(no subject)
Jan. 28th, 2005 04:18 pmMost of you will probably find this really offensive, on many different levels. Some of you will probably condone it, though I have no idea why. Still, I hope everyone finds this story a bit disturbing: Interrogators at Guantanamo Use Sexual Tactics.
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Date: 2005-01-28 10:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-28 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-28 10:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-28 11:05 pm (UTC)To say that I'm disgusted by it is an understatement.
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Date: 2005-01-28 11:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-28 11:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-28 11:37 pm (UTC)Yeah, *that's* really gonna help our cause.
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Date: 2005-01-29 12:06 am (UTC)Second, I think these tactics are cruel and unusual punishment. They shouldn't be allowed to do anything to these prisoners that wouldn't be allowed in any U.S. jail setting. These people need lawyers & fair trials. If even one innocent person is sitting over there without fair representation, then America is a friggin hypocrite.
Third, I don't think military women should be barred nor encouraged to work with the prisoners. If they would have been there anyway and are acting as they normally would, then that's fine by me. They're in our military camp and it should be run the way it normally is. However, I don't think an entire unit of women is neccesary to subdue unruly prisoners. They were assembled all at once specifically to scare the prisoner.
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Date: 2005-01-29 12:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-29 03:23 am (UTC)But I find it utterly fascinating that female sexuality is so scary to these guys that it can be used as a weapon.
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Date: 2005-01-29 04:02 am (UTC)Or what if the guys being treated this way were western? Do you think that western men would enjoy it? Even a western man would know that he is a prisoner who has no choice in the matter.
No matter the gender, no matter the culture, this is sexual violation. It's taking one of the most intimate of human interactions and turing it into a weapon. People have taboos about sexuality precisely because it is such a powerful impulse.
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Date: 2005-01-29 04:26 am (UTC)My point is this: why give them more reason to believe it's true? Why not show that women can be just as capable and professional as men, without their sexuality being an issue? Why shoud a woman have to use her body or sexualize herself to do her job? That's one of the classic misogynistic arguments, that having women in a traditionally male workplace would be disruptive because women can't control their sexuality. That is offensive to me, and this is just another example.
I'm not defending the guys in Guantanamo - most of them are there for a reason. What I object to is the fact that "we" are sinking to that level. It only does harm to women's rights, in the end.
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Date: 2005-01-29 09:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-01-30 05:17 pm (UTC)1. This is appalling behaviour. There is no excuse whatsoever for behaving this way, no matter how the military (not just the USA's, but any country's) try to justify it. In the long run, it will only lead to retaliation, and prolonging of hostilities, and in the short term it will most definitely emotionally scar detainees who have yet to be determined were actually involved. Many have already been released as they were realised to be innocent. How many innocent people are currently being tortured in these facilities? It's also counterproductive. I can't speak for anyone else, but I know that when I'm being bullied I go out of my way *not* to cooperate. Apparently no one has explained to the US military yet about flies, honey, and vinegar.
2. While I do not condone these tactics, and find them reprehensible, I have to ask if we would be reading about them at all, if the torture had been carried out by men. Torture happens often during war and interrogations which are carried out without outside independant supervision. I'm beginning to question whether the real shock that was felt in the US when the original photos of abuse in Abu Ghraib were revealed, wasn't that the suspects were being tortured, but that some of the torturers were women, and American women at that. There seems to me to be a level of hypocracy emerging here. Torture is unacceptable, no matter who carries it out.
3. "The price of democracy is eternal vigilance."
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Date: 2005-02-01 08:31 am (UTC)And in the end, the US doesn't look like a democratic country, and gets more enemies.