Geneva - No Place for U.S.
On May 5, 2006 U.S. representatives sat in front of an international U.N. legal panel in Geneva to discuss whether the U.S. violated a treaty to prevent the torture of prisoners. The officials contended that the U.S. has systematically mistreated prisoners in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
PNAM reminds the world that being American means you never have to say you're sorry. In the case of prisoner torture, the U.S. has the right and even the duty to carry out any sort of methods needed to convince other countries that America's Christian moral values reppresent the only valid way of life.
Mr. Bush needs to take a public and vocal stand on this issue. Torture is a useful method in establishing American dominance around the globe. There should be no fear that U.S. troops may one day be tortured by our enemies, because the U.S. has the superior military. If it was learned that American troops were being tortured, the simple and warranted response would be to use nuclear weapons against the offending country.

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