Thursday, April 23, 2009

Fuzzy Math

Excerpted from The Corner:

How many times have you read and heard in the mainstream media that terrorists were waterboarded more than 180 times?

It turns out that’s not true. What is?


According to two sources, both of them very well-informed and reliable (but preferring to remain anonymous), the 180-plus times refers not to sessions of waterboarding, but to “pours” — that is, to instances of water being poured on the subject.


Under a strict set of rules, every pour of water had to be counted — and the number of pours was limited.


Also: Waterboarding interrogation sessions were permitted on no more than five days within any 30-day period.


No more than two sessions were permitted in any 24-hour period.


A session could last no longer than two hours.


There could be at most six pours of water lasting ten seconds or longer — and never longer than 40 seconds — during any individual session.


Water could be poured on a subject for a combined total of no more than 12 minutes during any 24 hour period.


You do the math.


Now go read the rest of the post.

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