Although Lawrence Rockwood was commended as a Giraffe Hero over a decade ago, I had never met him until a recent evening in San Diego, the city where he has settled into a new life as a teacher of history. The event was a private dinner honoring the Project’s work and two Giraffe Heroes in particular, Azim Khamisa and Larry Rockwood.
We talked at length, just hours after the passing of the Military Commissions Act by the Senate, a shameful moment in US history and one that had stunning significance for this fourth-generation soldier.
As a former counterintelligence officer, Rockwood knows what works in interrogating prisoners. Torture—legalized by this astonishing vote—does not work. As a man of conscience and an historian, he also knows that legalizing torture is a low point in the history of this honorable country.
It’s been a given for centuries that tortured prisoners will say anything to stop the agony, that information extracted by torture is so tainted as to be worthless. And yet our legislative branch has just voted for and the president has signed new laws that make torture by Americans legal, in the name of protecting us.
It is now legal in America to imprison anyone the president deems to be aiding terrorists, without any need to tell such prisoners the charges against them, to know who has accused them or what legal recourses are available to them.
Given the long human history of abusing power, it is not cynicism to anticipate that people who simply disagree with this radical, out-of-control government’s actions are in grave danger.
Many who disagree with preemptive warfare, profligate spending and gutting the Constitution have already been accused of treason; it’s just one step from there to imprisoning them without charges and without recourse. Concerned, outspoken patriots, if declared to be aiding and abetting the enemy, have now lost all legal rights.
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