soylent
Muse
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2007
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- 968
In my view torture is a social institution akin to the death penalty in that while it's conceivable that it would be a good thing to torture some people or execute some people, I sure as hell do not trust any government not to abuse the power to do it. Therefore I feel very strongly that every single US citizen who aided and abetted torture should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
If we are going to take that route then let's indict Obama for assessing the death penalty against the terrorist "suspects" and innocent civilians killed in a dozen drone attacks to date since his election. There is no "ticking time bomb" situation there either. In lieu of that let him release the legal advice that he got to do so.Discussion from this thread moved to here:
Firstly, Paximperium, would you care to elaborate on this remark?
In my view torture is a social institution akin to the death penalty in that while it's conceivable that it would be a good thing to torture some people or execute some people, I sure as hell do not trust any government not to abuse the power to do it. Therefore I feel very strongly that every single US citizen who aided and abetted torture should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
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If we are going to take that route then let's indict Obama for assessing the death penalty against the terrorist "suspects" and innocent civilians killed in a dozen drone attacks to date since his election. There is no "ticking time bomb" situation there either. In lieu of that let him release the legal advice that he got to do so.
If we are going to take that route then let's indict Obama for assessing the death penalty against the terrorist "suspects" and innocent civilians killed in a dozen drone attacks to date since his election. There is no "ticking time bomb" situation there either. In lieu of that let him release the legal advice that he got to do so.
Start your own thread on that topic please, rather than threadjacking this one.
Torture did seem to work for the gestapo.
At one point they were quite close to rolling up most of the danish resistance movement.
The surviving resistance called in a RAF airstrike against the gestapo headquarter in copenhagen to kill the captured resistance leaders before they could talk, and get the file cabinets I guess.
I guess gestapo were better at it than the abu grai crew, or danish resistance fighters were softer.
This is actually a good point.
A major difference is that the Nazi's didn't have to worry about losing their moral authority.
They had made fear, genocide and domination their central values and were actively communicating that. I mean, who designed those SS uniforms?
Secondly, I think that they were doing a rather well directed campaign (in practical terms). Getting people to report people under torture, who would then do the same.
Same thing in Argentina in the seventies. First you get a broad cross section on the left, including a few that would be prepared to get involved in armed resistance.
Then you start torturing communists, then socialists, then people who know socialists, then people who look like they know socialists.
I agree.In my view torture is a social institution akin to the death penalty in that while it's conceivable that it would be a good thing to torture some people or execute some people, I sure as hell do not trust any government not to abuse the power to do it.
That is a separate discussion. Would you prefer to continue the discussion here or back at the "EJ thread of rants"?Therefore I feel very strongly that every single US citizen who aided and abetted torture should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
Nothing interesting about it. I needed more information before I could decide if torture would have any utility at all in safeguarding lives. The answer is no.Lastly, I think it's fascinating that Pax wanted to shift the topic from the highly specific topic of the previous thread, which was "US torturers to go free", to the much more vague "Is torture ever warranted?".
You try it - if you were going to die anyway, you do and if the code works you don't - and at least the terrorist is in severe pain until his death.I would still like to know if the proponents of the ticking bomb scenario would trust the code given to them by a tortured man...
Why? We are talking about the handling of terrorist "suspects". Is it ok to kill them without a trial not to mention innocent bystanders while roughing them up is cause for imprisonment? If we are going to use the Obama standard then he should be tried for murder.
After doing some additional reading(and "soul" searching), I've reversed my position on torture. It doesn't work and its use is too often misused to allow its use under any situations even the hypothetical "ticking time bomb" scenario.
The ethical thing to do would be ban all use of torture, no matter the cause.
According to CNSNews, the CIA has said that waterboarding led to info that allowed them to prevent a 9/11-like attack on LA. However, the link doesn't appear to be working anymore and CNSNews is a conservative organization, so I will have to wait to see if a mainstream news org confirms its validity.
This link works now, http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=46949 and seems to confirm that waterboarding did produce intelligence that prevented another 9/11 type of attack.
an unnamed senior FBI official would later tell the Los Angeles Times that Bush's characterization of it as a "disrupted plot" was "ludicrous"—that plot was foiled in 2002. But Sheikh Mohammed wasn't captured until March 2003.