RedPhoenixxx wrote:
No, knowing damn well they were going to be tortured.
Says you. Forgive me if I don't fall over myself assuming that the conspiracy theorists got this one right, but are still wrong about Elvis and JFK.
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These processes had nothing to do with extradition. Extradition is an open, legal process resulting from a treaty between countries.
Rendition is a form of extradition and the terms are often used interchangeably. You're correct that I should have used the term "rendition", however the same nutters who have hammed up the "OMG! The US is torturing everyone!" have turned that term into an assumption of "prisoner transfer for the purpose or torture". I'd prefer not to play word games here.
It's a prisoner transfer. It's done for any of a number of reasons and it's done with the cooperation and knowledge of the governments involved. It's "legal". It's just not advertised in the newspaper. Remember, "secret" doesn't mean "illegal".
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The individuals in question is supposed to get a fair trial, and if there are any suspicions that the individual might get tortured or might not get a fair trial, the extradition doesn't go through...
Different countries have different extradition policies and agreements. It's not that cut and dried.
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What happened the these guys was the exact opposite of that, and everyone involved knew exactly what was going on.
The only real difference was secrecy. Which is necessary when the people you are transporting are believed to hold national security level information or be involved in significantly dangerous plots. You're free to speculate that this automatically means that said secrecy was used to torture people, but I'm not willing to make that assumption. And I'm certainly not going to support a lawsuit against a third party on the belief that since they were merely contracted to do the transportation that they are culpable for the alleged treatment which occurred later.
That's a stretch, isn't it?
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Never ceases to amuse me how you constantly whine about government taking "controlling the individual" by offering healthcare, and yet you're ok with it not only torturing people, but refusing them access to courts later.
I'm not ok with torture. What I'm ok with is dismissing a case against an airline because they were chartered to perform classified legal prisoner transfers. I'm also aware that the reason for said lawsuit isn't because the plaintiffs actually think that the airline is culpable for what they allege happened to them, but because if they are granted the power to gain records of the flights, they can then go on a fishing expedition and make more allegations about other transfers. And along the way, potentially violate national security.
You're going about 3 steps past what I'm arguing. Stop making assumptions here. I'm talking about this case against this airline. If you want to talk about cases directly against the US government, then bring up those cases. But you run into similar problems because those transfers, regardless of what happened at the other end, were "legal". You have to prove that those involved actually knew that the specific prisoners they were transferring were going to be tortured and/or that they did so specifically for that reason. So far, there is only wild speculation on the part of people like you to support that theory.
You can't convict people of a crime on theory and speculation.