Originally posted by: Riprorin
Jesus was without sin. He was competely blameless.
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
For thousands? What about one thousand? One hundred? Ten? What if you could save one life by torturing another?Originally posted by: Riprorin
I think that it would be immoral to let thousands die rather than causing discomfort to one.
What if a known child molester/killer abductes a child. His brother knows where he is but won't tell authorities. Time is of the essence because in the past the he kills within 24 hrs and the clock is ticking.
In this scenario, I would exert mental and/or physical discomfort save a life.
How much discomfort, Rip? Break a thumb? Cut it off? Cut off a hand? An arm?
Where is the line drawn as to how much discomfort is acceptable?
You posted the UN defintion of torture. It draws the line at "severe pain or suffering".
Just wondering: If incarcerating someone causes him severe mental pain or suffering, should we let him go?
Where would you draw the line, Rip?
I figure there are 3 possible reasons for your refusal to answer...
[*] You wouldn't draw a line, and you don't want people to know it.
[*] You actually don't condone torture, but you're doing what you normally do...saying things to get people to think you're a dick. (that's kind of weird, but you seem to enjoy doing it)
[*] This simple question has you stumped.
Which one is it, Rip?
Give me a scenario.
I'm inclined to say 'no', because I'm asking in general, not under specific examples. But I won't, instead let's just use your 'child molester/brother' scenario from above. Where would you draw the line and why?
I would apply the minimum level of physical or mental discomfort to extract the information.
Any maximum level of discomfort you would be willing to use?
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Link
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
For thousands? What about one thousand? One hundred? Ten? What if you could save one life by torturing another?Originally posted by: Riprorin
I think that it would be immoral to let thousands die rather than causing discomfort to one.
What if a known child molester/killer abductes a child. His brother knows where he is but won't tell authorities. Time is of the essence because in the past the he kills within 24 hrs and the clock is ticking.
In this scenario, I would exert mental and/or physical discomfort save a life.
How much discomfort, Rip? Break a thumb? Cut it off? Cut off a hand? An arm?
Where is the line drawn as to how much discomfort is acceptable?
You posted the UN defintion of torture. It draws the line at "severe pain or suffering".
Just wondering: If incarcerating someone causes him severe mental pain or suffering, should we let him go?
Where would you draw the line, Rip?
I figure there are 3 possible reasons for your refusal to answer...
[*] You wouldn't draw a line, and you don't want people to know it.
[*] You actually don't condone torture, but you're doing what you normally do...saying things to get people to think you're a dick. (that's kind of weird, but you seem to enjoy doing it)
[*] This simple question has you stumped.
Which one is it, Rip?
Give me a scenario.
I'm inclined to say 'no', because I'm asking in general, not under specific examples. But I won't, instead let's just use your 'child molester/brother' scenario from above. Where would you draw the line and why?
I would apply the minimum level of physical or mental discomfort to extract the information.
Any maximum level of discomfort you would be willing to use?
Just to clarify then, there are no ethical limits to interrogation, in your opinion; anything goes.Originally posted by: Riprorin
You can't get much useful information out of a dead person.
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Just to clarify then, there are no ethical limits to interrogation, in your opinion; anything goes.Originally posted by: Riprorin
You can't get much useful information out of a dead person.
Originally posted by: BBond
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Just to clarify then, there are no ethical limits to interrogation, in your opinion; anything goes.Originally posted by: Riprorin
You can't get much useful information out of a dead person.
Anything, it seems, short of torturing someone to death?
Is that where you'd draw the line then, Rip? At death?Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Any maximum level of discomfort you would be willing to use?
You can't get much useful information out of a dead person.
Originally posted by: Gaard
Is that where you'd draw the line then, Rip? At death?Originally posted by: Riprorin
Originally posted by: Gaard
Any maximum level of discomfort you would be willing to use?
You can't get much useful information out of a dead person.
Uh, Jesus didn't die on the cross, Rip. That's just more disinformation perpetuated the Church of rome.Originally posted by: Riprorin
We know what Jesus did: He sacrificed his life and endured humiliation and torture to save humanity from their sins.
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
If you want to allow torture, you need to provide a morally relevant difference between subjects that may be tortured and subjects that may not be tortured. If you cannot do so, you must either support torture in all cases or oppose it in all cases. Still waiting...Originally posted by: Riprorin
What if a known child molester/killer abductes a child. His brother knows where he is but won't tell authorities. Time is of the essence because in the past the he kills within 24 hrs and the clock is ticking.
In this scenario, I would exert mental and/or physical discomfort save a life.
Originally posted by: cquark
Originally posted by: CycloWizard
If you want to allow torture, you need to provide a morally relevant difference between subjects that may be tortured and subjects that may not be tortured. If you cannot do so, you must either support torture in all cases or oppose it in all cases. Still waiting...Originally posted by: Riprorin
What if a known child molester/killer abductes a child. His brother knows where he is but won't tell authorities. Time is of the essence because in the past the he kills within 24 hrs and the clock is ticking.
In this scenario, I would exert mental and/or physical discomfort save a life.
Good point.
The other problem is that the situation above is an exceptional one. How often do the good guys have enough information to capture the bad guy but not that one little extra piece of information they need to find the bomb/rescue the child that they correctly know that only the bad guy has?
Not very often. Even in the unlikely event that the good guys have enough info to get the bad guy but not enough to find the bomb, the bad guy probably doesn't have the information since terrorists typically work in isolated cells without direct knowledge of such things.
The more likely outcome of supporting torture is that the "good guys" do a sweep of the right demographic and torture some of them into a making up a good but false story.
Wouldn't it have been tempting to torture some of the group of suspected terrorists about the Maryland arsons? However, after further investigation, the perpetrator didn't turn out to be a group of terrorists, but one of their own security guards.
http://www.jrrobertssecurity.com/security-news/security-crime-news0013.htm
Torture is not restricted simply because it's immoral, but also because it's inaccurate, as the government can use it to produce confessions from innocent people.