Elmarnieh wrote:
You act as if you do not know that our highest law was written in man's best attempt to uphold natural law.
It wasn't. There is no natural law. There's God's law, but that's not what the Constitution was written to uphold, nor should we use that for our governance.
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If our government has labeled an action torture when done by our enemies (which it has) it is not something that law at a later date should bring into the realm of legality and attempt to dismiss it as not torture simply because a new law now allows us.
Of course we should, especially when our defining it that way in the first place served our own purposes. There's no reason at all we shouldn't "bring it into the realm of legality". Torture doesn't enjoy any special status where laws regarding it can't be changed. A torture law that is excessively vague is unconstitutional, unusuable, and should be replaced by a better, more specific law, and no one should be prosecuted under the old one. Torture enjoys no special status where normal legal requirements are dispensed with simply in order to remain consistent with past actions. Conssistency with the political positions of administrations long since out of office isn't important.
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For example we correctly call thumb screws torture and if next year a law is written to legally exempt thumbscrews from being considered torture - would this to you make it not torture?
This bears no relation to what actually happened. What actually happened was that we called waterboarding torture for our own expedience after WWII. At some point we also passed a law ostensibly prohibiting "torture" - except that the definition of torture that law contains is so vague that it is not clear that waterboarding is covered, or, if it is, that very common practices which it is ludicrous to call torture, such as putting people in a cell, is covered. What I'm saying is that if we want to call waterboarding torture, we need to define it as such clearly, and until then it is unlawful to prosecute anyone, regardless of how we've defined it in the past. Despite calling it torture after WWII, it continues to be used for training and publicity stunts, so clearly it is not torture under current law. Trainees at the sort of school where waterboarding would be used are certainly in the custody of their instructors since the instructors are responsible for their well-being in all the ways that a correctional officer or institution is.
In any case, it doesn't matter what thumb screws would be
to me. They wouldn't be torture legally, and attempting to prosecute someone for that would be unlawful.