TORTURED LOGIC AND TORTURING TERRORISTS
When House Majority Leader John Boehner accused Democrats last week of wanting to protect the "rights" of terrorists more than the lives of Americans, a number of Republican Senators winced - because they knew Boehner's accusation also applied to three of their colleagues: John Warner, Lindsay Graham, and most especially, John McCain.
A lot of folks who have had personal contact with McCain think a part of him is mentally unhinged. It scares them to death that he might be president. The upside of the debacle he has caused opposing President Bush's proposed legislation on terrorist interrogation is that there are enough voters now who see his mental instability to block his White House aspirations.
Yet if McCain is around the mental bend, even more so is the Supreme Court - or at least the five Justices (Breyer, Stevens, Kennedy, Souter, Ginsburg) whose pro-terrorist ruling in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld (June 29, 2006) is the cause of this mess.
For those interested in the tortured logic of the Supreme Court, I am appending a discussion of it at the end of this article.
What we're going to talk now about is torture, and how it isn't necessary. For there is a way, using a knowledge of brain chemistry, to make a terrorist quickly and easily sing like a canary - without any torture at all.
