RangerDave wrote:
I meant "agree to disagree" for now, since I don't have time to engage you on the subject right now, but I promise I will do so as soon as I can. In the meantime, though, I can't pretend I don't believe our government systematically committed torture and used specious legal arguments to provide themselves with just enough political cover to get away with it. Saying "Enhanced Interrogation" feels like an Orwellian lie to me, and I can't bring myself to do it.
Well, you can believe whatever you want to believe, but this crap about "Orwellianlies" is just that - crap. You can't just call it torture and then claim any argument or classification to the contrary is "Orwellian" or "specious legal arguments" or "political cover" - all you're doing then is begging the question which is poor logic at best and an attempt to circumvent legal burden to railroad a conviction at worst.
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If you do have time to engage the subject a bit, though, I'd appreciate it if you'd specify what points you'd like me to address. For instance, based on what you just wrote, it obviously appears that you think the the vagueness of the legal standard is problematic. Anything else in particular? Do you question the facts (i.e. what we did), the characterization of those facts (i.e. was it abuse/torture in a moral or historical sense), the legal ramifications (i.e. whether it was against the law), etc.?
As far as I'm concerned there are 3 insurmountable problems with alledging "torture":
1) Every legal standard of torture, in an obvious attempt to avoid a laundry list of tortures (which would, of course, have its own problems) tries to create some catch-all. For example the
UN definition:
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...any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him, or a third person, information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity. It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in, or incidental to, lawful sanctions.
could be read so as to prohibit imprisoning people, because it can cause "severe mental suffering". It attempts to get around this by claiming that things inherent in "lawful sanctions" are excepted, but then we're reduced to an absurd situation where all you have to do is legalize something and it meets the exception, or conversely where nothing is ever excepted because its cause of "severe pain or suffering" (itself highly subjective) prevents it being legalized.
I have seen no definition that has significant advantages over the UN definition in terms of usefulness or clarity.
2) I know of no technique that has been used that is not also used on trainees at variosu SERE-type courses - including waterboarding. In fact, we've seen people subject themselves to waterboarding for various public stunts; there is even pornograpghy that includes roughly similar acts. I consider this an insurmountable problem for the "torture" argument; torture refers in part to the severity of an act. Any act that is safe enough to be used on trainees really cannot be defined as torture without using definitions that suffer from the same open-ended uselessness as in 1) above.
3) Insofar as legal justification is concerned, the fact of the matter is that there
have been legal arguments made that indicate whatever was done, was, in fact, legal, and so far the only arguments against them have been simply outraged spluttering that "ZOMG Bush Administration lawyers are justifying torture!!" Ok, well either they're saying yes, its torture legally, but there's such-and-such exception, or they're saying it isn't torture in the first place. Any argument that's it's A) torture or B) illegal can't be based on simple outrage that something "obviously" torture or "obviously" illegal is so.