View Full Version : Is it wise for the U.S. government to release the photos of the Hussein boys?
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 10:51 AM
Will it do more harm than good? What do y'all think? I could argue it either way at this point.
PRIMARY PRO REASON AS I SEE IT
Releasing photographic proof could help break resolve of resistance fighters, therefore saving lives of American soldiers.
PRIMARY CON REASON AS I SEE IT
Releasing photographs could inflame terrorists and resistance fighters even further, costing more American lives.
Discuss.
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 10:57 AM
Pictures of the dead bodies or just pictures?
Dead bodies: No, or else we can't complain about anytime a terrorist shows the dead bodies of Americans on TV.
Normal Pictures: No big deal.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 10:58 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
Pictures of the dead bodies or just pictures?I've heard talk that we're considering releasing pictures of the dead bodies.
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 10:59 AM
Then under no circumstances. I'd think it'd be the most pathetic move of the "war on terrorism" if they did so.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:00 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
Then under no circumstances. I'd think it'd be the most pathetic move of the "war on terrorism" if they did so. Why?
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 11:01 AM
Pro:
I perceive one of the reasons for the hesitancy in Iraq is the dark shadow of the Husseins and Baath coming back to power and exacting revenge. This puts a hurt into that.
Con:
"inflame terrorists and resistance fighters even further" - par for the course. The hatred of them against the Allies/Israel runs very deep, always have and always will. This is not going to fan an already hot fire.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:01 AM
Oh....it is now mentioned in the second paragraph of a story on CNN.com Wednesday, July 23, 2003 Posted: 11:14 AM EDT (1514 GMT)
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, commander of U.S. ground forces in Iraq, provided details Wednesday about the U.S. military raid that killed two sons of toppled Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
Following Tuesday's raid on a house in Mosul, a senior Pentagon official said the U.S. military is considering releasing photographs of the bodies -- identified as those of Qusay and Uday Hussein -- in an effort to convince skeptical Iraqis of their deaths.
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:03 AM
It screams of hypocrisy. We have always said we're better than the terrorists, and we got all pissed off when Al Jazeera sowed dead American soldiers.
Now that we've killed some of them, its ok for us to do the same thing?
Ksyrup
07-23-2003, 11:03 AM
Release the photos over there. I don't think we need convincing that they're dead, so there's no legit reason for them to be shown on TV in this country.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:05 AM
Originally posted by Ksyrup
I don't think we need convincing that they're dead, so there's no legit reason for them to be shown on TV in this country. I agree with that, but I don't think it is reasonable to think that if our government releases them over there that American news outlets will hold off on showing them over here.
Ksyrup
07-23-2003, 11:05 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
It screams of hypocrisy. We have always said we're better than the terrorists, and we got all pissed off when Al Jazeera sowed dead American soldiers.
Now that we've killed some of them, its ok for us to do the same thing?
But there's a purpose, because the Iraqi people don't want to trust us, and may not believe us. Many of those people live in fear that the regime may come back to power, and is a primary reason why they are unwilling to cooperate with our efforts to rebuild. So I say let them see the pictures, but I don't think they need to be shown here. If you want to see them, you'd have to make a conscious effort to seek them out on some international website/TV station.
Radii
07-23-2003, 11:07 AM
I agree totally with Easy Mac. If the Iraqis, or a terrorist group killed someone high up in the American Government somehow or high up in the American military and displayed the bodies on TV for any reason there would be an amazing uproar. I just don't think it's the right thing to do and don't see positive results coming from it.
Of course, I'm a bleeding heart liberal who thinks televising executions would be the a major downturn in our society, so eh.
Fritz
07-23-2003, 11:09 AM
It doesn't really matter what the govt. does. If the govt. holds the images but dose not classify them, a news outlet will just file a FOIA.
JonInMiddleGA
07-23-2003, 11:09 AM
If there's a way to do so without violating the terms of the Geneva convention (as I remember, that was the basis for complaints about the pictures of U.S. bodies) then by all means, release the pictures.
If not, then I'd lean toward not releasing them although I'm not really sure that the benefit of doing so wouldn't outweight the negative.
Ksyrup
07-23-2003, 11:10 AM
Originally posted by SkyDog
I agree with that, but I don't think it is reasonable to think that if our government releases them over there that American news outlets will hold off on showing them over here.
Why? The news outlets have shown some discretion in these types of matters before. Ultimately, though, I have no doubt they'd be shown here.
And anyway, I don't think the government should hold off on using the pictures to convince Iraqis that they are dead, just because they may make it onto TV in the US. I think the legitimacy of the purpose outweighs the perceived damage to our credbility here. This isn't like we're just holding their heads up by their hair in an effort to prove that we've conquered the country. We need for the Irawis to feel safe in their own country, and knowning these guys are dead will assist that end.
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 11:11 AM
We are trying to get Iraq to institute a more republic/democratic form of government and self-rule without fear of a totalitarian dictator. Maybe the methods were messy (it always have been) but can it be a noble goal? Contrast that to those that stated their goal is to destroy a culture. I think I can discern a difference.
Radii
07-23-2003, 11:12 AM
Originally posted by Ksyrup
But there's a purpose, because the Iraqi people don't want to trust us, and may not believe us. Many of those people live in fear that the regime may come back to power, and is a primary reason why they are unwilling to cooperate with our efforts to rebuild. So I say let them see the pictures, but I don't think they need to be shown here. If you want to see them, you'd have to make a conscious effort to seek them out on some international website/TV station.
And when Al-Jazeera showed captured American Soldiers there was no purpose towards their cause? I understand the purpose for wanting to do it but I still see it as an out and out hypocritical and repulsive thing to do.
Ksyrup
07-23-2003, 11:18 AM
Originally posted by Radii
And when Al-Jazeera showed captured American Soldiers there was no purpose towards their cause? I understand the purpose for wanting to do it but I still see it as an out and out hypocritical and repulsive thing to do.
Well, wasn't that done in contravention of the Geneva Convention? I don't know those rules, but if we can show these pictures without violating the same rules, then I think there is a higher purpose than just showing that we're "winning the game." We're beyond that stage - we're trying to rebuild their country and need the people to provide as much assistance as possible, and to the extent this would serve that purpose, then we should do it.
I understand your argument, but I wasn't one who got all bent out of shape during the war when that happened, because I would go home at night and see bodies of Iraqis on TV. Maybe not close-ups of their faces, etc., but dead bodies from the waist down as they were found by the "imbedded" reporters. I assume that wasn't a violation of the Geneva Convention. So I agree that there's some hypocrisy, aside from the legality of it all under the "rules of war."
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:19 AM
I think the point is, I can search through this board finding posts by people who were screaming out against the pictures of Americans who are seemingly in favor of this.
JonInMiddleGA
07-23-2003, 11:30 AM
Or maybe EasyMac, the real point is we didn't start this shit, we're just trying to finish it?
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:33 AM
so if you try to finish it, anything goes?
And I'm pretty sure we started the Iraq war, or have you forgotten already?
panerd
07-23-2003, 11:35 AM
Agree completly with everything you are saying Easy Mac. I think the thread needs to be found about the US soldiers, and then the board can try and wither its way out of 100% hypocrisy.
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 11:35 AM
Ask the Kuwaitis.
cartman
07-23-2003, 11:37 AM
Ogrish.com will have them posted any day now, I'm sure. Keeping the pictures deep-sixed is almost impossible.
PRO - The quickest way to quash any rumors is to post the pics. It will be some sort of closure to those whose lives were affected by them.
CON - Since there has been a delay in releasing them, the consipracy theorists will have a field day, even if the pictures eventually are released.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:38 AM
Originally posted by panerd
Agree completly with everything you are saying Easy Mac. I think the thread needs to be found about the US soldiers, and then the board can try and wither its way out of 100% hypocrisy. Would it be hypocritical if we're right and they're wrong? I'm curious what you think...
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:38 AM
That was the last war. I thought this one was about the WMD's or was that terorism?
sachmo71
07-23-2003, 11:38 AM
No, I don't think they should show them. There are other ways to convince the Iraqis that they are dead. Word will get around to the people soon enough anyway.
EDIT: Besides, those who don't want to believe it will claim that the pictures are faked or that the bodies were made up to look like those demons. Sort of like the famous Hitler death photo...I just don't see it getting the bang for the buck.
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:39 AM
Originally posted by SkyDog
Would it be hypocritical if we're right and they're wrong? I'm curious what you think...
I think its hypocritical to assume who's right or wrong when those two concepts are subjective.
cartman
07-23-2003, 11:41 AM
Dola,
Part of the issue is that these were the leaders of the government, not merely pawns working for the decision makers. Case in point, Mussolini being hung by his feet in the Milan plaza was newsworthy and covered, rightly so. But put the same coverage on a normal soldier being hung like that and treated in the same way, there would be an outcry.
cartman
07-23-2003, 11:41 AM
well, I thought it was a dola, but this is a fast moving thread!
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 11:42 AM
The issue of weapons and terrorism and Iraq goes back to the 1980s. Remember what they did to Iran and the Kurds?
From Clinton...
WASHINGTON — President Bush's erroneous reference to an Iraqi-Africa uranium (search) link was understandable, former President Clinton (search) said Tuesday, in part because Saddam Hussein's regime had not accounted for some weapons by the time Clinton ended his term in 2001.
Clinton's comments reinforce one of the pillars of Bush's defense of the war in Iraq -- that his Democratic predecessor was never satisfied that Saddam had rid himself of weapons of mass destruction.
"When I left office, there was a substantial amount of biological and chemical material unaccounted for," Clinton said during a televised interview.
Clinton said he never found out whether a U.S.-British bombing campaign he ordered in 1998 ended Saddam's capability of producing chemical and biological weapons. "We might have gotten it all, we might have gotten half of it, we might have gotten none of it," he said.
In his State of the Union (search) speech in February justifying the planned war in Iraq, Bush referred to British intelligence reports that Saddam had tried to purchase uranium for nuclear weapons production. His administration says it now believes those reports were based in part on forged documents.
Clinton confined his remarks to biological and chemical weapons, and did not say whether he would consider credible any report that Saddam had wanted to build a nuclear weapons program.
Nonetheless, he suggested that Bush's mistake was par for the course -- and that it was time to move on now that Bush had acknowledged the error.
"You know, everybody makes mistakes when they are president," he said. "I mean, you can't make as many calls as you have to without messing up once in a while. The thing we ought to be focused on is what is the right thing to do now."
Clinton said ending tensions in Iraq should be the priority now -- another echo of the current White House's talking points. "We should be pulling for America on this. We should be pulling for the people of Iraq."
Clinton made his remarks as a call-in guest on a program observing the 80th birthday of Bob Dole, his rival for the White House in 1996.
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:43 AM
Incidentally, if I recall correctly, the uproar about the photos was because some idiot wanted them shown on American TV before the families had been notified.
Anrhydeddu
07-23-2003, 11:45 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
I think its hypocritical to assume who's right or wrong when those two concepts are subjective.
It is subjective, as wars are. But throughout history, wars usually are viewed as the lesser of two evils (like the Union's cause of destroying a slave culture). You can argue that not having wars is preferable but do you seen any evidence thoughout world's history where this can be realistic?
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:46 AM
Is the US going into Grenada considered terrorism? We went in with the intent to overthrow a government? Iraq went into Kuwait to attempt to overthrow Kuwait.
(Note: Nowhere am I arguing these sons aren't the scum of the Earth, I just can't see how people are arguing for seeing the photos when if Iraq did this, we'd want them hanged.)
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 11:46 AM
Dola--
I think it speaks to how tough a question this is that at present this thread has 32 replies, 170 views, and only 10 votes. As opinionated as this crowd usually is, that is interesting.
panerd
07-23-2003, 11:46 AM
Originally posted by SkyDog
Would it be hypocritical if we're right and they're wrong? I'm curious what you think...
I really bought into, and still believe, the main ideals behind both the wars in Afganistan and Iraq. We are better people than the terrorists. While I don't think releasing the pictures makes us terrorists, I don't think it sends the same message to the rest of the world.
Do as I say, not as I do?
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 11:48 AM
But the rules of war cannot be subjective based on who is doing them.
And seeing as how the discussion isn't even about this, I'm not sure why you're trying ot make a completely different point.
cartman
07-23-2003, 11:56 AM
Here's another perspetive on this:
The outcry over Al-Jazeera showing the pictures of the dead American soldiers came, in part, from the fact that they were trumpeting the fact that they had pictures of DEAD AMERICAN SOLDIERS, no names, just a particular brand of dead soldier. There was no weight or caring for who the dead were, just the American image the dead were representing.
But currently the discussion is to release only the photos of Uday and Qusay. There is no discussion to release the photos of the other two killed in the raid. So we are not rushing to publish photos of DEAD IRAQIS, we are deciding to publish the photos of two of the key lynchpins of the dictatorship, who helped to create and sustain the image the world had of Iraq.
JonInMiddleGA
07-23-2003, 12:00 PM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
I think its hypocritical to assume who's right or wrong when those two concepts are subjective.
And there really lies the crux of most discussions about anything to do with Iraq.
You see right & wrong as being subjective.
I see the right & wrong in the general topic of Iraq as so crystal clear that only a fool fails to recognize it.
And, as someone once put it, I am a person who does not suffer fools particularly well.
Easy Mac
07-23-2003, 12:03 PM
Is that all you do now, call people names? You can't actually argue a point, so it makes you feel better to look down on others who are actually willing to put up coherent arguments.
I will take you seriously when you cease speaking like a fool.
panerd
07-23-2003, 12:08 PM
What if President Bush were captured and killed and video was shown of his dead body? This would be a just killing to probably over half the world. (So this begs the question.. does a majority make it right?) But I don't even want to discuss whether it's right. Would citizens of the United States be even more pissed off and ready to fight if this happened? Won't terrorists be more pissed if the sons are shown?
vtbub
07-23-2003, 12:22 PM
Originally posted by panerd
What if President Bush were captured and killed and video was shown of his dead body? This would be a just killing to probably over half the world. (So this begs the question.. does a majority make it right?) But I don't even want to discuss whether it's right. Would citizens of the United States be even more pissed off and ready to fight if this happened? Won't terrorists be more pissed if the sons are shown?
We'd show it, just like we show the Zapruder film and Kennedy's autopsy photos.
My guess is that we will have no choice but to release them and that the mainstream press will not show them. Organizations like Pacifica and Drudge will use them to try to spin the story to their point of view. A picture might appear in Time or Newsweek.
cartman
07-23-2003, 12:26 PM
To answer your question panerd, I'm not looking at it from wrong or right, but should we/shouldn't we.
Since Bush is the de facto leader of the free world, he is the decision maker, and thus if he were killed in an armed shootout, an ambush, whatever, showing his demise would be a newsworthy event, not because someone died, but who it was that died.
Mustang
07-23-2003, 01:18 PM
Why even debate this?
Damn if we do, damned if we don't.
Release the pictures and try to show to the Iraqi people that "Yes, Saddam's sons are dead" and the United States is labelled and hypocritical that we are showing pictures of dead bodies. There will also be the group that will think the bodies are staged and photographed in the same studio the moon landing took place.
Don't release the pictures and everyone will think the United States is lying, Uday and Qusay are alive and doing well in downtown Baghdad.
End result. Everyone hates the United States Government and wants to accuse or bitch about the Government no matter what.
neofied
07-23-2003, 01:30 PM
I think there's a vast difference between the Uday and Qusay photos and the POW photos. The POWs were rank and file soldiers. Uday and Qusay were the sons of Saddam, heirs to a regime, and wanted men. In the eyes of the government, they were war criminals.
I think by releasing the photos is we proove that we can find whoever it is war looking for -- even the most influential figures in Iraq. It sends a message that anyone who resists, supports Hussein, the dead regime, and Ba'ath will be subject to a similar fate.
It's sort of like a public execution.
For Americans, it will help show that we can get the job done, that we must perservere in the hunt for Hussein, bin Laden and other wanted men (and women). It'll boost American morale and be proof positive to everyone that despite the daily losses of U.S. troops -- progress is being made.
Radii
07-23-2003, 01:41 PM
Originally posted by JonInMiddleGA
And there really lies the crux of most discussions about anything to do with Iraq.
You see right & wrong as being subjective.
I see the right & wrong in the general topic of Iraq as so crystal clear.
Edited to remove what could be/was perceived as name calling.
I'm not sure why this matters. To you, this war was a crystal clear "right" on the US part. I think that's irrelevant to this discussion.
When we take an action, we must take it at least with an understanding of how various parts of the world will view it. You may call the people who disagree with the United States policy on this war fools, but if you fail to recognize that they are out there and are very numerous then you're missing a major point.
I still say we should not show the photos simply because of what I view as a hypocracy here. But on top of that, we must understand that a lot of people totally disagree with the war, and a lot of those people are our allies. If parading around the dead is going to piss off our allies, we should take that into consideration.
What's so damned bad about saying "I'm right, I know I'm right, but I'm going to at least take into consideration the disagreements my friends have with me, even though they are wrong" and handling a situation in a different way as a result?
Morally right vs. wrong in the war effort itself IMO does not give us the right to do things that we would condemn our enemies for.
neofied
07-23-2003, 01:54 PM
I just hit me, but how can you can this hypocracy?
The photos of the US soldiers were of POWs, both living and killed after capture. Those photos violated the Geneva Conventions relating to the photography of POWs. Those rules are in effect under the assumption that POWs are to be treated with respect, dignity, or whatever you want to call it.
Uday, Qusay, Mustapha (Saddam's grandson) and the bodyguard were killed in a battle, a firefight. They weren't POWs. It's sort of like when you have a police shootout and it airs on TV news. I see no difference. The rules that applied to POWs wouldn't apply in this case.
Killebrew
07-23-2003, 03:35 PM
Originally posted by neofied
I just hit me, but how can you can this hypocracy?
The photos of the US soldiers were of POWs, both living and killed after capture. Those photos violated the Geneva Conventions relating to the photography of POWs. Those rules are in effect under the assumption that POWs are to be treated with respect, dignity, or whatever you want to call it.
Uday, Qusay, Mustapha (Saddam's grandson) and the bodyguard were killed in a battle, a firefight. They weren't POWs. It's sort of like when you have a police shootout and it airs on TV news. I see no difference. The rules that applied to POWs wouldn't apply in this case.
neofied - the uproar way back when was about showing American casualties of war.
neofied
07-23-2003, 03:39 PM
The American casulaties of war though were the POWs. I remember. It was the pile of bodies. Those were alleged POWs, killed by their captors. There's a big difference there.
There also was uproar of showing the living POWs on television.
Of course, the US networks showed the Iraqi POWs and casulaties throughout, so showing the dead pictures of Hussein's brood would be a moot point.
JonInMiddleGA
07-23-2003, 03:39 PM
Originally posted by Radii I'm not sure why this matters. To you, this war was a crystal clear "right" on the US part. I think that's irrelevant to this discussion.
It was actually meant more as a remark on a tangent point than on the original subject. I figured that would be clear, perhaps it wasn't as clear as I expected. Sorry 'bout that.
I was primarily (perhaps even completely) observing that a reference to the subjectivity of right and wrong once again seemed to be central to one of the countless Iraq-oriented debates I've read/heard/seen/ participated in both online & offline.
I'm of the growing opinion that attitudes about the existence of absolute right and wrong might be a pretty fair predictor of positions when it comes to Iraq.
That's what I had in mind, maybe it was more of a stream-of-conscious comment than typing on a message board allowed to come through.
Jon
ice4277
07-23-2003, 03:46 PM
Well, since they showed pictures of dead Americans during the war, and we showed pictures of dead Iraqis, I personally don't see what the difference would be in showing these pictures. If people are going to be pissed off and want to kill Americans because of these pictures, well, the odds are they already feel that way, so I don't think this will really hurt us very much if we do. All it will do is help confirm to Iraqis that they are dead, which, if I was Iraqi, I would definitely want to know.
ice4277
07-23-2003, 03:47 PM
Ooh and that was my 1000th post :)
andy m
07-23-2003, 04:25 PM
so long as they don't use the CGI artists from the hulk movie to fake the pictures, i think they could get away with it.
Nyarlahotep
07-23-2003, 04:37 PM
If there is a large number of people in Iraq who don't believe that they are dead and there is a possibility that the pictures will convince them, I think they should be shown as long as it does not violate the Geneva Convention. I also don't see this as hypocritical, because nobody was denying that American soldiers were killed. If Iraq was reporting they had killed American soldiers and Bush was on TV saying that no Americans had been killed it would have been a different story. All that is being done here is providing evidence for something that is being questioned.
*edited for typos*
sabotai
07-23-2003, 06:05 PM
"Of course, the US networks showed the Iraqi POWs and casulaties throughout, so showing the dead pictures of Hussein's brood would be a moot point."
Yes, we did. I remember flipping through TIME and seeing a picture that was a closeup of a dead Iraqi's face. Very tasteful, I thought....
Ben E Lou
07-23-2003, 06:16 PM
Well, the debate appears to be academic at this point. CNN is reporting that Rumsfeld said that the photos will be released. We'll see how this one plays out.
ScottVib
07-24-2003, 10:18 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/07/24/sprj.irq.sons/index.html
Pictures to be released today, they are allegedly grusome.... and CNN is planning to publish them on the website.
I understand the need to "prove" the death to the Iraqi people, but expected American news corporations to have better taste then to publish them here in the States, especially after the way some news sites blasted people for showing the video of Americans.... of course then again it's all about the ratings and add rates.. :rolleyes:
Edit - Here is a link to the photos for those interested (CNN says viewer discretion is advised/I have not viewed them):
http://www.cnn.com/interactive/world/0307/gallery.hussein.bodies/frameset.exclude.html
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:20 AM
I think you guys should include their pictures in your games. A slogan like "If their not in the game, then their not in the game." It'd be a million seller :)
ScottVib
07-24-2003, 10:22 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
I think you guys should include their pictures in your games. A slogan like "If their not in the game, then their not in the game." It'd be a million seller :)
Worst idea ever. ;)
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:23 AM
you'd sell big in Iraq, it would be a collector's item:p
Ksyrup
07-24-2003, 10:24 AM
Those pictures really don't tell me much of anything, frankly.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:28 AM
I can kind of make out Uday, buy not Qusay (prolly the beard). I'm not sure this will convince Iraqi's, based on the look of the images. Uday looks like he's going to order a mint julep.
MylesKnight
07-24-2003, 10:45 AM
Hell, personally, I'd like to see the pictures. Too much censorship going on in this country nowadays anyway.
But I do see the point of something like this motivating the enemies of this country.
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 10:46 AM
Hypocritical? Would that be complaining how the pictures shouldn't be released, and then going to look at them within moments of getting the link?
Ben E Lou
07-24-2003, 10:47 AM
Originally posted by EagleFan
Hypocritical? Would that be complaining how the pictures shouldn't be released, and then going to look at them within moments of getting the link? LOL. Touche' ;)
Craptacular
07-24-2003, 10:47 AM
The pictures aren't too bad.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:48 AM
Originally posted by EagleFan
Hypocritical? Would that be complaining how the pictures shouldn't be released, and then going to look at them within moments of getting the link?
nope, not in the slightest.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:51 AM
dola,
I never said I wouldn't look, I just said they shouldn't be out there, big difference.
Ben E Lou
07-24-2003, 10:53 AM
Originally posted by Easy Mac
dola,
I never said I wouldn't look, I just said they shouldn't be out there, big difference. So then, it would be fair to say that it is ok for you to view them, but no one else should view them.
MylesKnight
07-24-2003, 10:54 AM
This is in a way pretty similar to the whole withholding the identity of the young woman who is arguing was raped/sexually assulted by Kobe Bryant. Hell, I've already heard mentioned numerous times, as I'm sure we all have, that this girl's picture is on the internet as we speak.
It's just the way of the world... Curiousity did kill the cat though.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 10:55 AM
no its not okay, but look at it this way. Do you think its okay to look at photos of bodies in a train wreck? I would say no, but it is a natural compulsion to look.
Ben E Lou
07-24-2003, 11:02 AM
Actually, Easy, this little incident reminds me of this gem: Originally posted by Easy Mac
If oil prices went down as a result of the news, they can give as much misinformation as they want. Hell, I'd support the war if I saved .50 on my gallon prices... oh the days of 89 cent gas
MylesKnight
07-24-2003, 11:05 AM
So what's going to end up happening to Iraq in the longrun anyway?
And by the way, not that I am in support of this or anything, but what happened to colonization? I mean way back in the day, the elite countries colonized and had ownership of countries all over the globe. Why not colonize Iraq, or at least the oilfields? You know, kind of have Iraq be to America what Australia is to England.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 11:07 AM
and yet, despite me saying it was sarcasm even then, you still can't comprehend that.
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 11:07 AM
As far as the pictures go, there are two entirely seperate situations.
1) Dead soldiers/POW's shown on TV during a war. A violation of the Geneva convention.
2) Two members of the brutal dictatorship being shown in a response to the general public, of that very country, wanting more proof.
It's amazing how the same group of people who seem to always claim that there are no black and white issues are now trying to paint this as one. I guess it goes back to the double standards.
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 11:09 AM
dola: For the record, I didn't vote on the topic. Personally I don;t like the idea of showing dead people in the media but I can see the merits in this case.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 11:09 AM
Actually, we're the ones saying its not a black and white issue. You're saying 1 part is black (soldiers) one part is white (sons). I don't think you understand the distinction you are trying to make in this instance.
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 11:11 AM
dola, and at least we can agree on that EF (yes, I can at least understand what the merits are, though I may not agree with them)
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 11:12 AM
You are saying it's black and white. It's either showing dead bodies or not showing dead bodies. That's sounds awfully like painting the picture balck and white to me.
The grey area comes in when you determine if it is okay under certain circumstances. I think you don't understand the distinction that you are trying to make.
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 11:13 AM
Dammit, EM, don't ever say you agree with me. :D :D :D
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 11:16 AM
:). I don't want dead bodies at all, whether they are ruthless killers or POW's. There may indeed be a gra(e)y area, but I don't see why there should be, and I don't think people who argue this is ok shoud argue its not ok when they showed pictures of Americans. That was my point.
I t hink we both don't know the point we're making by now :)
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 11:52 AM
I was making a point?
Ksyrup
07-24-2003, 12:00 PM
Originally posted by EagleFan
I was rolling a joint?
And I think that's where we'll ultimately end up on this issue. Pass it down to Subby and EM.
EagleFan
07-24-2003, 01:21 PM
That's perjury. Where's my lawyer?
Easy Mac
07-24-2003, 01:28 PM
I killed him. I'm about to post his pictures, unless you pass the damn joint.
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