First, a passage describing accomodations at the North Korean concentration camps that seem to upset the "human rights" community as much as Guantanamo Bay:
"I witnessed a whole family being tested on suffocating gas and dying in the gas chamber. The parents, a son, and a daughter." The speaker is Kwon Hyuk, a former North Korean intelligence agent and a one-time administrator at Camp 22, the country's largest concentration camp. His testimony was heard on a television documentary that aired last week on the BBC. "The parents were vomiting and dying, but till the very last moment they tried to save the kids by doing mouth-to-mouth breathing."
Meanwhile, at Guantanamo Bay, the big issue is weight gain. The horror:
"For two or three days I was confused, but later the Americans were so nice with me, they were giving me good food with fruit and water for ablutions before prayer."
Besides teaching him to read and write English, the military provided books in his native Pashto language and a Quran, Islam's sacred book.
See, there's no difference at all.
"I witnessed a whole family being tested on suffocating gas and dying in the gas chamber. The parents, a son, and a daughter." The speaker is Kwon Hyuk, a former North Korean intelligence agent and a one-time administrator at Camp 22, the country's largest concentration camp. His testimony was heard on a television documentary that aired last week on the BBC. "The parents were vomiting and dying, but till the very last moment they tried to save the kids by doing mouth-to-mouth breathing."
Meanwhile, at Guantanamo Bay, the big issue is weight gain. The horror:
"For two or three days I was confused, but later the Americans were so nice with me, they were giving me good food with fruit and water for ablutions before prayer."
Besides teaching him to read and write English, the military provided books in his native Pashto language and a Quran, Islam's sacred book.
See, there's no difference at all.