Certainly there are other instances where it has not made a good-faith effort
How many instances would it take for you to cease assuming good-faith and grant that you have no basis to presume their actions are reasonable?
by and large that's not generally the case
By and large, when it comes to the Guantanamo prisoners, the U.S. government has not acted with good faith. Repeatedly, it has violated their rights, it has tortured them, it has created systems that deny the prisoners representation, it has subjected them to hearings in which they did not know the charges against them, it has made unsubstantiated allegations against them and used those as the basis for decisions.
This is not my allegations of conspiracy. This is not the liberal media hard at work. This is the record.
Listen to former Chief Prosecutor Air Force Col. Morris Davis. Listen to former prosecutor Lt. Col. Robert Preston. Or read what Captain John Carr had to say. Lt. Col. V. Stuart Couch's words might convince you.
no subject
How many instances would it take for you to cease assuming good-faith and grant that you have no basis to presume their actions are reasonable?
by and large that's not generally the case
By and large, when it comes to the Guantanamo prisoners, the U.S. government has not acted with good faith. Repeatedly, it has violated their rights, it has tortured them, it has created systems that deny the prisoners representation, it has subjected them to hearings in which they did not know the charges against them, it has made unsubstantiated allegations against them and used those as the basis for decisions.
This is not my allegations of conspiracy. This is not the liberal media hard at work. This is the record.
Listen to former Chief Prosecutor Air Force Col. Morris Davis. Listen to former prosecutor Lt. Col. Robert Preston. Or read what Captain John Carr had to say. Lt. Col. V. Stuart Couch's words might convince you.
Or try Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Abraham.