P.O. Box 1142
Our Community › Forums › General Discussion › P.O. Box 1142
- This topic has 5 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 12 years, 10 months ago by
baiskeli.
-
AuthorPosts
-
June 19, 2012 at 2:00 pm #943421
baiskeli
ParticipantYes, the Wash Po history is cool. Note that the interrogators said they got more intelligence using their tactics than our modern, fascist, unAmerican torture ever did.
June 19, 2012 at 7:02 pm #943454Terpfan
Participant@baiskeli 22670 wrote:
Yes, the Wash Po history is cool. Note that the interrogators said they got more intelligence using their tactics than our modern, fascist, unAmerican torture ever did.
Not too related, but our modern torture isn’t really that modern… Teddy Roosevelt’s Administration used similar water-type techniques on Fillipinos over 100 years ago. Go further back and we tarred and feathered the taxman.
Back to the Ft Hunt–interesting on the location. I had no idea.
June 19, 2012 at 7:08 pm #943456baiskeli
Participant@Terpfan 22704 wrote:
Not too related, but our modern torture isn’t really that modern… Teddy Roosevelt’s Administration used similar water-type techniques on Fillipinos over 100 years ago. Go further back and we tarred and feathered the taxman.
Well, yeah, if you go back far enough.
But we shouldn’t be going backwards.
June 20, 2012 at 11:26 am #943489Brendan von Buckingham
ParticipantIn general, our treatment of German POWs as a whole was pretty progressive and brilliant. We separated hard core political nazis from apolitical German soldiers. We didn’t do much with the sequestered Nazis, but the others were offered many opportunities. The Army drafted university professors to teach the Germans English, democracy, and American history. The aim was to accept the fact that someday they were going to have to let these prisoners go and up until then the ordinary German had a very tainted exposure to concepts like democracy. Many of the German POWs went home to Germany and became pro-western bulwarks in the new West Germany.
June 20, 2012 at 2:54 pm #943545baiskeli
Participant@Brendan von Buckingham 22743 wrote:
In general, our treatment of German POWs as a whole was pretty progressive and brilliant. We separated hard core political nazis from apolitical German soldiers. We didn’t do much with the sequestered Nazis, but the others were offered many opportunities. The Army drafted university professors to teach the Germans English, democracy, and American history. The aim was to accept the fact that someday they were going to have to let these prisoners go and up until then the ordinary German had a very tainted exposure to concepts like democracy. Many of the German POWs went home to Germany and became pro-western bulwarks in the new West Germany.
Yeah, that’s another way we’re going backwards.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.