LadyKate wrote:
It was more of a rhetorical question than anything else, DE, because I just dont understand how you can think waterboarding wouldnt cause suffering or be classified as torture.
Guess we will just have to disagree.
I didn't say it wouldn't cause suffering. It does, to a degree. However, like I said, suffering can encompass a wide degree of discomfort.
As to why it wouldn't be classified as torture, because it simply isn't severe enough. Torture, as far as I'm concerned, is something so bad it can't be done to a person under any circumstances - even consent should call into question the circumstances under which it was obained and the mental state of someone who would consent to it.
Simply because something causes some degree of suffering does not make it torture. Like I've pointed out, jail causes some degree of physical suffering by being an unpleasent environment, and perhaps a lot more if Bubba takes a liking to you. It definitely causes mental suffering; that's pretty much the point of it as punishment.
For some reason though, people want to define torture as being "anything that causes suffering" without thinking about the implications of that.
To put it in terms of human empathy, I have plenty. I am not interested in seeing waterboarding used as a punishment or used for anyone's sadistic pleasure. However, my empathy stops at the point where it's some terrorist withholding information, knowing nothing is going to happen to him because he can use our principles and the distaste of the public for certain things as a shield. He's not an American citizen, nor even a foriegn criminal caught here after a lawful entry, nor even an enemy soldier worthy of protection under the various international "laws" of warfare. He purposefulyl tries to ride the line between criminal and enemy soldier in order to tie us up in our own legalisms combatting him, and thus he deserves very little consideration when it comes to information he has that will help us catch others like him.