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Merged Senate Report on CIA Torture Program

"Those who sacrifice freedom for security will find themselves losing both"

Well, if read literally, that quote is nonsense. Obviously, we all need to sacrifice some freedom for some security sometimes. For example, I don't feel free to drive right through an intersection when I have a red light.

I find it ironic that you defend something that in today's world would be ineffective at preserving freedom whilst condoning something that definitely harms it. In a free society, operatives of the state should not be above the law. The CIA's actions were against US law.

Well, I'm on record here as saying that I would probably change my attitude towards gun control if there were 100,000 firearm homicides per year in the US rather than just 12,000 (not counting suicides). Also, I do not advocate the use of torture, nor do I believe that its use was justified in this case. I have more sympathy and understanding for those who conducted the torture, though, than most people here do. If that's condoning it, I guess I'm condoning it. But I'm not approving of it.
 
The problem is telling the one from the other.


That's shifting the burden by asking opponents to prove a negative. Not only is the burden of proof on those who say it works to prove the claim, but to also show that it is more efficient than other forms of interrogation.

Force works. That's why we use it for everything. Every single legal relationship is underpinned by force. Ultimately, a man comes along and separates you from your property, whether because you broke a contract or failed to pay a parking ticket. People are threatened with the use of force when giving evidence in court. If they lie and are found out they can go to jail. Torture is simply an unacceptable and more immediate form of force. There is no reason to think this type of force is any different from any other in affecting and conditioning behaviour.

As to whether it's more efficient than alternatives, what do you mean by efficient? Please tell us where you put the bomb on the plane versus tell us now or we blow your head off (or your kids' heads off)? Or something else?
 
<snip>

Could you please present, or point to, this plausible hypothetical situation where torture would be justified?

If I may plagiarize myself:

A dirty bomb is being assembled by a team of five terrorists in Manhattan. The radioactive material, Americium 241, has been successfully obtained and smuggled into the US, and now the team is preparing the bomb in a high-rise apartment in mid-town. The CIA has picked up information about the plot, and even has the name and picture of one of the team members, but does not know when and where the plot will develop.

By a fortuitous twist of fate, the FBI gets a call from a Manhattan hospital. A man had been hit by a taxi cab while crossing the street and brought to the hospital. Although the man was not seriously hurt, the doctors observed mild signs of radiation sickness. In testing his blood, technicians observed alpha radiation with a signature identical to Am 241.

The FBI takes the man into custody and consults with the CIA. The CIA identifies him as a known terrorist and the one they suspect as being part of the team. Further the CIA believes he was the mule responsible for smuggling the radioactive material into the US. It is theorized that this mule transported approximately 1kg of Am 241 by swallowing it. It is feasible to do this by packing the substance in four separate 25ml plastic containers, the walls of which are sufficient to stop the alpha particles from doing damage to internal tissues, although not the less harmful, secondary gamma rays. The CIA understands that 1kg of Am 241 is equivalent to 3500 Curies of radiation, enough to contaminate the entire island of Manhattan if an effective dispersal mechanism is employed. Many thousands of people would suffer excruciating radiation sickness, with hundreds dying of it. Tens of thousands would develop cancer, and large swaths of the city would be uninhabitable without a $1T cleanup.

Interrogations begin. The wounded terrorist is uncooperative. He merely gloats that he would recommend selling property in Manhattan by the end of the week. Analysts have calculated that a large bomb would be needed to blast the radioactive material into the sky in order to spread it around the island, but this could be done with a crude fertilizer bomb. It would be best to do this on a sunny day with no precipitation and no wind, and it would be best to do this from the top floor of a relatively tall building. Unfortunately, there are thousands of high rise apartment units in Manhattan, and that's not even counting offices and warehouses. More unfortunately, the weather conditions are perfect over the next three days for dispersal of the radioactive materials.

The FBI needs an address. The terrorist claims that he will never give it up. His interrogators can all go to hell, he says. CIA agents come in and begin setting up a table with towels, wrist and leg restraints, a hood, and a few gallon jugs of water. The head interrogator, Upchurch walks in. The terrorist looks at him and says. I know you. You don't have the balls. Upchurch stares at him coldly and says ...
 
Even so, Jack Bauer should have been prosecuted under the Convention Against Torture - there is no clause for value/utility of the information won through torture.
 
If I may plagiarize myself:

So, naturally, I will do the same:
I thought you were going to give me a situation where torture was required. The interrogators didn't even have a chance to try the more effective methods before you whipped out waterboarding.

Of course I'm not going to take his "you don't have the balls" bait, because I'm not 12 years old. I'm going to let the interrogators do their job because that is the best chance for getting the information.

So, to complete the story, after a day of establishing trust, the interrogators trick the terrorist into giving up the information. The FBI manages to safely contain the situation.

And to top it all off Superman flies the radioactive material into the sun!

What a happy ending to our hypothetical scenario!
So, is that your best "plausible" hypothetical situation where torture would be justified? There is no reason given as to why torture is require instead of other interrogation techniques. Where is the justification?
 
The ticking time bomb scenario that can only be solved by using torture is a Hollywood fairy tale. If such a scenario were to ever happen, torture would be the least effective form of getting the needed information because you don't have the time to separate the information you need from the information given just to get the torture to stop.


I just watched a TV show last week that used the ticking time bomb scenario...and resolved it realistically.
The person being tortured stalled until the clock ran out and the bomb went off.

[sarcasm]
Of course, the interrogator had never tortured anyone before and wasn't strong enough to do what was needed. If he had been a hard man willing to make hard choices, he would have gotten better results and would have saved everyone.
[/sarcasm]
 
On September 6, 2006 former President George W. Bush said in a news interview:

"I've said to the people that we don't torture, and we don't."

I knew that he was a stupid, idiotic liar then, and I know that he is a stupid, idiotic liar now.
 
So, naturally, I will do the same:

So, is that your best "plausible" hypothetical situation where torture would be justified?

Well, I had an even crazier scenario where 19 terrorists plan to hijack four separate commercial airliners within minutes of each and fly them into buildings to kill thousands of people, but I didn't figure anybody would buy that one.

There is no reason given as to why torture is require instead of other interrogation techniques. Where is the justification?

Ok, well I don't want to rehash our prior discussion, as illuminating as it was. I'll ask you this, though. If we took a poll of the American public, or even those weenie Europeans :D, what percentage do you think would approve an immediate resort to torture in my hypothetical? And, yes, that's an argumentum ad populum, but in questions of morality, the people do effectively determine the answers.
 
Well, I had an even crazier scenario where 19 terrorists plan to hijack four separate commercial airliners within minutes of each and fly them into buildings to kill thousands of people, but I didn't figure anybody would buy that one.
Apparently you don't understand what we mean by "justified". It does not mean "a more dire situation." It means "okay to use to the exclusion of legal and effective means of interrogation."

You have not established that torture is a more reliable way of getting information nor that it is a faster way of getting reliable information. Both of these conditions must be met for you to have a hope of justifying torture.
 
Torture is simply not a reliable way to informations, It's stupid as well as wrong.

But the Wannasee Protocols comparasion is way over the top.

Not sure how much damage this report will do. I think it just confirms what everybody already knew.
 
Now I don't feel so bad about posting this:


Torture, torture, torture! It's a thing we love to do
Torture, torture, torture! Now why don't we start with you?

It's okay when we do it, but not the other guy
The Coalition's justified, and here's the reason why
We do it to get intel, not for revenge or fun
We have all sorts of methods, we don't just rely on one
Who cares if Axis powers did it? They weren't in the right
Therefore you'd better talk or else we'll keep you up all night
With heavy metal music blasted straight into your ears
If you want us to stop, you'd better tattle on your peers
Just tell us what we want to hear, and we might end your pain
Or maybe not, we might decide to do it all again
We'll threaten you with vicious dogs, they'll rip your face right off!
We'll hold them within snapping range until you've had enough

We'll pulverize your food and funnel it right up your ass
If you want us to stop then you had better speak up fast
We'll drag you off and make you think that you're about to die
For this is what will happen to the ones who don't comply
Cooperate, or else we'll make your loved ones disappear
'Cos all you need to do is tell us what we want to hear
We'll drug you up to break your will, wreak havoc on your brain
We're sure that you'll confess to us once you're completely drained
You'll watch as other prisoners are tortured by our hand
So that you'll know ahead of time the things that we have planned
The fact that we use other methods makes this not a crime
It's not like torture has to hurt you every single time

We'll hood you, strip you naked, and make you stand in place
We'll strap you to a table, tying cloth around your face
And pouring water over you, to make you think you'll drown
As torture goes, the Coalition loves to go to town
We'll clamp electrodes to your nipples, then we'll hit the juice
Or maybe we'll just beat you up, it's not like that's abuse
We'll pound you in the stomach until you can barely walk
It's what you prisoners deserve, since you refuse to talk
We'll douse you with cold water 'til you're shivering and blue
If you stay silent we'll just have to freeze you through and through
You'll stand in a submissive pose while shackled to the floor
We'll make you stand like this for up to 40 hours or more

And torture works, since it's the way the Coalition found
Bin Laden once he fled to his Abbottabad compound
The Senate might dispute this, but who cares what those guys say?
The evidence that torture works comes from the CIA
Forget that many people worked together on this case
And torture wasn't needed to identify that place
No single piece of evidence led to Bin Laden's fate
But torture's just a thing we like to do at any rate
We've tortured in the past in many instances before
We've tortured through the centuries right up through the Cold War
The stakes were high enough back then to justify its use
Since torture's in our repertoire, well, how could we refuse?

Torture, torture, torture! It's a thing we do all day
And since we're not beheading folks, I think we're still OK
 
Well, I had an even crazier scenario where 19 terrorists plan to hijack four separate commercial airliners within minutes of each and fly them into buildings to kill thousands of people, but I didn't figure anybody would buy that one.

So who should have been tortured to prevent 9/11?

The problem is that the idea that we have someone who knows about an attack that we are sure is going to happen in custody before the attack can happen is very very contrived. So you go to lower and lower standards.

What should the results of torturing someone innocent to death because of poor information, like misinformation from the first guy you tortured to death?
 
The question of whether or not torture works is similar to asking whether germ warfare or poison/nerve gas munitions are effective. It's a moot point, since they are all outlawed by the laws of human decency.

Laws of human decency don't seem to have been enforced very well, otherwise, it wouldn't have been necessary to write the report in the first place.

Still, your statement fits well within moral outrage, which is one of the main ways of doing things. The other, of course is looking at facts. This is the basic Hume split of "is" versus "ought."

I well know moral outrage. If anything, I experience it pretty strongly, I think more than most people. The parts of my brain that get angry and judgmental all the time. That may be the reason I'm so skeptical of them and try so hard not to be controlled by them. There are some serious problems.

I can think about moral outrage and discuss it, and you know that because that is what I am doing. Of course, I've been arguing against using it as a guide, and you or anybody else might not agree. Still, I can consider them.

The first problem is that moral outrage drives out other considerations. We know that this is happening, because you just demonstrated it. You're not arguing that it's better than looking at whether torture works. You declare it moot. That is, irrelevant, not for discussion, and so on. It's extremely effective. Moral outrage tends to trump everything else. That's Number 1.

So what doesn't it trump? How about other moral outrage? You mention chemical warfare. It's just a fact that it got used a lot during the Great War.

I haven't heard rational arguments as to why this happened, so I don't know what they would be. It seems unlikely that people simply didn't know that things like chlorine and mustard gas were horrific.

What I am sure of is that great efforts to create moral outrage were employed. The men (boys, actually, in many cases, as machine-gun training happened in schools), and Rosie the Riveter hadn't been invented yet. So the women put on these live diorama shows, tableaux, and pantomimes, to work people into a frenzy. A common theme was revenge for what was called "the rape of Belgium." I once had an old poster from that era, showing a silhouette of a man with an appropriately phallic pointy spiked German helmet dragging a silhouette of a small girl by the wrist.

Nothing trumps quite like the use of the term "rape." It affects so many people on a visceral level, and moral outrage just happens. (This should make people doubt facile declarations of "rape culture" as well as it explains why they work.) This moral outrage can be used to trump another moral outrage.

I suppose that there might be some accuracy, or at least I wouldn't declare the idea moot. Maybe there is something eternally and innately wrong with Germans. Great War the Sequel didn't make Germans look so hot. I'd like to think not, as I'm mostly German, and I've managed to go a half century without committing any particularly vile acts. On the other hand, who knows? Tom Lehrer once sang, "Once all the Germans were warlike and mean/but that couldn't happen again./We taught them a lesson in 1918,/and they've hardly bothered us since then!"

Whether that be true or not, the drumbeats hammering for moral outrage certainly pushed armies into the trenches. I think it likely that it was so strong that people went, "well, yeah, these gases are horrible, but on the other hand THE EVIL HUN! And RAPE!"

It's about this time that people start saying "by any means necessary" and "you have to break a few eggs to make an omelette." That's the result of moral outrage, too.

As it was with Alan Dershowitz who came out saying that sometimes torture was morally justified. I was disappointed with his intelligence, because I had been impressed by his ability in the Trials of the Century lectures (on CD) to get through a simplistic moral judgment and uncover some interesting reality. Maybe he's only smart about law. Or maybe, like everybody, when moral outrage takes over, he gets stupid.

As it was with the euphemistically named "waterboarding" and all that. OK, it's bad and all, but let's pick a fun-sounding name. Besides, 9/11 TERRORISM MUSLIMS BENGHAZI! AAAAAIIIIEEEEE! Great stuff that moral outrage, and not different from anybody else's in any important way at all.

Of course, moral outrage is fun! It enables all sorts of exciting social activities. You can get together with a bunch of people who have the same moral outrage. Yeah! Go us! If you meet some others with a different sort of moral outrage, you can get some action like this:

images


Fun fun fun! Of course, it's the same sort of fun as is enjoyed by torturers. But I'm sure people can come up with a moral justification. But wait a minute, so can the torturers! And when that happens all the morally justified laws, whether they are just made up to justify outrage or exist in toothless international organizations, don't seem to do a lot of good.

But just as I'm suggesting that the purpose of torture isn't actually to get any information, maybe the purpose of harping on moral outrage and principles and "laws" isn't to stop torture. There could be other purposes.

For Americans, there could be partisan politics, which are fun, or even the ritual self-degradation that Americans love so much. For Europeans, there could be the "look how superior and civilized we are" which prevents them from having to think about The Great War or The Sequel: Now with Fewer Jews or even Anders Breivik. For everybody else, it could just be simple revenge. I don't know. But whatever it is, it isn't effective at making torture go away, and it isn't skeptical.
 
On September 6, 2006 former President George W. Bush said in a news interview:



I knew that he was a stupid, idiotic liar then, and I know that he is a stupid, idiotic liar now.

At what point can those who opposed GWBush and his policies all along say, "We told you so"?

The sad part is about on how many things this applies.
 
So who should have been tortured to prevent 9/11?

The problem is that the idea that we have someone who knows about an attack that we are sure is going to happen in custody before the attack can happen is very very contrived. So you go to lower and lower standards.

What should the results of torturing someone innocent to death because of poor information, like misinformation from the first guy you tortured to death?

I was going to ask the same question. 9/11 is actually one of the poorest examples one can use to arbitrarily justify torture, because for the most part, the Bush administration had no idea it was about to happen, unless you believe in conspiracy theories. Even had they known, how was torture supposed to stop the planes, in flight, on the way to their targets, in a matter of hours?
 
So who should have been tortured to prevent 9/11?

The problem is that the idea that we have someone who knows about an attack that we are sure is going to happen in custody before the attack can happen is very very contrived. So you go to lower and lower standards.

I was addressing what I thought was one of the criticisms of my scenario, i.e. its supposed implausibility. My point wasn't that torture could have prevented the 9/11 attacks but rather that terrorist threats that seem implausible, and only the stuff of Hollywood dreams, maybe aren't so implausible.

What should the results of torturing someone innocent to death because of poor information, like misinformation from the first guy you tortured to death?

Seems like you didn't finish your question here.
 

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