Just when you think that this administration has been so screwed up for so long and has done so many heinous things that it's hard to tell them all apart or even care about them all anymore, along comes something that reminds you that the horror is not over and you can still be outraged.
Digby excerpts a long GQ article about Joseph and Bernadette Darby and what has happened to their lives since Joe was identifed as a whistleblower in the Abu Ghirab scandal.
Digby talks about the article as a window into red-state wingnut America and why nobody is supporting the Darbys in their home town. Which is true, and the fact that they have had to be moved into protective custody is sad, but as far as I am concerned, what's really appaling is why.
Abu Ghirab is in fact worse that we've heard. And it's getting lost in the outrage backwash. Nobody is talking about it. And we don't know why.
One thing Bernadette didn't know—because almost nobody knows it, because almost everybody who does know has either been lying or keeping it a secret—is the rest of the story, what really happened at Abu Ghraib. Oh, you hear allusions to the fact that certain things haven't been told, like Rumsfeld saying in May that the whole story is "a good deal more terrible" than what you've seen. But you don't hear Rumsfeld saying any more than that, or explaining what "more terrible" means.[snip]
Seymour Hersh, the man who uncovered the Abu Ghraib scandal in The New Yorker, claims that video exists of young Iraqi boys being sodomized. But Hersh hasn't come forward with the video, and neither has anybody else. Even if he's not right, there's no question that other prisoners were sodomized by U.S. soldiers. There are pictures of at least one Iraqi man being raped with a light stick. You didn't see those pictures on the news though, didn't hear Rumsfeld talk about that. Just like nobody except Janis Karpinski is talking about the three military-intelligence officers who were sent home in January after the sexual assault of two female prisoners. That case is confidential, just like the roughly 5,950 pages of Major General Antonio Taguba's 6,000-page investigation of the Abu Ghraib scandal are "confidential."
Its obvious that there is indeed much more to tell, but it also seems obvious that we're not going to know the worst there is to know. And the longer we don't know the truth, stand up to it, punish the guilty, and apologize, we're going to have the spectre of what we did hovering over Iraq and elsewhere for a long time.

