Saturday, May 03, 2008

Donal Blaney: Hypocrite, Political Whore, and Torture Fan

Blaney:
Donal Blaney said...

I do not bandy the term "nazi" or "racist" about in the same way the left do.
2:05 PM


Blaney:
This is how the Nazi traffic wardens of London behave when they see a nice car that they decide they want to tow.


Blaney:
First, a confession. I was appointed a house prefect at school and I handed out a record 400 punishments over 14 months for a variety of offences, most of them trivial. In doing so, I recognise that in many instances I abused my power.


Blaney:
Now we know where the thousands of extra police are being deployed - on low level "crime" rather than preventing and investigating violent crimes and burglaries that are what we're all most worried about.


Blaney:
Where do I accuse anyone of plotting to suppress an accusation of paedophilia? What drugs are you on to have written such nonsense?


Blaney:
Secondly, a Labour council candidate was arrested last week on suspicion of child porn offences. Needless to say, had he been a Tory it would have been the lead story on the BBC and in the national press.


Blaney:
Thatcher would use nuclear. She wouldn't want us dependent on foreign gas and oil in today's world. It is the one area, apart from cuisine and gun rights, where the French are better than us.


How many nuclear power stations did she build, Don?

Blaney:
Cut Petrol Tax, You Greedy Sods


Are you against the market, Don?

Blaney:
Amnesty International once again show their true political colours in a campaign ad against the practice of waterboarding. This sanctimonious clique of naive peaceniks and leftist fellow travellers want us to fight the evil psychopaths who indiscriminately kill innocent men, women and children of all colours, creeds and religions with one arm tied behind our backs.


Blaney:
Hectoring and abrasive, Humphrys has become a parody of himself. In the same way that Jeremy Paxman's sneer seems to have become more exaggerated as the years go by, so it is with Humphrys' aggressiveness.


Hectoring and aggressive, eh?

Blaney:
I obviously agree that torture is not the answer.

I think I draw the line at permanent physical harm to the prisoner. Humiliation or psychological interrogation techniques are, in my view, not a problem - but we're all entitled to a different view. Waterboarding doesn't do the prisoner any permanent physical harm although he may be reluctant to shower or use a flannel again in the future when/if he is freed.

I am aware that the CIA has in the past used a creative interview technique which involved blind-folding a suspect, placing him into a helicopter and for the helicopter to lift a foot or two off the ground. If the prisoner didn't answer questions, he was told he faced being pushed out of the helicopter from (as he was told) hundreds of feet up. This too concentrated the mind.


(Note that he therefore goes against the British Army's doctrine on human intelligence collection and sides with, ah, the Gestapo. Are you against the troops, Don?)

Feel free to add any more Dons you find interesting in the comments. Unfortunately Don's forgotten how to use the moderation function, or something.

2 comments:

Surreptitious Evil said...

While agreeing with most of this (especially the sanctimonious 'I don't agree with torture but anything I decide isn't torture is fine') , can I please point out that the petrol tax is a very considerable distortion (between 2 & 3 times the market cost of the fuel) of the market rather than the efficient operation of such. You may consider it an appropriate distortion on Pigouvian (sp?) grounds but a distortion it still is.

Donal can't actually be wrong about everything, that's Gordon's job.

Alex said...

It's a pretty strange way to carry on if you don't want to be "dependent on foreign gas and oil".

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