Originally posted by Liberator
I'm not talking a permanent or long term denial of sleep here, aldo, a week at the most. You know how bad you feel after a single day without sleep? Now imagine someone asking you questions, you probably be more inclined to tell them what they want to know.
A week is considered the beginning of long-term deprivation. Don't try and excuse the act of torture by claiming it's 'not that bad'; it's inhumane, hypocritical and immoral. Don't you know what sleep deprivation consists of? Ear-splitting white noise, 24 hour blinding lights, often combined with regular beatings, dousings in water, forced into stress positions (i.e. causing short or long term damage to muscles and extreme pain).
Not to mention that even
short term sleep deprivation results in impairment of memory. Even if it works, the information becomes increasingly unreliable the longer it's applied.
Originally posted by Liberator
Not if you didn't know that you wouldn't be denied sleep after the session.
Oh, of course - if you sign whatevers put in front of you. So what you're saying is, torture someone for a week or so. And then, if they still don't talk, they're free to go?
Surely you understand how torture is used to extract statements - prolonged extreme suffering, until the torturer gets
exactly the result they want?
Originally posted by Liberator
So you'd be okay with it if you and others knew...knew...that someone was going to kill someone else and the police didn't use psychologically harsh interogation methods to extract that that information?
How would you possibly
know unless you already had that information via evidence?
And no, I wouldn't. Because what you're suggesting is a scenario where you use effectively the same technique the criminal is using. What you describe as psycholigically 'harsh', I presume still refers to the dangerous and unreliable methods used to torture out 'information'.
Originally posted by Bobboau
ok, lets look at three completely diferent situations that start initaly the same.
there is a guy, the police know he is connected with a disapearence of someone, but they can prove it.
a)they beat a confession out of him.
this isituation the confession is useless and should be throughen out.
b)they beat not only a confession out of him, but he also discloses the location of the body and the murder weapon and tests prove his fingerprints and the victim's blood are on the knife.
this situation produces physical evedence that they would not have otherwise gotten, the confession is not relevent, but the fact that he knew were the body and the murder weapon was, and that it had his prints and the victim's blood on it, prety much prove that he was in fact the killer.
c)they beat a confession out of him, as well the location of the victim they go out to a remote streach of woods and find the nearly dead victim locked in a basement of an old hunting cabbin. the victim then identifies the man as the person who abducted them.
in this case information wich saved a life was gained in addition to damning evedence. even if passive interogation would have provided the same information it likely would not have done so before the victim died.
and as usual the confession is worthless. information gained is not.
Bob; if there's enough evidence for the police to
know the connection, then there's no need for torture in the first place. The justice system operates on a fundamental principle of innocent until
proven guilty; even if the methods you describe were legal and not prohibited under any manner of local and international convention, they would still be being used against an innocent - unconvicted - suspect.
not only that - what if they person picked up in suspicion is innocent, and beaten until they confess to whatever the police want them to say? Because that's a lot easier - and more likely to happen - in a system permitting torture than getting the correct suspect and torturing them.
[q]"Intense pain is quite likely to produce false confessions, concocted as a means of escaping from distress… KUBARK (a codeword for the CIA) is especially vulnerable to such tactics because the interrogation is conducted for the sake of information." – CIA Vietnam-era interrogation manual[/q]
For me it's simple; torture is most effective as a form of terrorism, not intelligence gathering. This 'war on terror' is suppossed to be being fought (on face value) against despotic tyrants and terrorists. Both of these moral enemies are vilified for using torture in their interests. What right can we (the west / civillisation / the forces in Iraq - any definition you apply) possibly have for using it in our own, and saying we're better than them? Because our 'cause' is just? - isn't that what
they'd say.