All you have to do is redefine the word 'war' to mean something completely different than it ever has before.
Really?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War
In his book, On War, Prussian military theoretician Carl Von Clausewitz calls war the "continuation of political intercourse, carried on with other means."[1] War is an interaction in which two or more militaries have a “struggle of wills”.[2]
Looks to me like the current conflict falls within that definition.
Looks can be deceiving; especially if one doesn't understand all the words he's looking at. Both
'political intercourse' and
'two or more militaries' imply struggle between governments, not governments versus loosely confederated extremist religious zealots. You fail.
In other words, you have no evidence in support of your claim.
No, I'm simply not going to bother to try and convince you on that issue. Because frankly I don't think anything I post would convince you as nothing I post seems to be influencing you on any other issue.
Like I said: You've got nothing. All you need to change my mind is a valid argument backed up by strong evidence in support of its premises. You've not presented anything of the kind.
Since the exchange in question was talking about professional interrogators and not soldiers, yes, the motivation our laws give to soldiers is, in fact, irrelevant to the question at hand.
You'd prefer, instead, to play with definitions. What does "is" mean?
I'm not the one making up new meanings as I go along.
You presented a False Dichotomy (yet another logical fallacy), suggesting that given the choice to either torture or *do nothing*
Under the situation that I described ... having just hours to break a subject and find out the location of a nuclear bomb or hundreds of thousands of people will die, I'm not presenting a false dichotomy. You'd just rather plays games with logical terms than deal with the scenario.
The situation you described, one in which only torturing someone can certainly extract reliable information which must be had immediately in order to save many lives, and one must choose either torture or no other course of action, cannot possibly exist. That's a
False Dichotomy. Since you like playing with definitions so much, why don't you look up that term.
it's possible for people to choose to do nothing for some other reason than fear of prosecution, such as because they believe that's the morally correct course to follow.
Do you really think they would be morally correct in allowing hundreds of thousands of people to die rather than inflict temporary, non-lethal physical and mental stress on a single prisoner? If so, I think your moral compass is broken.
No I do not. I also do not think that they would be morally correct if they chose to eat babies while waltzing atop a rainbow. Since both propositions are equally likely, I fail to see the relevance.
People who don't do things that they believe are right only because they fear prosecution are, in my experience, exceedingly rare
Well how vast is your experience compared to mine? There's no way to really know.
For the sake of your ego, I'm willing to stipulate that yours is bigger than mine, while I take solace in the apparent fact that I'm able to use mine a bit more skillfully. You have made a positive claim that such people exist, so the burden of proof is on you to provide evidence that this is the case. Please forgive me if I decline the option to hold my breath while you go dig some up.
--but I don't hang out with a lot of far-right-wingers, so maybe you know something I don't.
You know nothing about me. But I guess you'd rather argue with insinuations about me than face the real issue of relative morality.
Lacking any sound argument in support of your position, I've unfortunately got nothing
but insinuations to argue with.
As to your quip about my being in denial, I'll thank you in advance not to make such personal attacks in the future.
It's not a personal attack. It's an observation based on what you've said and what I believe to be the truth about human nature.
So, if whatever I say happens to be in disagreement with whatever you believe to be the truth, that means I'm in denial concerning reality. Since you apparently believe that reality consists only of whatever your personal beliefs are, and that is obviously not the case, it seems then that
you really are in denial concerning reality.
BeAChooser - Ah yes ... another liberal completely controlled by emotion.
It's actually rather rare to find someone actually commiting a genuine Ad Hominem
Is it an Ad Hominem to call you a liberal? Is that how you feel about liberals? In a negative way? That must be, because saying you are completely controlled by emotion is not at odds with your statement that "I would be acting neither rationally, nor morally. I would be acting solely from emotion."
You might as well add 'Ad Hominem' to the list of definitions you need to check before trying to play with them any further. It doesn't matter how I feel about the term 'liberal'. It only matters that you attempt to associate me with the term in order to fallaciously undermine my position.
BeAChooser - I'm not suggesting torture in situations where you don't have good reason to suspect your *victim* ... snip ...
I think perhaps you meant to say "do" in place of the bolded "don't", otherwise you'd have me torturing every innocent person I came across.
No, "don't" is the correct word and saying that in the context of everything else I posted doesn't imply anything of the sort you suggest. You'd just rather play games with words than face the issue of relative morality.
If you can't understand your own posts, how on earth do you expect others to?
You don't like the word "victim"? Which term would you use to define the relationship between torturer and tortured, "reluctant masochist" perhaps?
Did you also call the terrorists we were fighting in Iraq "freedom fighters"?
Ahh, the old,
"I know you are but what am I," defense--almost caught me by surprise; I haven't heard that since about 3rd grade or so.
Regardless, you still don't know whether or not torture will extract that vital information until after you've committed torture--unless you're psychic, in which case you wouldn't need to torture, would you?
With absolute certainty? No. But then I hope you aren't as naive as some here who seem to demand absolute certainty before attempting to save a hundred thousand lives.
I've already told you what I, personally, would do. But it doesn't matter what I, or anyone else would do. What matters is what the law should allow.
all that suggests is that there's a potential exception to a proven valid rule
No, it's an exception to the statement jthat there is "NO CIRCUMSTANCE that justifies torture" ... the statement justifying the rule. Proving the rule, as written, is invalid.
You are conflating moral justification with legal permission. This appears to be the source of your confusion.
If it really is a "new type of war" then how on Earth would you know what "a sure way to lose" is?
Just look at what happened in Iraq. The Iraqi government tried to fight our invasion with the methods of the last war.
Oh, come on! You can't possibly actually believe that the reason Saddam's forces lost is because they were using outdated methods.
And were demolished by forces that leftists in America (many of them in the press) were certain would be unable to defeat the Iraqi military without horrendous losses on our side (and I'm not talking about the terrorist campaign that cropped up later). Don't you remember? So call it a truism. The surest way to lose a war is fight the last one. Look around. You'll find a lot of people seem to accept that. Even in the military.
There are ignorant fools at all points on the political spectrum, and in all walks of life. Anyone who thought Saddam's forces would have been capable of such a feat certainly fell into that category. I'm not concerned with them. What I am concerned with is that, although you recognize that using methods from the last 'war' is certainly a mistake, you seem to think that skipping back to to the methods of a thousand years ago is somehow better.
Originally Posted by Prometheus
And even in war, soldiers are not allowed to torture their prisoners.
And why does the other side in this war not respect that rule? Could it again be that you are using rules that don't fit the current circumstances?
...or perhaps it's because they're Un-American. Is that what you aspire to be?
So you equate the sort of torture we know that al-qaeda uses to our waterboarding? Is this not just another example of you believing in a moral equivalence that is ludicrous?
I do no such thing, and there's no possible way to rationally infer that from anything I've posted.
'Strawman Fallacy'--add it to the list.