Kevin_Lowe
Unregistered
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2003
- Messages
- 12,221
Well, you are basically saying that if I am to condone torture in any situation, I must condone excessive use of torture, because some other person has done that. It's not a good argument, and I don't see a need to deal with it.
The argument you are putting forward is in no way new or original. The "ticking time bomb" stalking horse has been the staple of the pro-torture lobby since it's first steps as far as I can recall.
However "legalised" torture has never been limited to that stalking-horse situation. Once the stalking horse has tested the water, the real agenda comes out which is secret torture with no oversight, "extraordinary rendition", and ice-packed corpses being given the thumbs up.
So no, I'm not saying that you must condone torture in any situation. I'm saying that your "ticking time bomb" argument is rarely advanced in good faith, and on the rare occasion that it is the people putting it forward are, in my view, naive fellow travellers with some of the vilest criminals on Earth.
I also don't like the idea that the law can simply be disregarded in special circumstances. If there is such a circumstance, then there should be an amendment to the law; otherwise, it will be just the personal opinion of the judge that settles who has the right to use torture and in what situation. What you are suggesting does not differ from changing the law - it would still give people the chance to torture without punishment in special cases - but it would make the punishments (or lack thereof) inconsistent.
Then they can get a Presidential pardon. I don't care, frankly. If it saves thousands of lives then they should do it even if it lands them in the clink - at least they won't be tortured to death while they are in there.
Biological warfare saves lives? That's the first I've heard of it.
It's called a hypothetical.
Ah yes, the "you must be a bad person" argument.
War, of course, is hardly as simple a matter as law enforcement. "Saving lives" in a wartime situation often means killing enemies, which makes the whole moral aspect rather more ambiguous. In addition, war, to certain extent, is a game played according to rules. If both sides agree not to use torture, neither clearly has an incentive to break that agreement. The same is not true for criminals.
So the sole reason we don't torture every POW we can lay our hands on who might know something good is that we are afraid the other side will do it back to us?
Suggesting that I must simply think that "terrorists deserve it" is disingenuous.
True. You might just be refraining from it out of fear of retaliation rather than out of any moral opposition to torture as such. I don't think it's a position that smells any better but I agree with you that it is meaningfully different.
No, that isn't a better question, actually. It wasn't the government that abused the power in the case of Abu Ghraib, although there certainly are problems with how the abuses were dealt with. My impression was that it was a group of individuals that abused the power given to them. I think the question of whether all individuals given said power ended up abusing it is quite relevant; if yes, then you have a point, but if no, then that suggests torture could be used without abuses if it's use was more strictly regulated.
Oh, spare us. The US government did nothing to curb the abuses at Abu Ghraib until it was forced to by the publication of damning images that roused public opinion against them, despite being well aware of what was going on. Nor did it punish any of the rapists, torturers or murderers on its payroll to a degree even remotely proportionate to their crimes. The US government can't wash it hands of the atrocities at Abu Ghraib, nor can it be trusted with the power to torture (or for that matter to hand people over to be tortured).