Music Used To Torture Gitmo Prisoners Has Artists Hopping Mad

Everyone has their own taste when it comes to music.
What may be considered music to one's ears, may be considered simply torturous to others. Just because I feel that Michael Bolton sounds like a cat getting skinned alive, and that his music is some sort of cruel joke to all of mankind, doesn't mean that some other tone deaf person has to agree with me.
One thing is for certain, whether it is the sweet voice of Bonnie Raitt or the overrated raspy voice of Bruce who stepped in it Springsteen... if it is played at decibels to make you feel that your ears are going to bleed and it is played over and over... it can be quite torturous no matter who it is.
Everyone is aware that the prisoners at Gitmo (Guantánamo Bay) were needlessly tortured by water boarding along with other degrading and unspeakable acts.

One of the methods used was music played repeatedly and at ear piercing levels. The songs used and some of the artists who made that music are not too happy to say the least. How would you feel if one of your songs was used to torture someone? I am sure you would be horrified.

Well, Michael Stipe of REM, along with twenty or so other artists have aired their disgust, and have banned together and formed Close Gitmo Now.
A little info on Gitmo first, before we get into which performers are saying Gitmo has to go.
Gitmo has held nearly 800 detainees in it's history. An alarming majority of those detainees were never charged, nor went to trial. Only THREE of those detainees have ever been convicted of a crime.To keep Gitmo open is costing tax payers MILLIONS.
So what did the spokesman for the CIA say when it came to using music as torture?
He said nuh-uh.
George Little, a CIA spokesman said:
"music was used only for security, rather than "punitive purposes"
And in a 2005 CIA document, it stated,
"loud music or white noise was needed "to mask sound and prevent communication among detainees"
So what tunes and artists made it to the Gitmo "top 20"? Continued on the next page



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