The
United States: A Country Without Mercy
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
The Christmas
season is a time to remember the unfortunate, among whom are those
who have been wrongly convicted.
In the United
States, the country with the largest prison population in the world,
the number of wrongly convicted is very large. Hardly any felony
charges are resolved with trials. The vast majority of defendants,
both innocent and guilty, are coerced into plea bargains. Not only
are the innocent framed, but the guilty as well. It is quicker and
less expensive to frame the guilty than to convict them on the evidence.
Many Americans
are wrongfully convicted, because they trust the justice system.
They naïvely believe that police and prosecutors are moved by evidence
and have a sense of justice. The trust they have in authorities
makes them easy victims of a system that has no moral conscience
and is untroubled by the injustice it perpetrates.
Lt. William
Strong, son of a military family, tired of his wife’s unfaithfulness
and filed for divorce. The unfaithful wife retaliated by accusing
Strong of rape. There was no evidence of rape, but Strong was deceived
into a plea bargain. Once Strong entered a plea, he was double-crossed
and given 60 years.
Christophe
Gaynor took an adolescent skate board team to New York City for
a competition. One of the kids attempted to buy illicit drugs. Gaynor
threatened to tell the boy’s parents, and the boy preempted Gaynor
by accusing him of sexual molestation.
Gaynor was
openly framed in the Arlington, Virginia, court system.
Americans,
or perhaps more accurately some Americans, were horrified by the
photographs showing the torture of Iraqi detainees in Abu Ghraib
by the US military. The Senate Armed Services Committee has issued
a report which concludes that the torture policy originated at the
highest level of the Bush administration. Those Americans with a
moral conscience have reeled under further revelations – the torture
of Guantanamo detainees, the transport of people seized by US authorities
to third world countries to be tortured.
We have to
ask ourselves why American service men and women and CIA operatives
delight in torturing people about whom they know nothing? It has
been well known since the Stalin era that torture never produces
accurate information. Yet, US soldiers and CIA personnel jumped
at the green light given to torture by President George W. Bush,
Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, and the
US Department of Justice. Why weren’t our soldiers shocked instead
at the immorality of their leaders?
One answer
is that the US military no longer operates according to a code of
honor. Military discipline in the traditional sense does not exist.
The ethos of the US military has degenerated into kick-ass macho.
Major General Taguba, who, instead of covering up the Abu Ghraib
scandal, attempted in his report to hold the US military to its
traditional principles, was forced to resign from the US Army.
Another answer
is that the work of torture, like police work and prosecutorial
work, attracts brutal people who enjoy inflicting harm on others.
The two Republican female US Attorneys in Alabama who framed Democratic
Governor Siegelman enjoyed ruining Siegelman and bringing grief
to his family.
Deborah
Davies of the BBC’s Channel 4 undertook a
four-month investigation of the torture of American prisoners inside
American prisons. Videos taken by sadistic prison guards and
videos recovered from surveillance cameras reveal horrible acts
of torture and even of murder of prisoners by prison guards.
An American
prison reformer told Deborah Davies, "We’ve become immune to
the abuse. The brutality has become customary."
Few
Americans seem to be disturbed as these inhumane and illegal practices
continue unabated. Americans continue to see themselves as the salt
of the earth, the "indispensable people."
"Law and
order conservatives" have a great responsibility for this evil.
Just as "law and order conservatives" created hysteria
among the people about crime, they created hysteria about terrorists.
Hysterical people condone great evils and arm government with power
in the mistaken belief that it will protect them.
What kind of
people have we become when we exercise no oversight over a criminal
justice (sic) system that destroys the lives of innocent people
and locks them away in prisons to be tortured by sadistic guards?
December
17, 2008
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has just been released by
Random House.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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