Watch this short commercial by Amnesty International. Then click the link below. Then let’s talk about waterboarding.

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If we are willing to commit human rights violations in our so-called War on Terror, then what have we become? What is worth protecting if we abandon our principles? I have said before, and I will say again, if you are willing to sacrifice your principles when it is inconvenient to keep them, then you have no principles.

In a democracy, the people create the government and ultimately set policy through elected representatives. The people also bear the moral responsibility for the actions of the government.

Even if “moral principle” isn’t enough of a motivation to oppose torture techniques like waterboarding, at least we should look to international law. The United States is a signatory to dozens of human rights treaties and conventions. And although we once helped lead the “free world” in the fight for universal human rights, the United States today appears far more interested in shirking international law whenever possible. Frightening memos circulate around the White House, telling the president that he is authorized to ignore domestic and international law any time he judges it to be contrary to his view of national security.

Fortunately, it appears that our next president will switch directions, at least on this issue of torture. Those people who think that any action that perpetuates and protects the state are justified scare me. Some of the Republican primary debates scared me when the candidates kept trying to one up each other in how brutal they were willing to be with detained terror suspects in the fictitious “ticking time bomb” scenario.

Maybe this is something to pray about today, since it is the National Day of Prayer.