Enter your username and password.
-
posts about #abughraibrapepictures more →
Administration Denies Reports That Abu Ghraib Photos Depict Rape
| posts about #abughraibrapepictures more → |
Administration Denies Reports That Abu Ghraib Photos Depict Rape |
05/28/09
Salon published many of the sexual abuse in 2006 as did CBS. So if there are photos worse than the ones we have seen already, then God help us.
I am in the Do Not Show camp. I don't care if the faces are blurred or blacked out or what-have-you. There comes a point in time when we have to realize that the Need to Know does not give us the right to impose our will on others. Releasing the pictures to the public for their viewing "pleasure" is akin to raping the victims all over again. Honestly, do we need to see it Kodak to believe it happened? (To the Administration: Deny it all you want; we know better.)
[www.atlargely.com]
05/28/09
One of the definitions of pornography is whether or not it appeals to prurient (a morbid, degrading and unhealthy interest in sex). Publishing these photos sounds prurient to me and really, it is just unnecessary for anyone outside of the military or the Hague to see them.
05/28/09
Yes. Yes I would. And I would tell my story to as many reporters as would listen.
Again I think it's not appropriate to compare the alleged sex acts in these photos (alleged because we haven't seen them) to an average sexual assult. There are big differences.
05/28/09
Where would that stop? What if a congressman was accused of raping his a constitute? Is that now fair game? What about the CEO of a major company? The line should be fixed, not based on how interesting the public would find the photos.
05/28/09
A CEO of a major company? CEOs are private citizens, not paid for or salaried by the taxpayers.
05/28/09
And a lot of CEOs are quasi government employees with the bailout.
05/29/09
05/28/09
I'm in media and I don't think these should be in the paper. Maybe let the press or someone convey just how bad the pics are without printing them, but if an envelope of them came to me, I don't know if I could bear looking at them.
Regardless of what is or isn't presented, I want these people prosecuted. And I want to know how they're being prosecuted. We have the right to that, I would think.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
Fucking SNAP!
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
As for whether any/all of this might be porn, well, wasn't there a story just last week about a photo of a child "breastfeeding" her doll accused of the same thing? That's the society we're living in right now.
05/28/09
It just gets worse and worse...
05/28/09
05/28/09
Then 4 years later the exact issue comes up again...
So I'm afraid that it is most likely real.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
Maybe it's just wishful thinking, but something has to be done, regardless of the circumstances.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
1. The victims might have other identifiable features; and
2. Even if no one knew who the victim was in a blurred photo, he or she would know, and that could still be horribly damaging.
If the victims gave consent to the widespread release of the photographs, that would be one thing (although still not porn, Breslin!), but otherwise I think it would cause more harm than good.
05/28/09
05/28/09
I don't think these photos belong in the press. It makes the press culpable for sexual abuse to publish pictures of sexual abuse taken under duress and published without consent.
05/28/09
I think that's a very, very huge stretch to hold the press guilty of sexual abuse should these be published. And my question on consent would be - who do the pictures really belong to? Who would really have to give consent?
05/28/09
Certainly, if the photos are released, anyone interested in seeing them all will be able to find them on the web. But they will certainly not all be in newspapers. And publishing a story about something makes the press an observer, not a conspirator. By informing the public, they are doing nothing if not helping hold those accountable, well, accountable.
@KiddyKat: That's an interesting point about this influencing future coverage of rape. I think that so much coverage has been done on rape as war crime that is completely separate from rapes that are not war-related. And none of this coverage has involved pictures of rapes occurring as a means of story-telling. I think we could still expect this degree sensitivity to continue.
DISCLOSURE: I work in media, and studied journalism and ethics in school, so I'm quite interested in this as a result.
05/28/09
We don't have to see things to understand them and we don't have the right to see everything. Its basic human decency to keep these photos unpublished, the descriptions are enough.
05/28/09
But are these photos really on the same level of "most people"'s sexual assaults? These photos depict soldiers doing the act. A tax-paid U.S> soldier using sex as a weapon in a war on terrorism is quite a different charge, in my opinion, than an average sexual assault case. And I believe soldiers are to be held to a different privacy standard in these cases, especially when their actions may impact a war.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
We don't know that it is in fact rape or sexual assault, though. That's another issue in this. What we know about these photos is based on what government officials or military officials are telling us, which I personally don't think is enough. I think the pictures should be judged in the court of public opinion.
05/28/09
05/28/09
And I guess I should go back again and say that while I do understand the value of victim privacy and the effects releasing more photos would have on victims, I still think the public deserves to see the photos to judge for themselves what our soldiers are doing.
05/28/09
05/28/09
@Leslie: We don't need to see the photos to know what went on.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
But at the same time, photographs are so powerful that it could provoke people to flip the fuck out around the world. I don't want people to start riots (like the Mohammed cartoons) or give the Taliban another recruiting tool.
It's hard to decide which is more important...
05/28/09
HOWEVER, I do think the political leaders and troop comanders should be forced to look at the images. Before making any policy decisions regarding this war they need all information.
05/28/09
05/28/09
05/28/09
What, you don't think terrorists and terrorists manqué already have a good idea of what's going on in these pictures? The fact that they exist at all is a mobilizing force. Releasing them really isn't going to change a hell of a lot of minds that haven't already been convinced.
It's got to be done. Part of being a grown-up is owning up to your mistakes. And part of being a grown-up in government is realising that sometimes good PR just isn't a luxury available to you anymore. The damage has already been done. Time to draw a line.
05/28/09
Agreed.