Torture ineffective
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Re: Torture ineffective
Is the solitary confinement of prisoners in the US prison system torture?
Is forced physical exertion and mental stress of boot camp torture?
Is forced physical exertion and mental stress of boot camp torture?
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Do they combine it with sleep deprivation, stress positions, temperature extremes, etc... and allow it to go on for months?Embar wrote:Is the solitary confinement of prisoners in the US prison system torture?
What an idiotic question. Absolutely moronic.Embar wrote:Is forced physical exertion and mental stress of boot camp torture?
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Re: Torture ineffective
Nice dodge.
Your premise seems to be its the frame of mind of the recipient that defines torture. I don't buy that at all.
Your premise seems to be its the frame of mind of the recipient that defines torture. I don't buy that at all.
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Embar come on, boot camp is something you sign up for.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Hardly. I gave the question the response it deserved. Durrr.... are we torturing our soldiers during boot camp??? durrr.....Embar wrote:Nice dodge.
My premise was perfectly clear but you still seemed to miss it. Imagine that. It has nothing to do with the "frame of mind of the recipient" and I never implied anything like that.Embar wrote:Your premise seems to be its the frame of mind of the recipient that defines torture. I don't buy that at all.
Repeating... even something as mundane as being forced to stand for hours in a stress position is torture when combined with other techniques and it goes on for weeks, months, and years.
It's clear that you know nothing about what we've done.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Which is EXACTLY my point. Lurker seems to maintain (and you've bought into it) that itsreally isn't the process an individual is subjected to, its the mindset of the individual. If you volunteer for the treatment, its not torture. But the same or similar treatment, when applied involuntarily, suddenly becomes torture.Harlowe wrote:Embar come on, boot camp is something you sign up for.
That's like saying ice cream really isn't ice cream unless the person whos eating it says it is.
And Lurker is still dodging the solitary confinement question.
Last edited by Embar Angylwrath on Wed Apr 22, 2009 3:41 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Hey there,
If I was chained with my hands to the ceiling and my feet to the floor and left there for hours or even days at a time, I'm pretty sure I would call it torture. When the doctor came in to measure the swelling in my legs to make sure that there would not be any "permanent" damage, I would hope he would call it torture too. Stress positions are more than just uncomfortable. I've been trapped underwater before and I can tell you that there is not anything quite like the unbridled terror that comes with not being able to breath or escape. Then there are all the other techniques that I imagine are quite nasty when used together.
As a citizen, I'm outraged at what my country has been doing during the past administration and am very relieved that the current one has ended these acts. How can we lead the world if we can't even abide by something as universally accepted as the Geneva Convention? What good is it to secure (allegedly) our nation by sacrificing its core values? Personally, I would rather run the risk of dying in an attack then see my nation place its morals upon the alter of security.
If I was chained with my hands to the ceiling and my feet to the floor and left there for hours or even days at a time, I'm pretty sure I would call it torture. When the doctor came in to measure the swelling in my legs to make sure that there would not be any "permanent" damage, I would hope he would call it torture too. Stress positions are more than just uncomfortable. I've been trapped underwater before and I can tell you that there is not anything quite like the unbridled terror that comes with not being able to breath or escape. Then there are all the other techniques that I imagine are quite nasty when used together.
As a citizen, I'm outraged at what my country has been doing during the past administration and am very relieved that the current one has ended these acts. How can we lead the world if we can't even abide by something as universally accepted as the Geneva Convention? What good is it to secure (allegedly) our nation by sacrificing its core values? Personally, I would rather run the risk of dying in an attack then see my nation place its morals upon the alter of security.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Hey there,
This the case with a lot of things. Voluntary sex is great, but it's called rape otherwise.Embar wrote: But the same or similar treatment, when applied involuntarily, suddenly becomes torture.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Nice posts Baginns. Well said.
Now back to the idiocy...
Now back to the idiocy...
I didn't dodge the solitary confinement question. I answered it and you completely missed my point. That goes a long way to explaining why you think I'm chalking it up to frame of mind. Try reading it again.Embar wrote:And Lurker is still dodging the solitary confinement question.
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Re: Torture ineffective
The closer anaology would be if someone is fucking you, and you turn around and fuck them back, that someone can't claim rape...
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Ok Lurker, then what you're saying that its the combination that makes it torture, not the individual acts themselves? Its a question of amount?
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
I wouldn't say "amounts". I'd just say that the cumulative affect of multiple techniques makes it torture.
It's easy to laugh off making someone stand for hours a day. Hell, Rumsfeld stood for hours a day volunatarily and it wasn't torture, right? It's less easy to laugh off what actually went on. The person wasn't just standing for hours a day. The standing was combined with all the other authorized techniques in a neverending rotation, for weeks and months and years, until the person was destroyed as a human being.
It's easy to laugh off making someone stand for hours a day. Hell, Rumsfeld stood for hours a day volunatarily and it wasn't torture, right? It's less easy to laugh off what actually went on. The person wasn't just standing for hours a day. The standing was combined with all the other authorized techniques in a neverending rotation, for weeks and months and years, until the person was destroyed as a human being.
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Re: Torture ineffective
This is how you differ from 'patriots' like Embar, in that they will cheerfully throw YOUR rights on the fire and lose their sense of moral values to save their lives from a mostly imaginary threat.I would rather run the risk of dying in an attack then see my nation place its morals upon the alter of security.
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Re: Torture ineffective
So you're saying that its ok to apply those techniques, but only in moderation? Are any of those techniques that in and of themselves constitute torture?Lurker wrote:I wouldn't say "amounts". I'd just say that the cumulative affect of multiple techniques makes it torture.
It's easy to laugh off making someone stand for hours a day. Hell, Rumsfeld stood for hours a day volunatarily and it wasn't torture, right? It's less easy to laugh off what actually went on. The person wasn't just standing for hours a day. The standing was combined with all the other authorized techniques in a neverending rotation, for weeks and months and years, until the person was destroyed as a human being.
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Before we engage in a hypothetical discussion of whether A, B or C are torture when taken in isolation, can you agree that what we did in reality (rotation of A,B,C etc. for weeks, months and years) was torture?
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Re: Torture ineffective
You might like Fighting for American Manhood, by Kristin L. Hoganson. There's a limited copy on Google Books if you want to have a look.Partha wrote:Maybe the spooks were just getting their jollies putting a sand nigger to the water?
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Re: Torture ineffective
Sleep deprivation and being screamed at for hours? While those may not be "torture" in the Spanish Inquisition sense that we tend to invoke, they do cause things like PTSD.Embar Angylwrath wrote: So you're saying that its ok to apply those techniques, but only in moderation? Are any of those techniques that in and of themselves constitute torture?
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Re: Torture ineffective
No, we can't agree, because I don't agree. Why does my agreement have anything to do with the question I asked. I sense another dodge coming on.Lurker wrote:Before we engage in a hypothetical discussion of whether A, B or C are torture when taken in isolation, can you agree that what we did in reality (rotation of A,B,C etc. for weeks, months and years) was torture?
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
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Re: Torture ineffective
Another dodge? Oh... you must mean your attempts to divert the conversation with hypothetical questions and bad analogies.
Sorry. If you think we just made some people "uncomfortable" then you are ignorant about what we did, and if we can't agree on basic facts about what we did there's not much point delving into hypotheticals.
Sorry. If you think we just made some people "uncomfortable" then you are ignorant about what we did, and if we can't agree on basic facts about what we did there's not much point delving into hypotheticals.
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Re: Torture ineffective
I wasn't ascribing any moral justification......nor was I "excusing" anything. I was simply pointing out that if you want to say an interrogation method was "ineffective" then you need to examine all of the evidence.....not bits and pieces.Lurker wrote:Ha! You sure do set a high bar when you want to excuse something as dreadful as state sponsored torture.Kulaf wrote:Unless/Until we see full transcripts of everything that occured there is no way to determine the effectiveness of the technique.