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#251 2011-05-08 16:43:17

Grossgrain Silk
Member
From: The Inner Bar
Posts: 877

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#252 2011-05-08 16:52:25

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#253 2011-05-08 17:12:57

Kingstonian
Member
From: sea to shining sea
Posts: 3205

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#254 2011-05-09 01:54:24

Grossgrain Silk
Member
From: The Inner Bar
Posts: 877

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#255 2011-05-09 04:29:49

4F Hepcat
THE Cat
Posts: 14333

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

Boris Johnson's position:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/borisjohnson/8501595/Lets-be-clear-Osama-bin-Laden-was-executed-and-for-good-reason.html


Vibe-Rations in Spectra-Sonic-Sound

 

#256 2011-05-09 06:43:01

macabee
Member
Posts: 228

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law


"One martini is all right. Two are too many, and three are not enough"
James Thurber

 

#257 2011-05-09 06:56:19

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

I remain spectacularly unconvinced that inconvenience or expense are good reasons to deny a trial; especially when the uS had already spent US$1.3 trillion in tracking ObL down. In fact a trial would have clarified for many what it was all about because the extent of his alleged culpability has never been clearly established and it would have been better all round if it had been. I also suspect that there might have been fears that ObL in the witness box might have had some uncomfortable things to say for certain people; concerning the arms' trade, big money numbers and world leaders.

 

#258 2011-05-09 07:03:02

eg
Member
From: Burlington, ON
Posts: 1499

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#259 2011-05-09 07:28:44

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#260 2011-05-09 10:17:45

Grossgrain Silk
Member
From: The Inner Bar
Posts: 877

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#261 2011-05-09 10:40:59

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#262 2011-05-09 12:56:40

K. A. Adams
Member
Posts: 257

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

As far as OBL's culpability goes, he has stated his own involvement in the direction and organization of not only the 9/11 attacks but also the attacks on 2 US Embassies and the U.S.S. Cole. 

Evidence also suggests that OBL and his associate, the new al Qaeda heir apparent, Anwar al-Awlaki, were the main sources of inspiration for the events of 7/7 in London.

The reasons for not wanting OBL to stand trial are many but perhaps the most persuasive would be the increased security risks manifested because of his detention.

Every single U.S. Citizen and Foreign, Non Muslim; aid worker, civil servant, missionary, nun, priest, soldier, tourist and government official working or living in muslim lands would be subject to being taken hostage and being beheaded in an effort to force OBL's release.

Additionally, but perhaps less importantly, there is not a nation on earth that is going to want it's national security apparatus and methods exposed in a trial that would take years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Lastly, a living OBL becomes a motivating cause celebre for the entire muslim world whereas a dead OBL will eventually become just another tired martyr poster.

This was a just and moral action and I don't giving a flying fornication whether or not it is considered legal by the U.N. or any other international community.

 

#263 2011-05-09 13:47:08

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

Last edited by NJS (2011-05-09 14:28:43)

 

#264 2011-05-09 14:26:46

Film Noir Buff
Dandy Nightmare
From: Devil's Island
Posts: 9345

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#265 2011-05-09 14:30:38

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

FNB - in fairness, you missed my amendments to the last post. However, as you say: a trial most certainly is to prove guilt: regardless of all that has been publicized between the commission of the alleged crime and the trial. That is a requirement. I have to say that I do not know much, from direct experience (as opposed to reports), about life in the USA - but do you not think that it is a sorry state of affairs if people die just for looking wrong? If I were just a devil's advocate smart-ass, I suppose that I might add that, if you are right on this point, there were never a better reason for citizens of the USA to sign up and follow this site and to be very wary about becoming marooned on Devil's Island.

Last edited by NJS (2011-05-09 14:53:01)

 

#266 2011-05-09 14:49:42

Film Noir Buff
Dandy Nightmare
From: Devil's Island
Posts: 9345

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#267 2011-05-09 15:12:38

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

We crossed again. Ho, hum. I'm not entirely sure that I fully understand your latest; for a start the references to first and third worlds: these terms normally relate to degrees of development of infrastructure, rather than the merits of the individuals who comprise the societies and I am not toasting anything. But , so far as being a civilization brought to its knees is concerned: in 1939/1940 Britain had a choice: fight on, under the banner, "Business as Usual", or submit. It fought on. It paid a heavy price for that but, with the help of forces from the then Empire; forces who escaped occupied countries and, very importantly, forces from the USA, our shared civilization was saved. Then, there was the accounting, presided over by the victors but arranged to apply the principles of right and wrong that had been defended for five years. It's all very well to say (as many do) that the Nuremberg trials were show trials, but not everyone tried was hanged. There was a move, early on, after victory, to seek out the suspects and gun them down. That did not happen and the world now is better for it. The political assassination of ObL does not signal anything like the utter end of civilized values and I have never suggested that it might but it is a regrettable event, against how it might have been handled. It's just that shooting an unarmed man (at that point identified by rather uncertain information), in his darkened bedroom (apparently in the back of th head), in the presence of his family, with the forces that the USA had there on the spot, far from any field of actual battle, strikes me as quite different from killing him in his campaign tent, or campaign airplane, when he happens to be taking forty winks. All the other arguments about inexpediency and difficulty and the risks of trying him are quite beside the point. I should hasten to add  that I do not mean any criticism of the members of the task force itself, as they were subject to higher military and, ultimately, political control and it is there that my comments (for what they are worth), are aimed.

Last edited by NJS (2011-05-09 15:28:59)

 

#268 2011-05-09 15:41:10

captainpreppy
Member
Posts: 1536

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

Last edited by captainpreppy (2011-05-09 15:42:07)

 

#269 2011-05-09 16:54:16

K. A. Adams
Member
Posts: 257

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

NJS -

OBL proudly professes his own involvement in the different attacks in multiple videos.

His followers profess his involvement and inspiration in their own intended acts in their pre event martyrdom tapes.

Of course, this means nothing to you because, well, you know better.

To suggest that he didn't deserve justice because he was hiding is stupid and it also seems that that stiff upper lip of yours prevents you from seeing all the way down below your majestic lawyerly feet to the inconsequential people in harm's way.

Most importantly, perhaps because you are a lawyer, you have trouble understanding that there are some things which are illegal but perfectly moral, some things which are perfectly legal and immoral and somethings which are both perfectly legal and perfectly moral.

Your lynch mob remarks are a pale and thin cliche used to frighten uninformed juries and are meaningless in the face of all the U.S. and international law which already supports the actions taken.

Another brief skim of this thread is all that I could bear, but I have yet to see you condemn OBL's actions. 

Instead you hide behind conspiracy theories, cliches, vague legal questions and the love of your own writing.

I'm starting to believe that you are either sympathetic to OBL's ( or choose your conspiracy theory ) actions or that your significant other is a hadji who's point of view you are compelled to represent.

Last edited by K. A. Adams (2011-05-09 17:11:00)

 

#270 2011-05-09 17:20:19

shamrockmonkey
Member
From: chicago
Posts: 1418

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

following this bicker-fest with much amusement. as an Umurcan, I'm interested as to who our international role-model should be. The SAS? Brazillian death squads?

on the other hand, the guy was essentially created by the Free World...a trial would have made for some interesting cross-examination. at least according to that damn gawd-hatin' librul Ollie North.


I brush my teeth with minty paste/I hate when Liquor goes to waste.

 

#271 2011-05-09 17:21:17

K. A. Adams
Member
Posts: 257

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#272 2011-05-09 17:22:45

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

Last edited by Marc Grayson (2011-05-09 17:24:36)


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

#273 2011-05-09 17:37:37

K. A. Adams
Member
Posts: 257

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

 

#274 2011-05-09 18:03:08

NJS
Member
Posts: 2358

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

FNB, Captain Preppie and Grizzly, a composite reply, as so far undelivered, if I may:

First, FNB: It is good internet and full and frank debate.

Secondly, Captain Preppie: The USA has come a long way, in a short time, to have achieved the position that it enjoys in the world and I thought that the days of 'frontier justice' were long gone. A great leader should: reflect his people on election; recognize his obligation to influence them for the better, during his term, and then represent their will. Only in this way will (our) civilization be advanced.

One of your greatest Presidents of modern times (hell, one of the greatest of your Presidents of all time), JFK, once said that the failure is not to be judged by aiming too high, and misssing the target, but by aiming too low and achieving it. Since he died,with a couple of lonely exceptions (including Nelson Mandela in South Africa), elected world leaders (that spring to my mind), have not come even close to his calibre. When he died, I was about three years old and I reacall my mother (who has no association with the USA whatsoever), being in tears. Since then, politics, like sport, has become increasingly mired in the money game and this produces systems that are quite different from those enured in the the spirit of competition and simple pride in achievement, which were the hallmarks of national politics, and sport, of past times. Maybe, this is because true excellence is no longer enough. Enough?: hell, it is increasingly discouraged in our educational systems; on the feeble basis that, in a democracy (seemingly bragged about over a meritocracy), too many will be shown to be ordinary losers. Therefore, everyone is just after an unearned, vacuous 'celebrity' and not to mention the dough - and so much dough that they cannot, on any conceivable basis, really need it all for themselves (and their small time on earth), alone. If 'the 'first world' is now seen to be on its knees, maybe it is because it has returned to worshipping at the shrine of the golden calf.

Grizzly Adams: on the videos: do you understand Arabic? Who are 'his followers'? I have never said that ObL did not deserve 'justice'. In fact, I have always said that he did. I do not regard anyone as 'inconsequential'. Your disquisition on law and morality unconvincingly, attempts to compress into a remarkably short space, the combined thinking of the best thinkers of the last two thousand (or more) years and I am unequal in the time that I will allow myself and the cyberspace available, to reply; except to say that, generally speaking, in every civilization the law follows morality. That is to say that, as civilization evolves, the law is brought into line, more or less, to reflect the moral thinking of those in government who, in turn, should reflect the thinking of those who elect them. I note that you now maintain that the lawful authority of the world is behind you; but I should watch out with that flying f**k of yourn, because you never know when it might turn and take you suddenly from behind the head, in your own bedroom, in the middle of the night. I would need to be convinced of ObL's actions and their proven causative effect, before I condemned them but my own personal assessment is irrelevant to the administration of justice. I hide nowhere and behind nothing. I just ask to know the truth.

I am naif.

I don't 'enjoy' writing this and I have nothing to gain from it. You are free to believe what you like; including that I am sympatheitc to terrorism, but it is not true. I have never stated my wife's religion. I have said that she is a Kashmiri and feels that the world is better off without terrorists. I am in the happy position of not having to do or believe anything, except according to my own mind.

Camomile lotion is damned effective against milder cases of wild bee stings but, if you think (as well you might ), that the venom has gone to your brain), then I suggest, as a fellow Buff Bastard, that you seek medical assistance without delay.

 

#275 2011-05-09 18:22:40

Marc Grayson
Member
Posts: 8860

Re: The Killing of Osama bin Laden and The Rule of Law

Last edited by Marc Grayson (2011-05-09 18:23:13)


"‘The sense of being perfectly well dressed gives a feeling of inner tranquility which even religion is powerless to bestow." Ralph Waldo Emerson
"Looking good and dressing well is a necessity. Having a purpose in life is not."  Oscar Wilde

 

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