Dusty Ayres said:The people behind this website don't want torture from Starfleet characters, period. That's why they are doing this, and they have a good right to be concerned.
No they don't. They're getting worked up in a vacuum of information.
Dusty Ayres said:The people behind this website don't want torture from Starfleet characters, period. That's why they are doing this, and they have a good right to be concerned.
Plum said:
It gets the job done quickly. Trust me, you cut a guys balls...
Kegek is correct, in a sense, but not in another one.Kegek said:
Plum said:
It gets the job done quickly. Trust me, you cut a guys balls...
Plum, it's not the pain, it's the duration - and, naturally, the power to make it stop at any moment. Call me a traditionalist, but I still prefer classic torture techniques like dripping water right between the eyes, ad nauseam.
So simple, so subtle, so infuriating. Just set your guy up, start the water dripping, go and have a good meal, and by the time you're back he'll tell you anything. :thumbsup:
Kegek said:
Plum said:
It gets the job done quickly. Trust me, you cut a guys balls...
Plum, it's not the pain, it's the duration - and, naturally, the power to make it stop at any moment. Call me a traditionalist, but I still prefer classic torture techniques like dripping water right between the eyes, ad nauseam.
So simple, so subtle, so infuriating. Just set your guy up, start the water dripping, go and have a good meal, and by the time you're back he'll tell you anything. :thumbsup:
Cary L. Brown said:
"Waterboarding" is all the rage to talk about these days... so think about it. This is a technique that causes significant physical and psychological discomfort, but NO actual physical harm. It's actually remarkably ingenious.
That is an INTERROGATION technique, not a "torture" technique. And it works very well. I, personally, am hugely in favor of the use of such techniques to obtain information from known "bad actors."
There may be some psychological issues, but not much ongoing physical pain.
CUTE argument. But since I know you read my entire post, it's clear you're "cherry-picking" things. I'm sure you didn't miss THIS bit... did you?David cgc said:
Okay. So, it's not torture if the harm the prisoner endures is all in their head. Does that extend to other areas of life, as well? It's child abuse if I beat my youngster, obviously, but if I merely verbally abuse him, and swing at him but pull my punch so I don't make contact and he only flinches, I've not done anything wrong?Cary L. Brown said:
"Waterboarding" is all the rage to talk about these days... so think about it. This is a technique that causes significant physical and psychological discomfort, but NO actual physical harm. It's actually remarkably ingenious.
Would you be willing to recommend a disobedient child receive such harsh treatment, if it's stipulated that the only effects will be psychological?
So... did you not catch that? Or did you intentionally disregard it in the hopes that you could drag in another, totally UNRELATED topic... DISCIPLINE?TORTURE is done to cause pain and suffering... it has no other purpose or goal.
INTERROGATION is not done to cause pain or suffering. It's done to get information. It has no other goal.
Well, you may be shocked to hear this, but I agree.Do you believe the information gained is reliable? Since simulated drowning, as far as I've read, always breaks the victim, doesn't that guarantee that will produce a bundle of unreliable confessions? According to an ABC report, one of those false pieces of information was used to justify the Iraq War. Now, granted, one less claim that Iraq helped Al Quaeda develop chemical weapons probably wouldn't have prevented the invasion, but, still. That's one piece of unreliable information that ultimately led to a war that's resulted in tens of thousands of deaths, all because someone told an interrogator what he wanted to hear, after some high muckity muck declared he wanted things done fast rather than right.That is an INTERROGATION technique, not a "torture" technique. And it works very well. I, personally, am hugely in favor of the use of such techniques to obtain information from known "bad actors."
Way to turn a factually-based conversation into one based upon personal attacks and emotions.Way to write that one off. What's the ratio, do you think, of people who have committed violent crimes in response to physical damage as compared to psychological damage?There may be some psychological issues, but not much ongoing physical pain.
Recognize that one?I was not attempting to evaluate it's moral implications... Logic dictates...
Who's justifying torture?stj said:We have somebody openly justifying torture as policy but most of you people think they're the wackos? We're drowning ina sea of something, all right.
No, it's not. On either count.Starship Polaris said:Waterboarding is torture, and justifying or excusing it is contemptible.
You wanna play that game then?stj said:The ticking time bomb scenario is bad melodrama. It's nothing but an excuse. Proponents of torture always put it forward as an exception, whether fictionally as in BSG or 24, but they really mean torture as policy. That's the only way torture works as policy. But of course torture as terror also "works," even if the information is always unreliable.
Ah, that's good, actually. But I wasn't asking what you'd do if someone else got the information from him. I was asking what you'd do if you had to make the choice to attempt to get the information from him (through means that you may believe qualify as "torture") or to do nothing.If somehow the scenario happened in reality? Why probably the victim of torture would just spout off any old time-consuming false lead. Personally I would be seriously tempted to just chopper this unlikely fiction into LA. I really don't think that would work either, though.
So, Dennis, you're going to dodge the issue and refuse to answer the question of what you would do?Starship Polaris said:You've got it exactly right, stj. Defenders of torture like fiction and "what if" scenarios. They don't like facts or history, particularly recent history, because they find no support there.
Samuel T. Cogley said:
This thread is torture.
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