Well, there isn't a way to answer that without coming across as an antisemitic bastard. People should let the past go, live in the presence.
I can't accept killing or harming other people or double standards. As punishment method its savage, and as interrogation it doesn't work, because you are forced with violence and if you don't want to end up dead, they can make you admit guilty to anything.
Torture doesn't work. Although the protocols for interrogations have been developed with the help of APA members they have discovered that those methods are counterproductive, and shaming their name. So they're trying to back off with the minimal damage possible.
This is, in no way, an ideal fight. This is about the practical implications of a method which is tremendously error prone, and at the same time morally reproachable.
It's my opinion, however, that this happens - also - because the ship is sinking, and anyone who was willing to have part in a victory is unwilling to share the burden of defeat. In other words, if things were perceived as good by the general public, the ethical problem would simply go away for the majority of people. After all, victory is the only reason for which you're willing to fight a war. If victory is impossible you surrender and try to negotiate the best possible conditions, or you seek a honourable death.
If this is your idea of military, I disagree because it's a stupid idea. Refer to the original thread for more information.
Edit: and by the way, changing or deleting your signature after my post has been a wise idea. Only time will tell if you did it because you want to delete your footsteps, because you want to do something nastier or, as I hope, because you understood what I wrote.
As we say - a bit harshly - in Italy, Those who lived hoping died shitting. Luckily I'm practical enough to survive my deluded hopes, at least to this day
Is it really antisemitic to not want to see Hitler tortured? Is it really antisemitic to not want to go down the road of "he tortured jews, so he deserved to be tortured himself"? I'm not willing to stoop to his level by playing his game.
Good. One of the things that separates a man from his enemy is his unwillingness to play by his enemy's rules. Unfortunately, by going down the torture/secret imprisonment/imprisonment without trial route (among many, many other things), the US is in danger of becoming its own worst enemy. It's decided, arbitrarily, that so-called "enemy combatants" aren't protected by the Geneva Conventions or the Magna Carta, so what's to stop America's enemies treating US captives just as harshly? Why can't other countries simply elect to opt out of long-standing international agreements on the treatment of POWs and start electrocuting & beating people?
That must be the famous Italian subtlety I've heard about
This stuff curiously reminds me of a psychiatrist, a Colonel who was in charge of the psychiatric section of the military hospital in my town. He's a specialist in emergencies and he's extremely interested in deviant human behaviour. So - not so ironically - he chose the military (I guess his penchant for women didn't allow him to join the Church instead). He said this was a sort of mission, for him. He believed much more in psychotherapy than in psychiatry. He had a rather contorted sense of duty, however. A friend of mine told me something about him. He was told by his doctor, who was also in the military.
Eventually, when I met this psychiatrist again I asked him, almost abruptly: "Have you ever dressed like a priest?"
He was delighted to answer. "Of course! I really like it! Some nuns even wanted me to celebrate Mass, but I declined. I said I had to go."
One of the nicest persons I've met in my life. And an excellent officer too (no pun intended).