decide whether to prosecute him or not.''
John Hutson, former Navy judge advocate general in the Clinton administration: I agree with, uh, with Dean Koh that it is always illegal. Now, you may decide that you are going to take the illegal action, ummm, because you have to.
Doug Johnson, director of the Center for Victims of Torture in Minneapolis: ''I think that it's very overblown in our imaginations, and ?— and it's very ripe with what I would . . . could only call fantasy and mythology.''
Translation of academic double-speak: Make it illegal except when you have to do it, and then prosecute the person who did the torturing. Or, it's a problem that will never exist except our imagination, so I don't have to answer the question.
Is it any wonder why Americans don't trust leftists with national security?
IF a terrorist knows the whereabouts of a ticking bomb that could kill thousands of Americans, would torturing him be permissible to prevent catastrophe?
The question was posed by Sen. Arlen Specter to three witnesses testifying before the committee that's conducting hearings on Attorney General-nominee Alberto Gonzales ?— a man the three consider ''dangerous.''
Harold Koh, dean of the law school at Yale: ''I think that my approach would be to keep the flat ban, and if someone ?— the president of the United States ?— had to make a decision like that, someone would have to decide whether to prosecute him or not.''
John Hutson, former Navy judge advocate general in the Clinton administration: I agree with, uh, with Dean Koh that it is always illegal. Now, you may decide that you are going to take the illegal action, ummm, because you have to.
Doug Johnson, director of the Center for Victims of Torture in Minneapolis: ''I think that it's very overblown in our imaginations, and ?— and it's very ripe with what I would . . . could only call fantasy and mythology.''
Translation of academic double-speak: Make it illegal except when you have to do it, and then prosecute the person who did the torturing. Or, it's a problem that will never exist except our imagination, so I don't have to answer the question.
Is it any wonder why Americans don't trust leftists with national security?