I wonder if he thinks 1984 has a happy ending.
Oh, I know the truth of that book, I'm just constantly amazed by it.
I wonder if he thinks 1984 has a happy ending.
Sorry, but you're factually wrong, and I've already shown you how. In the U.S. Code, the types of things that can cause "severe mental pain" are spelled out (and I've quoted this to you before).I think I've already won this portion of the argument since I've already established that the definition of the phrases "severe" and "prolonged" in the definition of torture aren't written on any tablet or even in any convention or law signed or passed by the US.
First, let me remind you that this thread is about the effectiveness of torture, not about what may or may not comprise torture. You're arguing both things, I think, and getting all mixed up.Thus, interpretation plays an important role in the law and allows wide latitude as to what acts actually do constitute torture. We've seen that latitude at work over the last few decades.
I have specifically answered your hypotheticals over and over. I reject them as being impossible. You cannot possibly know that committing the crime of torture will result in saving lives. Even if you could (and you can't), you couldn't possibly know that it is the only way to save those lives (that is, that there weren't ways of saving those lives that do not involve committing a crime or an unethical action).Then even without specifically answering my hypothetical question you've answered it.
As I said, I reject the "if" portion of this statement. That's exactly why I think torture is not justified in any circumstances. It is impossible to know that with 100 percent certainty that inflicting temporary pain (is there any other kind?) on one person will result in saving everyone in the universe or a billion people or a thousand people. It matters not at all that you repeat the same hypothetical with different numbers of people.If inflicting temporary pain on one person could with 100 percent certainty prevent the otherwise certain destruction of the universe (all I've described is a circumstance and you did say "ANY circumstance WHATSOEVER"), you wouldn't do it. Personally, I think that's insane.
You're either wrong about the way waterboarding works, or you're intentionally misreading the phrase "threat of imminent death". If you haul someone out of their cell, and pretend you are about to execute them by firing squad (even though there is no chance whatsoever that you will actually kill him--because of blanks in the guns or whatever), you are nonetheless causing severe mental pain caused by the threat of imminent death.There is no threat of imminent death from waterboarding as used by the CIA.
Nonsense. A soldier and journalist who voluntarily undergoes waterboarding is not being threatened with imminent death because they know they won't be killed. (The situation also fails to meet the definition of torture on a number of other points, as you well know.) A prisoner suspected of terrorism has no such knowledge. Should I remind you that suspected terrorists have been murdered in U.S. run prisons?We've waterboarded thousands of our own soldiers. Journalists are volunteering to be waterboarded. Obviously, there is no threat of imminent death.
Did you notice that at the same hearing where Mohammed claimed he lied under torture, he also listed 29 terror plots in which he took part? And if he lied before, could he be lying now?
It's not just a conscious thought; the sense of smothering works at the brain-stem level so what you experience is horror and panic. It is very, very unpleasant.
More than that, he claimed that prisoners know they can't be killed by waterboarding.Did BeaCH just claim that water-boarding can't kill a person?!
Our atheist group
Surely you have been on the JREF forum long enough to have had this question answered hundreds of times and yet you still cling to your false belief that morality comes from god beliefs.I'm curious, Joe. If you don't believe in God, how can you believe in absolute morality? Or do you? It seems to me that if there is no higher power, then there is no right or wrong beyond personal preference. With that in mind, I can understand why you might believe in moral equivalency.
... yet you still cling to your false belief that morality comes from god beliefs.
I'm curious, Joe. If you don't believe in God, how can you believe in absolute morality? Or do you? It seems to me that if there is no higher power, then there is no right or wrong beyond personal preference. With that in mind, I can understand why you might believe in moral equivalency.
I'm curious, Joe. If you don't believe in God, how can you believe in absolute morality? Or do you? It seems to me that if there is no higher power, then there is no right or wrong beyond personal preference.
A sense of right and wrong can easily be developed my reasonable people based on their own exerpiences with what causes pain and suffering, and what causes happiness.
The idea that murder is wrong, only because "God" says so, is silly. The victim of the murder didn't want to die. The family members of the victim suffer pain and grief that they didn't want. I think the same arguments can be made about things like theft, and rape.
Not exactly.I don't disagree. People can develop a PERSONAL sense of right and wrong without believing in "God". But that then leaves the definition of right and wrong up to the individual and the culture they experience. Doesn't it?
Believers also make up their own definitions of right and wrong, they just assign the credit to their gods. Believing in a higher authority doesn't solve any dilemma, it just camouflages it. After all, who are you do say what god thinks is right or wrong?
Well it's probably because anyone like me who questions the legality or morality of some of the actions of the Bush administration obviously hates America.Those are justMuslimsterrorists being tortured, why do you care about the well-being of them?