TheHammer wrote:
You specifically stated that we needed to know "beyond a shadow of a doubt", a level of proof that already exceeds the "reasonable" doubt that would be needed in a court of law. I don't know what point you feel I've dodged, its clear you are simply trying to deflect from the fact that you made a moronic statement.
So you ignore the breadth of my point to nitpick the semantics. Classy.
TheHammer wrote:
No where did I say "no proof was needed". I simply said that it didn't need to be of the same level as you'd see evidence presented in a court of law.
And I asked you why.
TheHammer wrote:I'd fucking hope that they did indeed have evidence for putting someone on these lists and that they had a vetting process for that evidence. In fact, I'm quite certain that they do. This isn't the same situation as when they were rounding up individuals to dump at Gitmo.
Prove it. I am getting tired of your idiocy. Why are you certain that they do? Why is this a different situation?
TheHammer wrote:
Accurately depicting your position is not a strawman.
Then find the post where I said, "throwing my hands in the air and deciding its worthless." That is how you characterized my stance.
TheHammer wrote:
You made it clear by your statement that you didn't trust the intelligence, that either it was "malice" or "incompetance" thus implying that the same situation would be likely to occur here. If that's NOT what you were implying it would have been irrelevent to even bring it up. In fact, I said as much then.
So you really are too thick to understand my argument despite me laying it out for you in very plain language in multiple posts? Again, you paint this as an issue of "trust," when it really is a matter of due process.
TheHammer wrote:
You're throwing random fallacy accusations that really don't fit and trying to escape as quickly as you can from the thorough ass kicking you are recieving. Declaring victory and running away isn't going to cut it you worthless piece of shit.
TheHammer wrote:
It wasn't an argument, it was a question. If you don't trust the intel gathering, and don't trust the evidence, "showing it to you" to justify the governments action is purely for show, and thus fucking pointless.
Do you really not understand what the word "evidence" means? Or what "due process" means?
TheHammer wrote:
Anytime someone uses the phrase "boils down to" a true strawman usually is about to follow, as you've just shown here. Anyone with a brain clearly knows that's not what I'm saying.
Again, you prove yourself to be a dishonest little fuck. This is word for word what you said asshole:
Methods change and improve overtime, as does leadership and personnel. just because there were mistakes made with regard to Gitmo detainees, and Iraq doesn't mean that there will be similar failures here. In fact, I'd argue that those previous failures are likely to prevent similar failures in the future.
You are literally dismissing any possibility of oversight or due process with the vague claim that they've fixed the source of any previous errors they've made, without providing any evidence that this could possibly be the case.
That's how a human being with a functioning brain interprets those words.
TheHammer wrote:
And measures have been taken.
What measures?
TheHammer wrote:As I previously noted, you've got a different administration, different personnel, different methods for gathering and interpreting intel.
The current administration's methods have been identical to the previous administration's in essentially every aspect of the way the war is being conducted, from drone strikes to CIA "black sites." If it has been the same in every other way, what evidence do we have that they have fixed any procedural or institutional errors that have contributed to previous debacles?
TheHammer wrote:
They don't operate under secrecy because that's not the nature of their business. Conducting intelligence and war time operations DOES heavily involve secrecy because you want to deny your enemies any advantage.
Why does this necessarily preclude the need for due process, or throw out the need for sufficient evidence to be gathered to even classify someone as an enemy combatant? You know it is possible to have judicial oversight while still keeping something secret (it happens all the time in domestic law enforcement)?
TheHammer wrote:
You attribute to one of those two factors when you brought up Iraq.
Okay, so now you have proven you are completely fucking illiterate. You can't even manage to keep your own god-damned posts in their proper context. Let's take a step back and look at this again, shall we, moron?
YOU said: "That doesn't mean that if I see something wrong that I'll just cover my eyes in any of these events. It simply means that I don't presume incompetance or malfeasance as you apparently do."
This is in direct response to me saying: "If the American intelligence and military apparatus has a proven history of misusing, misinterpreting, or downright fabricating evidence (as in Iraq post-9/11), how do we know that the evidence being used to kill these supposed military targets is sound?"
Now, it is pretty fucking obvious what I am talking about here. But since you can't understand it, we are talking about the extrajudicial killings of US (and other) citizens. I am not presuming incompetence or malfeasance in the issue; I am merely pointing out that the American intelligence apparatus has been guilty of them in the past, and thus the need for some sort of oversight to prevent the possibility of those occurring.
The only "incompetence or malfeasance" I have addressed was very specifically referring to the existence of WMDs in Iraq. It is inarguable that the intelligence there was wrong; it has been proven. I never said that the current intelligence operation exhibited either, and in fact specifically mentioned that I did not necessarily think this was the case.
So you are either, A) a moron, B) deliberately taking my quotes out of their proper context in an attempt to obfuscate my argument, or C) saying that the intelligence leading to the invasion of Iraq was correct. If C), I expect you to provide some evidence.
TheHammer wrote:
Its not at all inconsistent. You've made weak arguments and I've smacked them down quite consistently.
Where? I am having a hard time finding a place you've actually addressed my arguments.
TheHammer wrote:
Further, You seem to imply that I think that there should "no guidelines" a position I certainly have not taken. Weak.
Your first post:
We do not give court trials to military targets. Senior leadership of an organization engaged in armed hostilities towards the US are legitimate military targets. The fact that there is any additional consideration at all given to these men because they are "American Citizens" should be considered a bonus.
To which multiple people (Ahriman238, Alyrium Denryle [twice], White Haven, Zaune, Dr. Trainwreck, Stark, Gaidin, Grumman, and myself) have responded and told you that the problem is that we don't have clear guidelines for how to classify someone as a legitimate military target in this war. You have not addressed that point at all, and in fact have refused to even acknowledge multiple posts posing the question to you. And the few times you did acknowledge them you just dismissed those fears as being "paranoid."
Tell me, then, you smug little shit. What position are you taking? When you dismiss any talk of oversight, review, transparency, or any other process by which the evidence can be properly vetted as being the results of paranoid delusion, you are heavily implying that you don't view any of those guidelines as being proper means.
TheHammer wrote:Yes lets bring race in to this, something I certainly have not done, so you can sit up on your pedestal and continue to launch bullshit. Weak.
This response sums up your debate style pretty nicely. You've done it consistently throughout this thread. You clumsily try to avoid the obvious point of what I was saying, hoping that your little repartee will distract me.