Captain Hat: Best Movie Scene Ever.
I would like to note that I think this argument has pretty much winded down. We've eliminated eliminated the points of contention and come down to a pretty simple explanation for our differing views. He holds that we should be cynical towards motivations in all cases and thus we do not need to be worried about what the subtext of a statement says about the morality of the subjects motivations. I maintain that subtext about motivation is essential to the words meaning and thus ignoring the subtext is drawing a false comparison. While he can see me as making an arbitrary distinction and I can see him as losing sight of truth by blurring the lines, our positions are pretty clearly laid out and reasonable at this point.
So uh, the fight you're expecting is kinda over at this point.
...Well, I've been trying to keep up on your argument - the subject of imprisonment and rationality of seizure is rather important to me, as I'm pursuing a career in criminal justice. Likewise, I've studied argumentative method quite a bit, and both of you are pretty worrying in that regard.
Anyway, at the risk of starting this up again, I'll give you my take. I'm just going to ignore any analogy of Guantanamo to the Spanish Inquisition, because I think both of you were putting yourselves too close to the argument over your perceptions of meaning. This just about imprisoning "terrorists".
Moral reasoning or theoretical risk must be ignored when deciding to imprison or hold someone, not out of cynicism, but out of recognition of fallibility. The whole point of written law is to try to establish what is "right" and "wrong" according to the best consensus on practical threat of a person's actions. Legal action, including forcible arrest, must only ever be undertaken when there is obvious cause, not possible cause or belief of moral righteousness. Punishment must likewise follow exactly the written rules for the situation and crimes, where guilt can be definitively proven.
There is no threat, no matter how great, that nullifies those laws, at any time, or under circumstances. If we can act outside those laws, then they are not laws at all. The whole reason we have them if to avoid questions of morality, for no matter how certain any one person may be, there will always be disagreement, most certainly of all by the accused, and morality is by nature undefinable.
Seizure of people and punishment thereof must only be undertaken for definitive reasons, and nothing less - we must, as a humane society, always err on the side of innocent intent. But, will bad people slip through this net and do evil things to good people? Yes.
That is the price of freedom - not the willingness to give up rights for any particular person, but the understanding that any particular person may be harmed, because someone with evil intent could not be legally stopped in time.