Thing is, that's a judgement call. I'm not willing to accept your view of what's plausible or not.
You're not willing to accept that your doomsday sci-fi movie scenario is "not plausible"? Okay!
Nor have I even begun to list the scenarios that are possible. Could we agree that I probably could come up with scenarios that are plausible?
No, we can't agree on that. If you
could come up with a plausible scenario, you would have used one from REALITY already. That you need to INVENT scenarios, or modify existing ones to the point of absurdity, in order to prove your point, shows just how warped you are.
And beside, as I said, irregardless of plausibility, are you willing to hurt one person to save the lives of thousands or even hundreds of thousands? Yes or no?
I already answered that. If I had to commit some atrocity in order to save the entire universe, sure, I'd do it. But I don't live out my days in anxiety about it, and I don't make policies about it.
And you don't live in the real world.
Coming from someone who keeps inventing bizarre sci-fi scenarios as arguments, this is rich.
In the real world there really are people trying to acquire nuclear materials for dirty bombs ... trying to acquire nuclear and other WMD weapons ... so they can use them against us or our allies in dramatic terrorist attacks. There really are people willing to commit suicide in order to kill thousands of innocent people. And there are no end to the ways they could do it. There really are people who have sworn to destroy our civilization and way of life.
I'm aware of that. But what you are conveniently omitting is that in the real world, these people aren't in captivity hours away from their attacks with torture as the only resort to prevent them; in the real world, waterboarding and torture are not very effective in obtaining this information anyway; in the real world, interrogation experts disagree with you and you are clutching at wet, slippery straws.
See? You see moral equivalence in a hurting single person and his destroying the planet. Your moral compass is broken.
Huh? I was saying that if I DID agree to your stupid premise, I WOULD torture someone to save the planet. You are so off the charts that you can't parse simple English now?
I tend to be utilitarian. If the evidence demonstrated that the torture of terrorists really worked and did help save lives, I would probably support its use.
And I bet you are a liberal.
You are a grotesque caricature.
Absolutely. What if in the next season of 24 the terrorist is home grown? We gots to torture that US MF.
In seasons 3 and 5, the main terrorists are American.
But this is such a stupid question, because it would justify anything.
Yes, if it was certain that it would save billions of lives, then I would torture someone. Also, if it was certain that it would save billions of lives, I would rape a child or set fire to a kitten.
When you have to invoke the saving of billions of lives to justify an action, then that's kind of a big clue that it is not, under any normal circumstances, justifiable.
Too true. Bolding the keyword here because BAC keeps missing the point.
To repeat: sure, in some bizarro world where the only possibility is choosing between torture and destroying thousands/millions/the world/the Universe, torture could be justified. This does NOT mean that it's justified in normal, typical, real-life circumstances - on the contrary, and all the historical evidence shows that a typical terror plot is not adverted hours in advance with last-minute torturing of a suspect, but through weeks-long (or more) investigations and subtle, non-torturing interrogation techniques, and that the use of waterboarding and other torture methods are not only not effective in long-term investigations, they are also ineffective for obtaining information rapidly (as shown by the need to use the technique 180 times or so before it remotely got anywhere). Therefore, it is not just moral, but also practical to outlaw torture as an interrogation technique.