Thursday, June 23, 2005

Snap! If you think Durbin said American soldiers are like Nazis, you are an idiot.

Zorn's got a great column today on what Durbin should have said.

This is the best part:

The America I believe in is better than the America on display in our overseas prisons. The America I believe in inspires rather than disgusts the international community.

If anything I said caused you to believe that I was equating American soldiers with Nazis or equating American leaders with Adolf Hitler or Pol Pot, then you are an idiot.

I said nothing of the kind.

I said that our mistreatment of wartime prisoners is of the sort you'd expect to see in a brutal, totalitarian dictatorship, not in a nation that has long congratulated itself on its exceptionally high standards of liberty and law.

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And yes, that's what commentators and operatives and even our news media blindly parroted: "Durbin compared American soldiers to Nazis"

The Senator didn't say that!

But the right-wing machine rallied around the support the troops mantra, and Durbin apologized.

Well, do you support the troops if they torture?

I don't.

And American troops have tortured.

A few of them are serving time for torturing in Abu Ghraib.

I don't support them.

Do you?

Because if you don't condemn those American soliders who have tortured -- as Senator Durbin wisely did -- you are besmirching the 99.99% of our soldiers who are as digusted as Senator Durbin is by torture.

And if you let the Bush Administration off the hook for their tolerance of torture, then you are also besmirching the good name of this nation.

That's the real deal.

4 comments:

IlliniPundit said...

Sigh...

To paraphrase Senator Durbin: I apologize if you think I'm an idiot.

Bill Baar said...

Lesson here is don't call people Nazis,,, whomever DD called a Nazi, Stalinist, Pot Potist, etc... it's worked out to be a losing strategy. It was deliberate too... a deliberate losing stratety. I'm afraid his Party's leadership has embraced it too. Goodbye Democratic Party.

Anonymous said...

I agree with Zorn and Dan on the substance here: that the real criticism is that America shouldn't violate human rights, and if she does, we need to condemn it loudly. And Zorn hits the nail squarely on the head with his observation that one automatically loses an argument when making a Hitler comparison.

Zorn, however, is a bit naive to think that his re-written speech, if given by a politician, would not be subject to an attack. Offhand, I imagine the right-wing would say something like, "Dick Durbin called Americans who support our troops 'idiots.'"

The point here is that the conservatives who want to turn a blind eye to human rights abuses in this war will always seek to change the subject. It is indefensible (imo) for this country -- a country I love precisely because of its respect for human rights -- to torture prisoners, even if the prisoners are enemy combatants.

I just think we're better than that as a nation. Respecting basic human rights makes waging a war harder,perhaps; but I have faith that we're a strong enough and smart enough nation to engage in battle without losing our humanity.

Of course, the right wing tries to change the subject. It's easier to attack a liberal than defend the indefensible.

ArchPundit said...

== whomever DD called a Nazi, Stalinist, Pot Potist, etc..

He didn't call anyone a Nazi. He compared the tactics described as being something you'd hear on a report from one of those regimes. I think it makes a mistake in comparing incidents that are too frequent, but not standard practice to regimes of terror and for that reason he made a mistake, but anyone who read the speech and understands English should be able to figure out that he didn't call anyone Nazis or Soviets or Khmer Rouge.

===I'm afraid his Party's leadership has embraced it too.

WTF? Huh?