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Algorem Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-13-05 11:13 AM
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Nation editor vanden Heuvel on public radio now
Edited on Tue Dec-13-05 11:20 AM by Algorem
http://www.wamu.org/programs/dr/

11:00 Katrina vanden Heuvel: "Dictionary of Republicanisms" (Nation Books)
The editor of The Nation magazine discusses the current issue dedicated to the issue of torture, and a new book's satirical look at what she calls the "Orwellian doublespeak" of political leaders.

Guests
Katrina vanden Heuvel, Editor, The Nation magazine


Anthony Lewis writes that a moment of historical reckoning has come: It is time to appoint a special prosecutor to bring executors of abuse to justice.


The Torture Administration
Anthony Lewis

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20051226/lewis

When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933 and proceeded to carry out their savagery, many in the outside world asked how this could have happened in the land of Goethe and Beethoven. Would the people of other societies as readily accept tyranny? Sinclair Lewis, in 1935, imagined Americans turning to dictatorship under the pressures of economic distress in the Depression. He called his novel, ironically, It Can't Happen Here.

Hannah Arendt and many others have stripped us, since then, of confidence that people will resist evil in times of fear. When Serbs and Rwandan Hutus were told that they were threatened, they slaughtered their neighbors. Lately Philip Roth was plausible enough when he imagined anti-Semitism surging after an isolationist America elected Charles Lindbergh as President in 1940.

But it still comes as a shock to discover that American leaders will open the way for the torture of prisoners, that lawyers will invent justifications for it, that the President of the United States will strenuously resist legislation prohibiting cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners--and that much of the American public will be indifferent to what is being done in its name.

The pictures from Abu Ghraib, first shown to the public on April 28, 2004, evoked a powerful reaction. Americans were outraged when they saw grinning US soldiers tormenting Iraqi prisoners. But it was seeing the mistreatment that produced the outrage, or so we must now conclude. Since then the Bush Administration and its lawyers have prevented the release of any more photographs or videotapes. And the public has not reacted similarly to the disclosure, without pictures, of worse actions, including murder...

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