TheHammer wrote:Your point on due process was that before we can imprison anyone you have to "determine if they in fact should be imprisoned at all". You are incorrect. Individuals are often detained on suspicision of committing an offense, and it is not until trial that guilt or innocense is determined and thus if they should have been imprisoned at all.
I suppose I should really said "determine if in fact a crime has occurred". Whenever a person is arrested, it should be in response to something identifiable. It was this that I referred to, your nitpicking nonwithstanding.
Of course, all this is only true if the arrest is made by the
police. Let's instead say that they are "arrested" by gang members high on PCP. They are then brought before a "court" where the guy who arrested them also serves as judge, prosecutor and defendant. That analogy actually corresponds with the situation we have, unlike the one you devised. And that is probably also the reason you think it's irrelevant. After all, reality is your enemy.
TheHammer wrote:The rest of your comment is irrelevent.
No, it is not. Unlike your posts, mine contain actual points which you need to address instead of feebly trying to wave away. You claim there's a crime going on, and that if someone was near the scene, 'he would be arrested' by an unknown but benevolent force that just coincidentally must the be the United States. You have not established why this is the case, or why it is just, or on what grounds an arrest would be made, or defined the crime in question.
There is no possibility of impartial behaviour from the US in this instance. The US has no right to be their judge, because the US was the one fucking with them in the first case.
Evidence of impartiality being impossible?
Now you're just trolling, and transparently so. My meaning was perfectly fucking clear. True, in the technical sense it is
possible, in the same way that it's
possible that if you pet a wolverine it won't try to maul you.
Now, having acknowledged that I technically used the wrong term, I will also note that this was the
only aspect of what I said that you dared address, meaning you have no actual rebuttal.
GITMO detainees won't get shit. There's no way in hell if we go by the precedent I gave.
Says what? Your gut feeling?
Relevant part bolded. This is the quality of TheHammer's argument. He can repeat your words back at you, but he won't understand their meaning.
As I've said over and over again, I'm not presuming to pre-judge any of the prisoners, therefore I don't need to fucking show they are guilty.
But you have already judged them -- the majority of them -- as being guilty for the crime of
being captured by the US.
I said that many of them are
probably deserving of imprisonment.
Without any justification whatsoever. Yes.
That's just playing the odds. I'm reserving actual judgement until after evidence has been presented. As I said, if I'm wrong I'll admit it. I'll be shocked, but I'll admit it.
The odds of what? Tell me, if I were to hijack a random bus and put the passengers in prison, would it be "playing the odds" to conclude most of them are guilty of... uh...something? After all, you have made no attempt to even tenuously connect them to a crime, and you have certainly not explained why the people arresting them had any right to do so.
Are you betting that most of them are probably not deserving of imprisonment?
Absolutely. Why? Are you betting you're not deserving of imprisonment yourself? See, I'm betting you really do, and that's apparently a compelling reason.