A false confession, that is. Here's the long and short of it:
11/2/2007 1:23:37 PM
I'm confused.Torture always seems to work in comic books.
11/2/2007 1:26:59 PM
It just seems like lazy police work. Whether he in fact owned the device or not, it seems like there should have been follow on to the "confession" of said device.Who in their right mind feels secure knowing that some guy with a communications device was caught, without anyone following the trail back to find out why he had, what he intended to do with it, who was he working with, etc.I didn't read any of the additional documents, maybe this procedure was followed...which begs the question, if the FBI/CIA couldn't find shit about this man, would they then not start to wonder what he confessed to?Police state ftl.
11/2/2007 1:34:21 PM
11/2/2007 1:42:53 PM
I've always thought that torture wouldn't work anyway. When people inflict pain upon you, you'll tell them anything they want to hear if it will make them stop hurting you. How are they going to know if it's a lie or not? Who's to say that you won't simply make something up, just so that they'll stop hurting you? And if they're already biased against you and suspect you of something anyway, are they really going to believe you when you say that you don't know what they're talking about?
11/2/2007 1:43:29 PM
But it works for Jack Bauer!
11/2/2007 1:48:43 PM
spöokyjon, why do you hate FREEDOM?Just wait till all the torture supporters and apologetics tag team your ass (4-5 users come to mind, but I won't name them).
11/2/2007 2:11:26 PM
The key here is that they didn't actually torture him, they just told him that they would (quite possibly a bluff?)... Nothing cruel or unusual or anti-Geneva about that.
11/2/2007 2:13:29 PM
^except thats the whole point. You cannot use torture or the idea of torture because each man has a different tolerance level. Someone else might have made it through some of the torture and then confessed the same thing. End result = bad intel.
11/2/2007 2:15:23 PM
11/2/2007 2:22:36 PM
here is one of them ^^^well i hope and dearly wish that one day there is a big robbery on your neighbourhood, and your wife/daughter/mother is threatened with rape, and she ends up falsely confessing because of that.and then i hope you will be standing by the street corner saying:
11/2/2007 2:22:57 PM
I'm not saying that the intel is going to be reliable. I'm not saying that this is a good thing for the FBI to be doing. I'm just saying that it's not really torture.[Edited on November 2, 2007 at 3:39 PM. Reason : .]
11/2/2007 3:36:26 PM
Torture is not limited to physical acts.
11/2/2007 3:40:15 PM
The alarming thing here, which no one is mentioning or talking about in the "MSM," is that the government put up a PDF of the court transcript originally. A blogger got a hold of it the first day. The second day, the court removed the PDF document and put up a new one with all of the nasty torture stuff removed. They said it was a matter of "national security." They are trying to get the blogger to hand it back over, but he says he won't.
11/2/2007 3:41:16 PM
11/2/2007 3:42:49 PM
11/2/2007 3:47:57 PM
11/2/2007 4:28:28 PM
so, if I am made uncomfortable by someone threatening me with jail time if I don't tell them what I know about something, is that torture? I mean, jail time would be torturous to me. It would be horrible and painful. So clearly, threatening me with that would be torture, under many of these definitions...
11/2/2007 7:02:51 PM
Are you this obtuse on purpose?'uncomfortable' =/= 'severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental'Regardless, jail time is not torture because it is the legal punishment for a crime. Jail time is the end result of a legal process, usually involving a judge and jury.
11/2/2007 7:50:15 PM
hey, being in jail would cause me severe metal pain. I'd probably get assraped and beat up, too. maybe even shanked a couple times. That's clearly physical pain. So, the definition still fits.Oh, and what if the the punishment for a crime by law were waterboarding? Would that be OK, since it was the end result of the legal system?
11/2/2007 7:52:49 PM
In the United States, waterboarding would probably fall under cruel and unusual punishment. So, yes, it would still be torture.Regardless, waterboarding or jail time as punishment for crime (assuming due process) is not the same thing as waterboarding to coerce information.[Edited on November 2, 2007 at 8:00 PM. Reason : ]
11/2/2007 7:59:34 PM
but, what about threatening jail time. that's the point here. The OP talked about coercion using the threat of torture, and that is what I am getting at.
11/2/2007 8:02:23 PM
Again, it depends on the context.In the right context, the threat of torture is torture.In a different context, the threat of torture is not torture.In the right context, the threat of jail time probably could be considered torture.In a different context--say contempt of court--the threat of jail time would not be considered torture.
11/2/2007 8:05:58 PM
unfortunately, laws aren't written to consider context. They generally say "act X is OK" or "act X is not OK." I agree with you, btw, that the threat of torture isn't always torture.
11/2/2007 8:09:44 PM
11/2/2007 8:15:44 PM
except that we can't take it to a jury in order to consider what is "torture" when we are interrogating a suspect.
11/2/2007 8:19:31 PM
if I was in a position where my family would be harmed if i didnt "cooperate" you can be damn sure i would "cooperate"meaning, if I believed my family was in danger, and the only way to remove that danger would be to tell my captors the lie(s) they wanted to hear .... I would tell whatever lies they wanted to incriminate myself -- and possibly others -- that i was required to do.
11/3/2007 2:30:28 AM
I'd pull a Keyzer Sozay and murder my family in front of my captors
11/3/2007 11:29:21 AM
but that's not really surprising.
11/3/2007 3:58:51 PM
but what about aaronburro trolling this thread? would us having to read his stupidity be considered torture?
11/3/2007 6:17:35 PM
considering I'm not trolling, I guess that doesn't really count, does it?
11/3/2007 6:37:14 PM
11/3/2007 6:42:49 PM
the fact that you don't get the point of that shows how stupid you really are. Some people claim that threatening someone with torture is, in fact, torture. The definition of torture includes causing mental pain. Now, shut the fuck up and go back to being your normal racist fucking self.
11/3/2007 6:45:37 PM
racist? hahahahahahahahahahahahhahah you really play the troll part well. Good job, sir.Next you are going to whine about how parents torture their kids because they threaten them with 'time out' go fuck yourself and take the stupid trolling else where.
11/3/2007 6:49:48 PM
I don't think I'm alone in saying that my outrage over the whole torture issue would be a lot less if said torture were being applied on different people.Torture to get a confession out of a guy who might have done something is stupid and wrong, for exactly the reasons mentioned in this thread.Unfortunately I have to make a slight departure from Constitutional norms -- not that I necessarily think that those norms apply to foreign combatants, but I like to stick to them as much as I can all the same -- on the question of reasonable doubt here. There was a reasonable possibility that this Hizgazy fellow hadn't done anything. Hell, I don't even think you'd need a court to tell you that.But if tomorrow we caught al-Zawahiri just over the Afghanistan border, we can say with resolute certainty that he has done bad shit to us and has knowledge of bad shit to be done in the future. Some of you might try to argue against me, but I think most will agree that there is no reasonable doubt about these things. Now, were he a US citizen or even a lawful combatant as recognized by the Geneva Conventions, I would still say, "Well, we gotta give him a trial to establish whether that doubt exists." But he isn't those things, so I'm inclined to be less strict.So I say have at him.You're not looking for a confession, first of all -- you're past that point -- you're looking for intelligence. And in these circumstances I'll wager that it's a hell of a lot easier to just spill the truth than it is to concoct lies, especially when either one has an equal chance of getting the torture to stop. Hizgazy was in an unfortunate position of having no guilty truth to spill, so because of incompetent implementation of the procedures he had to lie. This would not be the case of someone known beyond reasonable doubt to have useful information.So, in a nutshell: quit torturing low-level peons and people who might not be guilty. Save it for the known quantities.
11/5/2007 1:00:23 PM