Former president Bill Clinton has
told NBC's Meet The Press that America needs
more intelligence agents who make their own rules and engage
in whatever actions are necessary like Jack Bauer from the
fictional TV show 24.
"I think what our policy ought to be
is to be uncompromisingly opposed to terror--I mean to torture,
and that if you're the Jack Bauer person, you'll do whatever
you do and you should be prepared to take the consequences...
And I think the consequences will be imposed based on what
turns out to be the truth." Clinton said.
"If you have any kind of a formal exception,
people just drive a truck through it, and they'll say, 'Well,
I thought it was covered by the exception,'" Clinton
added.
The question was again raised by host Tim
Russert after Clinton told him last year that he would authorize
torture in a "ticking bomb 24"-style situation.
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Clinton went on to state “If you look at the show,
every time they get the president to approve something,
the president gets in trouble, the country gets in trouble.
And when Bauer goes out there on his own and is prepared
to live with the consequences, it always seems to work better.".
Clinton's comments represent another case of an influential
political figure discussing the benefits of torture in the
context of a fictional TV show character.
Earlier this year Supreme
Court judge Antonin Scalia also used the analogy
at a panel discussion on torture, stating "Jack Bauer
saved Los Angeles. ... He saved hundreds of thousands of
lives... Are you going to convict Jack Bauer? Say that criminal
law is against him? ‘You have the right to a jury
trial?’ Is any jury going to convict Jack Bauer? I
don’t think so.”
We are more used to this kind of dross from Fox News. For
example, Laura Ingraham has previously stated that the average
American's love of the show is a referendum for the use
of torture against anyone considered to be with "Al
Qaeda" whether they be American citizens or not. Watch
it:
24 has routinely depicted scenes of detainee torture,
as well as plot-lines broaching the issue of the detention
of American citizens in a time of crisis.
At a time when legislation such as The Patriot Act and
The Military Commissions Act are setting the precedent for
the detention of American citizens, and in the absence of
any real terror 24 serves as the perfect dose of
fear-mongering propaganda to encourage acceptance of such
attacks upon the fabric of freedom.
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24, Threat Matrix, Spooks, and other such shows
are contributions to a conditioning mechanism that present
torture as a reasonable and ethical method. However, in
every case of torture that has come to light in the real
world there isn't even a basis of "situational ethics"
to justify this with.
Click
here to watch a video clip in which Alex Jones
explains the hypocrisy of torture and why the doublethink
of the "it's bad when the enemy does it but good when
we do it" mentality is so dangerous.
Finally, should we really have to endure BIll Clinton,
an impeached former president who has been accused of rape
and molestation, speaking on "facing consequences"
for one's actions based on "what turns out to be the
truth"?