Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Why Does Bush Not Trust The Military? Part II

Over and over again current and former military plead with this administration to not only follow the rule of basic human dignity but also to follow international law concerning detainees that have served well for more 60 years.

"There is nothing good about it," John Hutson, former judge advocate general of
the Navy, said about the authority to conduct harsh interrogations codified in
the Bush plan. "It is not effective in terms of gaining good intelligence. It is
not good for the U.S. in terms of being a world leader. And it is not good for
U.S. troops in terms of being the victims of it or perpetrating it."


If Bush will not listen to the military, just who in the hell will he listen to?

2 comments:

Johnny Webb said...

I agree...we should at least treat them with the same respect they treat our 'detainees'.....

Anonymous said...

"If Bush will not listen to the military, just who in the hell will he listen to?"

The Lord, maybe?

Because you know, if there's one thing the Lord can't tolerate and wants stamped out at any cost, it's religious extremism.