Let's say you waterboarded him and got put on a false trail. Would you feel bad that you didn't use a more effective technique?you'd be kicking yerself for not water boarding him. Dont even bother denying it, you're human.
Let's say you waterboarded him and got put on a false trail. Would you feel bad that you didn't use a more effective technique?you'd be kicking yerself for not water boarding him. Dont even bother denying it, you're human.
Let's say you waterboarded him and got put on a false trail. Would you feel bad that you didn't use a more effective technique?
What are your sources? Mine disagree. Here's a sample:
"If I had the choice of being waterboarded by a third party or having my fingers smashed one at a time by a sledgehammer, I'd take the fingers, no question. It's horrible, terrible, inhuman torture. I can hardly imagine worse. I'd prefer permanent damage and disability to experiencing it again. I'd give up anything, say anything, do anything." -Scylla
Burning the fingers with hot iron rods causes the fingers to send a message to the brain saying "you are being damaged". Waterboarding causes a drowning reflex to send a message saying "you are being destroyed". The latter is a more serious event with more negative utility. What grounds do you have for saying that simulated damage is not as bad as simulated destruction?
Remember, brains operate by telepresence from the skull. Pain received in the finger is perceived in the brain, not the finger.
In a perfectly ideal scenario, I agree that there's nothing immoral about that torture.
One mistake we're making here is confusing legal with moral.
It should never be legal to do that torture. If the torture is 100% legit and necessary, then do it and go to jail.
You'd go to jail to stop your kid from suffocating to death. A good CIA agent would go to jail to stop another 9/11.
The torture becomes immoral once the certainty of the 'deservedness' of the torture is brought into question. And it's also immoral to grant someone else permission to torture.
The clock is ticking. Obviously I don't suspect that they are planning in hijacking planes and crashing them into buildings or I would already have the airports on high alert. Note that we have used waterboarding to confirm information or gather confessions - another words, torturing someone towards a particular answer. If you don't already have the correct answers suspected, waterboarding is not going to be effective.Of course, but what more effective technique do I have that wont put me on a false trail? I'll gladly use it... The clock is ticking![]()
The clock is ticking. Obviously I don't suspect that they are planning in hijacking planes and crashing them into buildings or I would already have the airports on high alert.
Note that we have used waterboarding to confirm information or gather confessions - another words, torturing someone towards a particular answer. If you don't already have the correct answers suspected, waterboarding is not going to be effective.
Waterboarding gives me maybe one decent shot to ask questions under that particular technique because any repeats are likely to increase the chance of false info since the person I am interrogating becomes convinced that any answers aren't going to prevent a repeat and thus there is very little incentive to do anything but give answer that ends the waterboarding for the moment.
Since I don't even know to ask about hijacking planes crashing into buildings, how would I ever hope to ask effective questions in the one chance I have under the technique?
More traditonal techniques that would allow me to gather information over the whole time period the clock is ticking would have a better chance of narrowing down what I need to be doing to prevent the attack.
True security? Where does that exist?
Terrorists did not attack us because of the water boarding of a few terrorists after the attacks began. They dont want a US military presence in those parts of the ME they consider sacred, Saudi Arabia is the last place we should have plopped down an army for an extended stay. Now, I understand yer point and I agree with it to an extent.
So the terrorists justify murdering the innocent because we water boarded a few terrorists? Hardly... I dont have to find the justification, it exists regardless of whether or not I exist. If a terrorist was about to kill yer kid, you'd kill 'em instead and you'd be justified. That principle applies to torture, if you can shoot him to save a life, you can dunk his head in water to save a life
They want us to leave the ME, they could care less about the rest of that.
When you are waterboarded, you'll suffer no lasting consequences, afaik.
Your knowledge doesn't stretch far enough, and you appear to have ignored several of the points I made. If I remove your entire hand, I can still cause you phantom limb pain as though the fingers were being smashed, and I can smash the fingers without you feeling anything. As the perception in the brain, not the event on the finger, is what causes pain, it is the simulation of damage which makes up the torture, and the smashed fingers are only a convenient tool. Waterboarding does have lasting consequences, and is generally preferred (by torturers) to sledgehammers for the specific reason of not leaving gross physical signs, both because it is harder to prove afterwards, and because it doesn't lock out as many other options. ("You can't use stress positions if the participant's hands and feet have been amputated. You can't show your prisoner his wife being raped if you've burned his eyes out.") Finally, to torture does not mean to cripple.I do not claim this is not terrible to experience. That's why it is still torture. It would be of no use otherwise.
The difference is that when your fingers are smashed with sledgehammer, this is in no way "simulated" damage. You'll effectively, irreversibly, end up as a cripple. When you are waterboarded, you'll suffer no lasting consequences, afaik.
And why is it immoral to grant permission to water board? If I'm in the way of the bomb about to go off, you have my permission to water board the terrorist![]()
ProbablyYour knowledge doesn't stretch far enough,
Yes, yes, I completely understand that. But that was not the point I was trying to make. The point was, that while waterboarding might (not sure about that, but unless I try both, I won't be able to confirm or deny) be more painful and emotionally difficult than smashing of fingers while it is performed, the waterboarded guy won't be permanently disabled. For the rest of his life, he will be better off than the another guy, who might never hold a spoon again...and you appear to have ignored several of the points I made. If I remove your entire hand, I can still cause you phantom limb pain as though the fingers were being smashed, and I can smash the fingers without you feeling anything. As the perception in the brain, not the event on the finger, is what causes pain, it is the simulation of damage which makes up the torture, and the smashed fingers are only a convenient tool.
Which ones? Apart from fear of it being repeated?Waterboarding does have lasting consequences,
Makes perfect sense, obviously.and is generally preferred (by torturers) to sledgehammers for the specific reason of not leaving gross physical signs, both because it is harder to prove afterwards, and because it doesn't lock out as many other options. ("You can't use stress positions if the participant's hands and feet have been amputated. You can't show your prisoner his wife being raped if you've burned his eyes out.")
Sure, but which one is worse? Not to mention that our comparison is actually between:Finally, to torture does not mean to cripple.
I can't imagine why would that experience be different or less terrible than the drowning sensation he felt when he waterboarded himself?Once, while training as a lifeguard I swam laps without breathing until I passed out, so that I could know my limits.
Ah, in that case I see your point, and I think we've been talking past one another if you were comparing those, while I was arguing which forms of torture were worse as torture.Makes perfect sense, obviously.
Sure, but which one is worse? Not to mention that our comparison is actually between:
a) Torture
b) Torture AND cripple.
If he swam until he passed out (and I assume there was another lifeguard there to grab him out at that point), he wouldn't have been drowning at any point that he was conscious.EDIT: Also, I read the description of waterboarding experience given by Scylla you provided and one thing stroke me as odd. The guy claims that I can't imagine why would that experience be different or less terrible than the drowning sensation he felt when he waterboarded himself?![]()
So if you were put on the board, would you be willing to "confess" that it doesn't work if that's what would get you off the board?
So you've felt the effects. Would you be willing to give a false confession to stop them?I've been put on the board. I've felt it's effects. I have no problems with it being used because I can tell you from first hand experance that it works. If you end up in that situation, your professionals handleing you know that you already know something or prehaps even a lot of information. It's not like they picked you up off the street and did it for kicks.
I've been put on the board. I've felt it's effects. I have no problems with it being used because I can tell you from first hand experance that it works. If you end up in that situation, your professionals handleing you know that you already know something or prehaps even a lot of information. It's not like they picked you up off the street and did it for kicks.