Every enemy of the state was asked "verifiable" questions prior to execution in Nazi Germany. Every Jew asked verifiable questions during internment before gassing in Auschwitz. And civilians in Japanese territory were asked "verifiable questions" over suspicians about their roles as spies and saboteurs.
Rationalization was the main defense at Neuremburg. And if it was horrible ... it was necessary. It was orders. Jews weren't human ... much less German. Nor were Chinese worthy to be treated like anything other than sheep to be slaughtered, on regular occasion, to amuse and test swords by the Japanese. Nor American servicemen who surrendered rather than die.
We brag our culture has certainly progressed more than the combined cultures of all Muslim nations and communities worldwide, right? If someone, helpless in our custody though suspected of ties to terrorism, has a stroke or heart attack under the strain of "questioning" at least we didn't cut their head off slowly with a blunt machete. They're all savages, every single one. And the best excuse to torture them is that they aren't human, much less American, and they deserve it. That's how we protect ourselves from becoming what we despise most. That's how we shine the light of liberty. How we promote the virtue of Democracy. How we set the standard and inspire through example. That's how we keep our deserving culture and society alive. That's what your fathers, grandfathers and their fathers before them fought for.
Not.
I don't see the rationalization of the most unAmerican traits I can imagine, wrapped in the flag under the pretense that we're worthy of the respect and humanity we readily deny others in the name of "patriotism," anything more than shamefully throwing away the inheritance our forefathers granted us with their very lives. What good is protecting my nation while transforming it into something that's no longer the nation I (or my grandfathers) knew? My children deserve better. So do yours, whether you want to rationalize denial over that or not.