Prometheus
Acolyte of Víðarr
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2007
- Messages
- 50,595
I think you are wrong to try to equate torture during interrogation to soldiers killing during war.
You are entitled to your opinion. I doubt anything I say or show you can convince you that we are engaged in a very real, and potentially very deadly war, with a totally ruthless opponent. So I won't bother trying. But I wonder ... does Obama think we aren't at war? If not, do you feel safer folks?![]()
Actually, it would be quite easy. All you have to do is redefine the word 'war' to mean something completely different than it ever has before. To be precise, you are committing a logical fallacy known as "Low Redefinition". It's too bad that so many on the right fall for this one, too, as your arguments would have a great deal more weight if you'd just cut it out.
And I don't believe your claim that there are people who would do nothing in the same situation out of fear of prosecution
Well I'm not going to try and convince you. I think you don't know human nature as well as you think.
In other words, you have no evidence in support of your claim. Got it. Again, this is too bad. Perhaps you're right and I am wrong, but to assume so without evidence is committing another logical fallacy, a form of Argument From Incredulity.
but even if they do exist that's still irrelevant
So the motivation our laws give to our *soldiers* in war is irrelevant. I'm not sure many generals would agree with you.![]()
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. This is a Strawman Fallacy.
as I expect that such people would never be offered a job interrogating high-value terror suspects.
There are bureaucrats in all lines of work. Just look at the FBI. Even the CIA is full of people just looking to draw their pension, looking to not rock the boat. There are even a great number of people who are rule followers and would obey the law regardless of the consequences. You really are in denial concerning reality.
Perhaps you misunderstood my objection, so I'll give you the benefit of the doubt on this one. You presented a False Dichotomy (yet another logical fallacy), suggesting that given the choice to either torture or *do nothing*, some people would choose to do nothing solely out of fear of prosecution. Ignoring the fact that such a dichotomy can't exist in the first place, 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. People who don't do things that they believe are right only because they fear prosecution are, in my experience, exceedingly rare--but I don't hang out with a lot of far-right-wingers, so maybe you know something I don't.
As to your quip about my being in denial, I'll thank you in advance not to make such personal attacks in the future. They are unwarranted, and they detract from the quality of your arguments, such as they are.
The fact is, I would be acting neither rationally, nor morally. I would be acting solely from emotion.
Ah yes ... another liberal completely controlled by emotion.![]()
It's actually rather rare to find someone actually commiting a genuine Ad Hominem, as it really is one of the dumbest errors in reasoning possible. To be fair, though, it's unclear exactly what your intention is in the above statement, so perhaps I'll give you the benefit of the doubt again and assume that yours is just an emotional outburst rather than a truly poor debate tactic.
The main difference is that in the interrogation scenario, I have absolutely no way of knowing whether or not my victim actually does have information that will allow me to save lives--and that can be extracted via torture--until after I've committed torture.
That's not true. I'm not suggesting torture in situations where you don't have good reason to suspect your *victim* (that wording says a lot about you, by the way) is involved in a very serious plot and has vital information that might allow you to stop it.
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.
You don't like the word "victim"? Which term would you use to define the relationship between torturer and tortured, "reluctant masochist" perhaps?
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? And even if your rather weird and incredibly unlikely hypothetical should somehow occur, all that suggests is that there's a potential exception to a proven valid rule--certainly not a reasonable basis for changing the law.
Battle is a very different animal.
This is a battle in a new type of war. Seems liberals are going to insist on only fighting the last war. A sure way to lose this one, by the way.
I voted for Bush in 2000 (horrible mistake, I admit) and his father before him. Not sure how that makes me a liberal. Regardless, this is the same Low Redefinition fallacy that I pointed out above, and your statement is logically incoherent, to boot. If it really is a "new type of war" then how on Earth would you know what "a sure way to lose" is? If you've somehow got the necessary experience to argue this position from competence, then it can't be something new.
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?
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and apologize for my carelessness.