Vee have vays of making you talk. Like making you eat your faworite ice cream wery wery fast!
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:Democracy snobs - those supremacists who don't celebrate the diversity of other peoples and cultures, and who think the US can preach at the world about how things should be - won't like how the world's largest democracy is dealing with a captured Islamist terrorist.
But just as we can learn from Mexico about sound immigration policy, India has some things to show us about how to protect a democracy under attack.
The Times of London reports that Indian authorities, using their country's accepted police practices and laws, will conduct "narcoanalysis" on the sole known surviving terrorist involved in last week's murderous rampage in Mumbai. The practice involves administering a harmless "truth serum" to help establish the facts.
"Advanced" democracies like the US and UK once had the same practice, but no longer do, so they are better than everyone else, the thinking goes among post-democracy elites. Better to set terrorists free to kill our citizens yet again, than risk hurting the terrorists' feelings or poking them with a medical needle.
But there's good news on the other side of the world: An Indian police official says that the narcoanalysis is working like a fabled Hindu charm. About the terrorist, the official tells the Times, "He resisted at first, but soon he began to talk. We have our techniques, but we don't disclose our tactics."
Criticize India all you want about how it handled the Mumbai terrorist incident before and during the attack. But India doesn't have Miranda Rights and it doesn't need them. It has its own techniques to preserve its democracy. We should not be so chauvinistic against other democratic cultures. India certainly has a lot of answers to our counterterrorism dilemmas. Its methods send a signal that, unlike in America where mass-murdering terrorists can count on American trial lawyers to fight for their freedom, resistance in India is futile.
That's an important political message to send the world.
Perhaps the US can persuade India to host Club Gitmo before the Center for Constitutional Rights, Levick Strategic Communications and other enemy agents get Washington to set more Guantanamo-based terrorists free.
http://www.politicalwarfare.org/
Looks like my favorite cocktail mixer is working. Anyone want to defend this guy's "civil rights?"
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