post # 561, reply 1 (of 3)
We seem to be in agreement that the effectiveness of non-traditional methods needs to be proven before we attempt to use them.
My mistake. I misread what you wrote. I would agree that some non-traditional methods do need to be proven. But waterboarding isn't one of them. It is a proven technique.
So you keep saying. Unfortunately saying it doesn't make it so. If it did, astrology, dowsing, and speaking with the dead would also be proven techniques.
Now I'll grant that torture has been proven to be an effective technique for
breaking people. You have provided ample evidence of that -- such as the statement by John Kiriakou. What you haven't provided is evidence that torture is effective for obtaining useful information.
In contrast, a lot of evidence has been provided that torture does not work.
Evidence torture does not work:
1. Numerous experts in interrogation have explained that in their experience torture is not useful for obtaining accurate information.
2. Numerous examples have been provided in which torture obtained incorrect information.
Evidence torture does work:
1. Several examples have been offered in which torture is claimed to have obtained accurate information. In all of these for which adequate information was provided in which to check the claim, the claim has turned out to be false.
(NOTE: The repeated use of false examples weighs against a claim; if defenders of a claim need to use false examples it indicates true examples are difficult or impossible to find.)
2. Several vague statements have been made on behalf of the effectiveness of torture. These fall into two general categories:
(a) people who were speaking about the effectiveness of torture in breaking people;
(b) people who held the opinion that torture had been effective, but were unable of any specific examples.
(NOTE: neither type of statement carries any significant weight.)
The weight of the evidence is that torture is ineffective at obtaining useful information. You can't change the balance simply by repeating your assertions that it does.
And I think I can turn your statement around and say that the effectiveness of traditional methods in situations where time is of the essence needs to be proven before we rely on them when thousands of peoples lives are at risk. That was my point. Which so far you are simply ignoring.
No technique is 100% effective. The shorter the amount of time available, the greater the chance that conventional methods won't obtain the needed information.
There are techniques which will provide answers in extremely short times. Map-dowsing is one; psychic detection is a second; torture is a third. None of these, however, has been shown to be reliable in providing correct answers.
So we have a choice, and we need to decide which is more likely to provide the information we need: a technique which is is known to be generally effective (but may not work quickly enough) or a technique which is not known to be very effective (but which can provide us an incorrect answer extremely quickly).
Given an either/or choice between map-dowsing and conventional interrogation, I'd choose conventional interrogation. Wouldn't you? Even knowing there might not be enough time for conventional interrogation to obtain the needed information, I think any reasonable person would conclude the chance of failure (and people dying as a result) is greater if we rely on map-dowsing than if we rely on conventional interrogation.
Given an either/or choice between map-dowsing and conventional interrogation, I'd choose conventional interrogation. Wouldn't you? Even knowing there might not be enough time for conventional interrogation to obtain the needed information, I think any reasonable person would conclude the chance of failure (and people dying as a result) is greater if we rely on map-dowsing than if we rely on conventional interrogation.
Given an either/or choice between torture and conventional interrogation, I'd choose conventional interrogation. The reason is the same as in the previous two examples. Despite an irrational belief in the effectiveness of these methods by their devotees, none of these methods has been shown to be reliable in obtaining useful information. Each manages to come up with enough "hits" to impress devotees; but none of them, to date, has come up with evidence of success which stands up to scrutiny.
As a skeptic, I am willing to be convinced -- by evidence. And as a skeptic I expect the same standard of evidence from someone who claims torture is effective at locating ticking time bombs as from someone who claims psychic detection or map-dowsing are effective at locating ticking time bombs.
As I noted earlier, providing evidence isn't some form of punishment inflicted on people we don't like. It's how skeptics distinguish claims that are true from claims that are false. You seem to think it's only people who make claims you disagree with who need to provide evidence. No: it's anyone making a claim.
The burden on you, to show torture works, is the same as the burden on the person who believes in dowsing. Dowsers have been unable to meet that burden -- which indicates dowsing doesn't work. Torture defenders have also been so far unable to meet that burden. What does that tell us?