Originally posted by: DaiShan
in principle I am for them, but in practice I would have to oppose them, and here's why. Say we go to war and a government captures a few of our commandos, then they decide to use truth serum to extract information that could jeopardize the lives of countless soldiers, and Americans. Also would the truth serum apply to domestic terrorists as well? American citizens? what is the definition of the term terrorist? Could it not be misconstrued to be used on say a "hacker" someone who hacks websites, steals information, what about someone who commits a violent crime, should we use it on him to determine if he knows about anything else that we can get him or someone else for? Where do you draw the line? if there isn't a definite line it opens the door for a potential snowball effect IMO
Originally posted by: Skyclad1uhm1
Is there a chance of failure? If you have a 100% chance of it working then I don't really see a problem, unless it has nasty side effects.
If however it doesn't work 100% of the time, you cannot trust the information you get from it, and even if it's true 99% of the time I oppose it, for the simple reason that Bin Laden will pick his most trusted people from those who are resistant against it, and you still won't be able to get the information you need.
Sure, you will get the truth most of the time, but not when and where it matters.
Originally posted by: DaveSohmer
I would support it if there was compelling evidence that someone knew something that could save lives. For example- convicted spies or senior members of terrorist groups. I think the goverment should have to go before a judge and present evidence just like they do for search warrants, wire taps, etc. Someone correct me if I'm wrong but I'm pretty sure it is against the Geneva convention to use drugs on POW's.
LOL!Originally posted by: shinerburke
Use them, get all the info you can, then follow the drugs up with a truth bullet to the head.
Originally posted by: DaiShan
in principle I am for them, but in practice I would have to oppose them, and here's why. Say we go to war and a government captures a few of our commandos, then they decide to use truth serum to extract information that could jeopardize the lives of countless soldiers, and Americans. Also would the truth serum apply to domestic terrorists as well? American citizens? what is the definition of the term terrorist? Could it not be misconstrued to be used on say a "hacker" someone who hacks websites, steals information, what about someone who commits a violent crime, should we use it on him to determine if he knows about anything else that we can get him or someone else for? Where do you draw the line? if there isn't a definite line it opens the door for a potential snowball effect IMO
what is the definition of the term terrorist?
Yup...there's no reason not toOriginally posted by: sward666
Hell yes, use them. No-brainer. But do they work?
Originally posted by: hammer09
Actually, while it does generate some false information, it still gives you some good leads. As for it not working on "hardened" al-Qaeda, I think you're wrong about that. The Israeli are very good at what they do and have manage to break so very committed people. Shaking in combination with other stuff is supposed to be working very well for them.
Originally posted by: Skyclad1uhm1
Is there a chance of failure? If you have a 100% chance of it working then I don't really see a problem, unless it has nasty side effects.
If however it doesn't work 100% of the time, you cannot trust the information you get from it, and even if it's true 99% of the time I oppose it, for the simple reason that Bin Laden will pick his most trusted people from those who are resistant against it, and you still won't be able to get the information you need.
Sure, you will get the truth most of the time, but not when and where it matters.