"You Can't Use People As Laboratories"

Ah, but you can, providing you have sufficient power and are untroubled by ethical considerations. And it seems we have. So say Physicians for Human Rights, who today issued a white paper entitled Experiments in Torture: Evidence of Human Subject Research and Experimentation in the "Enhanced" Interrogation Program. From that document's Executive Summary:

Following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the Bush administration initiated new human intelligence collection programs. To that end, it detained and questioned an unknown number of people suspected of having links to terrorist organizations. As part of these programs, the Bush administration redefined acts, such as waterboarding, forced nudity, sleep deprivation, temperature extremes, stress positions and prolonged isolation, that had previously been recognized as illegal, to be “safe, legal and effective” “enhanced” interrogation techniques (EITs).

Bush administration lawyers at the Department of Justice’s (DoJ’s) Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) accomplished this redefinition by establishing legal thresholds for torture, which required medical monitoring of every application of “enhanced” interrogation. Medical personnel were ostensibly responsible for ensuring that the legal threshold for “severe physical and mental pain” was not crossed by interrogators, but their presence and complicity in intentionally harmful interrogation practices were not only apparently intended to enable the routine practice of torture, but also to serve as a potential legal defense against criminal liability for torture.

Investigation and analysis of US government documents by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) provides evidence indicating that the Bush administration, in the period after Sept. 11, conducted human research and experimentation on prisoners in US custody as part of this monitoring role. Health professionals working for and on behalf of the CIA monitored the interrogations of detainees, collected and analyzed the results of those interrogations, and sought to derive generalizable inferences to be applied to subsequent interrogations. Such acts may be seen as the conduct of research and experimentation by health professionals on prisoners, which could violate accepted standards of medical ethics, as well as domestic and international law. These practices could, in some cases, constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Pish and tosh, says the CIA.
“The report is just wrong,” said Paul Gimigliano, an agency spokesman. “The C.I.A. did not, as part of its past detention program, conduct human subject research on any detainee or group of detainees. The entire detention effort has been the subject of multiple, comprehensive reviews within our government, including by the Department of Justice.”
The CIA here, however, seems to have redefined the word "entire" – and possibly the words "did" and "not" – to complement its unconventional redefinition of the words "safe", "legal", and "effective". Specifically, there has been no government investigation of medical personnel involved in the interrogation of detainees. The New York Times quotes Dr. Steven H. Miles of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Minnesota "and an expert on the role of medical professionals in torture", saying:
There are countries that, over the years, have condemned medical complicity in torture in principle, but which haven’t really been willing to investigate medical professionals or hold them accountable. That group of countries includes the United States.
Aren't we special. I wonder who else is included? I'm sure we're in good company.

The PHR report doesn't present new information about what was done during enhanced interrogation torture sessions conducted by the CIA. What it does is evaluate, based on information about those sessions which has become available thus far, the role medical professionals played in designing and refining the "enhancements" used. This is the basis for their charge that the work done by medical personnel in these interrogations constituted medical experimentation. The purpose of the research the health professionals were conducting was the "improvement" of the torture techniques themselves.

It's true that the research being done on these subjects was not the purpose of the torture. It is difficult to see, however, how the fact that the abhorrent practice of medical experimentation on captives was done, not as an end in itself, but only secondarily to the primary purpose of torture, somehow resolves all ethical difficulties.

Says Jonathan D. Moreno, a professor of medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania:
There was no therapeutic purpose or intent to monitor and collect this data. You can’t use people as laboratories.
But the question seems to be: can you do it, in the United States, with impunity for all those complicit - the President who authorized it, the C.I.A. personnel who set it up, and the medical personnel who used their training to monitor torture and refine its conduct with scientific precision?

A couple other questions suggest themselves when contemplating the extensive role played by medical professionals in crafting methods of interrogation designed both to satisfy the CIA's and the White House's desire to inflict torture on detainees, and their desire to do it in a way which would support their effort to avoid legal penalty for doing so:

Who among all those responsible, in addition to the torturer-in-chief, would do it again?

And given a desire to do it again among politicians, spies, and even health care professionals, what is to stop them, in the absence of any legal penalties being imposed on those who are known to have done it?

PHR has a form here for emailing President Obama to urge that he instruct the Attorney General to investigate this matter, and prosecute anyone found to have committed a crime.

The PHR white paper can be downloaded here: The Torture Papers.

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Prescott to Bigots: We Have Shiny Teaspoons, Look!

Shaker maatnofret commented to the Note to Racist Jackhole post, that the people of Prescott Unified School District had held a big old-fashioned community teaspoon-raising on Saturday (blub warning; also, for Maude's sake, stay out of the comments, on pain of contact with memetic toxic sludge):

PRESCOTT - Prescott Unified School District administrators announced to a cheering crowd Saturday morning that the Mural Mice will restore the original design of the 'Go on Green' mural at Miller Valley Elementary School.

District Superintendent Kevin Kapp and school Principal Jeff Lane also admitted they erred for instructing the Mural Mice to lighten the faces on some of the children depicted in the mural that adorns the district's most ethnically diverse campus.
That's the way you do it. It takes a village, indeed.

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Monday Blogaround

[Note: Blogger is still being a jerk, and Liss can't post at all at the moment, so she asked me to put this up in her stead.]

This blogaround brought to you by Shaxco, makers of Dudley's Cute Juice, a 100% satisfaction guaranteed elixir for improving your cuteness. Made from organic cute.

Rachel: The Down Under Feminists Carnival

Veronica: I'm still not White, but am I American Indian?

Resistance: Water Still Wet

Beth: Dear Ms. Obama: Promote healthy food options, but please don't promote discrimination

Melanie: Secretary Clinton Announces $1 Million for Women and Girls

Angry Asian Man: Anamika Veeramani Wins 2010 Scripps National Spelling Bee

Andy: Gay Exorcisms Fail to Deliver

Leave your links in comments…

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Two Minute Nostalgia Sublime



GusGus: "Ladyshave"

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The Sign Post Up Ahead

Residents and travelers in Oxfordshire UK have been advised to think of the local fauna population and slow their driving just a bit.

A local citizen has posted a sign instructing "For Fox Sake Slow Down." I hope everyone takes it to heart.

For the foxes.

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Blog Note

Just FYI, Blogger is being a bit pissy this morning. We may be a little light on posting until they get their issues resolved. Thanks for your patience.

UPDATE: Blogger is still acting wonky (I originally typed that as "wanky," by the way), but some of us can post again. Thanks again for your patience.

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Open Thread



Hosted by Wienerschnitzel.

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Doctor Who Open Thread: S5E07: Amy's Choice

Time for another Doctor Who Open Thread, you Whopsters, and it's this week's (per the US/Canadian broadcast schedule) episode, Amy's Choice.

SPOILERS! This thread will contain spoilers for this episode, and possibly any episode which has come before it. Please be careful not to give spoilers from episodes beyond this point, as your thread host is a nasty cranky misanthrope when her shows get spoilt. :D

Have at it, Whopsters, what did you think of this episode? Didja find it...dreamy?

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Open Thread

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Hosted by Blinky.
This week's open threads have been brought to you by Red Things.

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Soccer v HIV in Africa

Following up yesterday's horrid story about FIFA refusing to allow distribution of condoms at the upcoming World Cup in South Africa (a country with one of highest HIV infection rates in the world), Shaker rhiain dropped a link to a really wonderful organization, Grassroot Soccer.

Now, it's no surprise to many of you, I think, how much I love that game. I still play every week, nearing 44 and using a cane most of the time (but not while playing! - then, I just take a lot more pain pills), just because I enjoy it so much. So when I see a group who are using the game I adore to do good works, well, that's a time when Caitie gets all squeeful.

This group is using the love of the game, shared by so many people, to spread good HIV prevention, life skills education, and safer sex practices to people growing up in areas with very high infection rates - not just in Africa, but also in Guatemala and the Dominican Republic, a little closer to home for most Shakers.

Anyway, they do a good thing, and like any group doing a good thing, they can always use more support. I'm going to be taking this information to my soccer team myself tomorrow, see if we can come up with fun ways to raise some money for the organization - maybe put together a marathon game or something.

I have no connection to the group at all - I just really like what they're doing, how they're doing it, and want to boost their profile here. They've got a great page listing ideas of how people can help them in their mission, beyond just giving money (although they can find uses for money too!).

If you're in a position to help, it'd be a great teaspoon to do so.

Tip of the CaitieCap to Shaker rhiain, for the awesome link.

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Open Thread

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Hosted by red velvet cake.

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The Virtual Pub Is Open



TFIF, Shakers!

Belly up to the bar,
and name your poison!

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Note to Racist Jackhole

Altered mural fuels racial debate

Local city councilman Steve Blair - a white cis man, apparently temporarily able-bodied and hetero - insists that wanting to whiten the depiction of some of the children in the mural - which have been the target of racial slurs for months, as the artists have - is totes not racist, dude:

He insists the controversy isn't about racism but says the mural is intended to create racial controversy where none existed before.

"Personally, I think it's pathetic," he says. "You have changed the ambience of that building to excite some kind of diversity power struggle that doesn't exist in Prescott, Arizona. And I'm ashamed of that."
So, your defense against charges that your response to the mural is racist is basically: it can't be, because there aren't any of those people 'round here?

Anyone got bingo yet?

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FIFA to Ban Distribution of Condoms at World Cup

This is just shameful, FIFA. Shameful. I've been playing our game since I was 3 - that's a little over 40 years - and this is one of the very few times I've been ashamed to be a lifetime supporter of the game.

South Africa has the world's largest number of (People living with AIDS), with an estimated 5.7 million people infected – about one in every five adults. There are around 1,400 new HIV infections every day and nearly 1,000 AIDS deaths.
There can be no excuse for this most basic failure of common sense by FIFA.

ô,ôP Teaspoons up: FIFA can be contacted through this form, or by other means as listed here.

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I'd Do It Again

Torture. War. Suffering and death on a massive scale. Traumatic disruption to the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. And the man who made it all happen is ready for more.

Speaking to the Economic Club of Grand Rapids, MI, on Wednesday, Bush said:

Yeah, we water-boarded Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. I'd do it again to save lives.
There's no reason to doubt the sincerity of the first part of that declaration - Bush's willingness to torture more people - but the pious justification of the dependent clause doesn't hold up.

A group of retired U.S. admirals and generals working with Human Rights First to educate members of Congress and candidates on the importance to national security of treating detainees lawfully and humanely released this statement in response:
Waterboarding is torture and torture is a crime. It cannot be demonstrated that any use of it by U.S. personnel in recent years has saved a single American life. To the contrary, the misguided belief that torture saves lives has cost America dearly. It is shocking that former President George W. Bush said he would use waterboarding 'again to save lives.' When he authorized it the first time he sent America down the wrong road, battering our alliances, damaging counterinsurgency efforts, and increasing threats to our soldiers.
Bush still thinks the war against Iraq was a good idea, too, because, "getting rid of Saddam Hussein was the right thing to do and the world is a better place without him."

And, despite Laura Bush's famous comment regarding watching TV coverage of the war that, "no one suffers more than their president and I do when we watch this, and certainly the commander in chief, who has asked our military to go into harm's way," it turns out that her husband found his father's loss of the Presidency much harder. Said Bush of that traumatic episode in his life:
Being a son of the president is a lot harder than being president.
Because, I guess, the son of the president doesn't get to torture or kill anybody when his self-respect needs a little pumping up.

Bush does have one regret - not being able to snatch Social Security away from the elderly and disabled. Being unable to push Social Security reform through Congress was "his greatest disappointment" as President.

Excuse me while I go brush the vomit out of my teeth.

Thanks to Scott Madin for the tip.

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The Not Quite Daily Teaspoon Report - F100604

Time for another Teaspoon Report.

Leave comments here that describe an act of teaspooning you encountered or committed. They don't have to be big, world-shaking acts; by definition, a teaspoon is a small thing, but enough of them together can empty the ocean.

If you would like to discuss the teaspoons here reported, or even offer congratulations or your admiration to a fellow Shaker, we ask that you do so over here in the Discussion Thread for today's NQDTR.

Shaker bgk has been kind enough to get a Twitter-pated version out there for you young twittersnappers (and by the way, get off my lawn, you meddling kids! *shakes cane*). You can find the details about the Tweetspoons project right here. That runs all the time, as far as I'm aware (*grumblenewtechnologygrumble*), and we encourage you to let other people know that there's at least one tweetstream talking about just going out and doing good things for the human species.

Teaspoons up, let's hear 'em, Shakers!

ô,ôP

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The NQDTR Discussion Thread - F100604

Hiya, Shakers, time for another Discussion Thread for the Not Quite Daily Teaspoon Report!

This is the thread in which you may offer congratulations or admiration for a teaspoon or teaspooner. If you're posting with just congrats or admiration, though, do take a moment and check the thread to see whether other people have said so a number of times already. Remember that no one is required to read here just because they posted over there, so there's no guarantee you'll get a response to a given comment.

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Blog note: Bread and Teaspoons

Not sure whether it's been much noticed, but I haven't made a B&T post in a few weeks. This is largely because it has seemed to me to be less and less attended, thus making me wonder if it is now past its time, but as with anything else to do with me, depression and physical pain and money stress* (poverty, in case it wasn't clear, sucks large rocks through small hoses) have had their roles to play as well.

I could start it up again, if people wanted, or make changes (maybe less often? maybe different posting guidelines? adding topics for discussion?), but I think as presently constituted, it's just not feeling easy to keep going.

Anyone got any thoughts, or do we just put it gracefully to bed as an idea that didn't quite work?

* It's hard not to feel somewhat irresponsible for putting time and effort into a labour of love (such as Shakesville is for me), when my business isn't making enough to live on as yet. This is tied into very old stuff for me, about my parents' narrative of me as selfish and irresponsible for transitioning.

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Friday Random YouTubery

Well, this should help with almost anything . . ..

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Two Minute Nostalgia Sublime



Taylor Dayne: "I'll Be Your Shelter"

Bonus I'll Be Your Shelter Starring Jeremy Sisto As Jesus:

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