Thursday, December 25, 2014

Torture and Truth


Old Gadfly:  Gentlemen, Merry Christmas.

IM (an American citizen with an inquiring mind):  Thank you, Gadfly.  I am celebrating this day with my family.  Why did you feel compelled to disrupt my celebration? 

AM (an American combat aviator with an inquiring mind):  I know why, IM.  Two days ago, a Jordanian fighter pilot was shot down by ISIS and is now a prisoner.  May God give him strength.

IM:  Why do you say that, AM?

AM:  Ironically, while Senator Feinstein and other like-minded progressives self-flagellate America for the so-called water-boarding torture, ISIS beheads people for propaganda purposes.  What do you think they have in mind for this coalition fighter pilot?  Before they behead him, ISIS will perpetrate and advertise the most extreme forms of torture, ensuring that other fighter pilots are fully aware of what they can expect if and when captured.  They won’t waste their time water boarding the pilot.  They could care less about humane measures during interrogations.  They want to send a global signal that they are fully committed to their cause.


Old Gadfly:  Was water-boarding a form of torture?

AM:  According to legal analysis prior to allowing the method, the critical element was “intent.”  The intent was not to harm or injure, which would be considered torture.  What I find ironic is that it is common to flash the three images of the only terrorists to be water-boarded.  They are still alive and healthy.  It would be far more revealing to show these three murderers against the 3,000 images of innocents murdered on 9/11 and the numerous Americans beheaded by terrorists.  Unfortunately, only Fox News has an interest in revealing the significant flaws and deliberate slant of the Feinstein report. 

Old Gadfly:   Was the Jordanian fighter pilot shot down by a surface to air missile?

AM:  In my opinion, yes.  What should be very disturbing to our national security team is that 20,000 surface to air missiles were unaccounted for after the fall of Kaddafi in Libya.  Then there was the Benghazi attack, where I have been told by credible sources, some of which having been reported in various news venues, that the U.S. was engaged in a gun running operation to supply anti-Assad rebels in Syria. 

Old Gadfly:  Didn’t ISIS emerge from Syria? 

AM:  Most of the evidence points to Camp Bucca in Iraq.  What the news reporting got wrong is that the cause, which unites members of ISIS, is Islamic ideology.  Camp Bucca closely assembled fanatic adherents to the ideology.  To the fanatics, Camp Bucca symbolized the Great Satan, thus adding fuel to the fire already raging in their hearts and minds.

Old Gadfly:  Did they benefit from the Benghazi arms shipments?

AM:  My guess is quite a bit.  But these weapons are a piss ant compared with the weapons they can acquire in the black market.

Old Gadfly:  Let’s revisit the ISIS cause for action.  Why would an American fighter pilot be willing to put himself at similar risk as the Jordanian fighter pilot?  For what cause does he (or she) fight? 

AM:  In my day, I fought for the American way of life—supporting and defending the Constitution against all enemies foreign and domestic meant something to me.  I was prepared to die to protect our nation from the foreign threat of communism. Our President now wants to help communist Cuba. 

IM:  In terms of our way of life, we now have a domestic enemy, a secular force in America that fights hard to diminish one of the important reasons we fought for independence as a nation.  Our very first of 10 Constitutional amendments guaranteed the freedom of religion.  Our culture and legal institutions were built upon Judeo-Christian principles; principles that regard life as being sacred and declared as an unalienable right in our Declaration of Independence.  Did you know that while Planned Parenthood and other organizations push for unfettered and taxpayer subsidized abortions, I could be fined up to $250,000 and sentenced up to 2 years in prison for destroying an eagle egg?  I guess a human being is less important than an eagle.


Old Gadfly:  Neither of you answered my question.  Why would an American fighter pilot risk a fate similar to the Jordanian fighter pilot?

AM:  I think many in today’s military are confused about what it is that they have committed to.  Sure, many “serve” for the pay and benefits.  If we get too many who serve merely for this purpose we can end up with the same hollow force the Iraqi’s discovered when American forces departed.

Old Gadfly:  But, don’t many in our military fight for our way of life?

IM:  Our way of life is being transformed by a major shift from individual liberty to collective liberty, managed by a central government.

AM:  Many in our nation are not in favor of this shift.  The recent elections are evidence.

Old Gadfly:  There is only so much that Congress can do.  It is still constrained by public sentiment.

IM:  Good point, Gadfly.  Public sentiment is characterized by our news media.  As we have discussed previously, the mainstream news media sources have a progressive lens through which they report.

Old Gadfly:  Did you see the report about the Marquette University (a Jesuit run university) professor being banned from campus while being investigated for “offensive speech” in a blog post?  He basically argued that a student was being unfairly censored for his traditional view of marriage.

IM:  Yes, I saw the report.  The professor is being punished for having a different view.  Add to this the “expectation” that people emotionally react to a white cop shooting a black man is all about the power of certain values despite the truth.

AM:  Sadly, when highly paid athletes hold up their hands to symbolize the “hands up-don’t shoot” meme falsely perpetrated by an accomplice or wear t-shirts bearing “I can’t breathe,” then they are like chimps mimicking prescribed behavior.  Others who assemble to protest over apparent racism or highly paid politicians who release damaging reports such as “CIA torture” are chumps, kowtowing to political ideology.  Hmmm . . . is ISIS successful because followers kowtow to an ideology?

Old Gadfly:  Either way, what we see happening in America is what F.A. Hayek observed among totalitarian regimes in the 1940s.  We discussed this already in a previous conversation.  Recall the opening paragraph in Hayek’s chapter, “The End of Truth,” in The Road to Serfdom:

The most effective way of making everybody serve the single system of ends toward which the social plan is directed is to make everybody believe in those ends.  To make a totalitarian system function efficiently, it is not enough that everybody should be forced to work for the same ends.  It is essential that the people should come to regard them as their own ends.  Although the beliefs must be chosen for the people and imposed upon them, they must become their beliefs, a generally accepted creed which makes the individuals as far as possible act spontaneously in the way the planner wants.  If the feeling of oppression in totalitarian countries is in general much less acute than most people in liberal countries imagine, this is because the totalitarian governments succeed to a high degree in making people think as they want them to.[1] 

IM:  Part of the last sentence is worth emphasizing:  “Totalitarian governments succeed to a high degree in making people think as they want them to.”  I heard on the news just this morning that the Obama Administration is saying our economy is growing like gangbusters.  Fortunately for the Administration, most Americans are not economists.  Were they, then they would know that when the Administration claims our economy is beyond the recession, technically this is correct.  But what the Administration will not admit is that America is in fact experiencing a serious depression.  The difference depends on monetary versus structural issues.  America’s economy reflects subnormal growth based on structural issues, thus a depression.  For an excellent explanation of this phenomenon see James Rickard’s article, “Welcome to the New Depression.”[2]  Rickards claims the best definition of a depression is from John Maynard Keynes:  “a chronic condition of subnormal activity for a considerable period without any marked tendency towards recovery or towards complete collapse.”  Rickards then argues:

Keynes did not refer to declining GDP; he talked about “subnormal” activity.  In other words, it’s entirely possible to have growth in a depression.  The problem is that the growth is below trend.  It is weak growth that does not do the job of providing enough jobs or staying ahead of the national debt.  This is exactly what the U.S. is experiencing today.

AM:  I read the article.  Rickard’s logic is compelling and contrary to what the Administration and mainstream media claim.    

Old Gadfly:  It is ironic and not coincidental that the Feinstein report was released the same time Jonathan Gruber testified before Congress.  This looks like a pretty straight-forward strategy, given a complicit media:  tell the public what you want it to believe.  Let the noise of the Feinstein report obscure the signal about intentional deception to get the Affordable Care Act passed.

IM:  Déjà vu.  Gadfly, do you remember our conversation a couple years ago on engineering public sentiment?  Here is what I said:

As I casually observed actions and behaviors that seemed somewhat isolated from each other, I also kept hearing in the back of my mind: drip . . . drip . . . drip . . .   Then, these seemingly isolated drops began to merge into a stream with force and direction.  I pulled my copy of George Orwell’s 1984 (with John Hurt and Richard Burton) off the shelf and inserted it into my DVD player.  At the very beginning of the movie was a black screen, then these words in white: 

WHO CONTROLS THE PAST

 

CONTROLS THE FUTURE

 

(Following a short pause, the next two lines appeared on the screen)

 

WHO CONTROLS THE PRESENT

 

CONTROLS THE PAST

This is when I truly understood the magnitude and danger of Obama and the progressive movement’s design for engineering public sentiment.  Unfortunately, many of our younger voters have no idea that Orwell was capturing the real dangers he actually witnessed in the Soviet Union and Germany when he wrote the original book in 1949.

AM:  There is a scene later in the movie where Richard Burton actually tortures John Hurt to coerce him into internalizing only “the truth” he was allowed to believe.

Old Gadfly:  Fortunately, today of all days is an opportunity for us to embrace a certain truth for which Jesus Christ willingly endured torture and death by crucifixion.  His selfless act liberated us from the chains of sinful illusions.  He taught us to love and to forgive, not to agitate or to hate.

IM:  Is there hope for us?

Old Gadfly:  Yes, if we place our trust in God’s salvation, not in man’s idea of utopia.



[1] F. A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom, (Chicago, IL:  The University of Chicago Press, 2007 [originally published 1944]), p. 171.
[2] A note of thanks to my good friend Dennis for alerting me to this article.

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