The Torture Moment
The way we respond to the revelations about the Bush administration's use of torture will define the kind of country we are. It is a test of our courage and our convictions. So far, the media are not getting high marks.
The way we respond to the revelations about the Bush administration's use of torture will define the kind of country we are. It is a test of our courage and our convictions. So far, the media are not getting high marks.
Michael Wolff | Posted 05.24.2009 | Media
You wouldn't necessarily think that the right wing would want to distinguish itself by its enthusiasm for torture, but that's clearly the message Sean Hannity is gleefully sending.
Jeff Schweitzer | Posted 05.24.2009 | Politics
Cheney and friends invoke national security as some blanket amnesty for any past or future ethical or legal violations. Our Founding Fathers would find that offensive.
Washington Independent | Posted 05.24.2009 | Politics
"As a general deal," President Barack Obama said Tuesday about Bush administration officials who shaped the post-9/11 interrogation and detention regi...
Bob Cesca | Posted 05.23.2009 | Politics
If we can't protect ourselves with our morals intact, we don't deserve to be protected in the first place.
Rick Horowitz | Posted 05.23.2009 | World
If the rest of us are to live with ourselves, if we're to regain our own consciences, first we have to see it for what it was, and call it by its rightful name, this thing that was done in our name.
Robert Creamer | Posted 05.23.2009 | Politics
As a country, we need to emerge from this debate having placed the argument that "torture works" outside of the boundaries of acceptable political discourse once and for all.
Larry Arnstein | Posted 05.22.2009 | World
We got famous all over the world as the big country that starts wars and tortures people. That's how well it worked.
Mike Malloy | Posted 05.22.2009 | Politics
Today, Obama opened the door just a crack for investigations and hearings to begin. It is now up to Congress and the nation's law enforcement division to either follow through or turn away.
Michael Wolff | Posted 05.22.2009 | Politics
Because the torture was carefully rationalized, the documentation is going to be bureaucratic and meticulous.
Rep. Jan Schakowsky | Posted 05.22.2009 | Politics
Not torturing prisoners is one of our nation's proudest traditions, one of the features that define us. Yet, the men who served as CIA Director and Attorney General still believe in these techniques.
Jacob Dickerman | Posted 05.22.2009 | Comedy
Al Hussein sighed and looked at his abdomen, where there were no longer any bruises from being slapped. "I never would have become an Islamic Extremist if it weren't for the human rights abuses."
Huffington Post | Alex Leo | Posted 05.22.2009 | Comedy
(SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO) Last week the Department of Justice released memos detailing techniques used for interrogation of terrorism suspects aka tort...
Marty Kaplan | Posted 05.21.2009 | Politics
No matter how horrified we may be by the actions of Jay S. Bybee, John Yoo & Company, it is too convenient to distance ourselves from what they did by explaining it away as Rovian evil.
Allison Silver | Posted 05.21.2009 | Politics
Friedrich Schiller, who wrote Mary Stuartin 1800, knew why Bush administration officials would sign off on these infamous torture memos.
Jeremy Scahill | Posted 05.21.2009 | Politics
The UN has indicated that Obama's refusal to prosecute torturers may be a violation of International law.
Coleen Rowley | Posted 05.20.2009 | Politics
Remember folks that all it takes for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing! There are only a few perpetrators but there are a lot of us.
Scott Atran | Posted 05.19.2009 | Politics
The restoration of our reputation and standing in the world requires more than just a restatement of principles. It requires that those who violate those principles be brought to justice.
Jacob Heilbrunn | Posted 05.19.2009 | Politics
Simply releasing the documents about their embrace of torture has further soiled Bush and Cheney's legacy. But whether that is punishment enough is another matter.
Miles Mogulescu | Posted 05.18.2009 | Politics
The message that Obama sends by refusing to even consider prosecuting CIA officers who may have committed war crimes, is that in the future, government officials can commit similar acts with impunity.
HuffingtonPost.com | Jason Linkins | Posted 05.18.2009 | Politics
Rush Limbaugh read the torture memos and got inspired to perform a brief act of self-torture and strenuous exercise, just like the old-timey radio por...
AP | REBECCA SANTANA | Posted 05.18.2009 | World
CAIRO — Human rights groups and former detainees in U.S. custody expressed disappointment Friday with the decision by President Barack Obama not...
David Bromwich | Posted 05.18.2009 | Politics
Obama comments on the release of the torture memos to assure the country that a dark age has passed. At the same time, he is careful to assure the agents of that darkness that they will be exempt from prosecution.
HuffingtonPost.com | Sam Stein | Posted 05.18.2009 | Politics
In an effort to rationalize the use of dietary manipulation on detainees, Bush administration officials turned to Slim Fast and Jenny Craig. In a fo...
HuffingtonPost.com | Sam Stein | Posted 05.17.2009 | Politics
With reporting by Stuart Whatley A Bush administration memo from 2005, intended to establish a legal basis for aggressive interrogation techniques, c...
Arianna Huffington | Posted 05.24.2009 | Politics