The line for torture

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

Moderator: Alyrium Denryle

Post Reply
User avatar
Sam Or I
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 1894
Joined: 2002-07-12 12:57am
Contact:

The line for torture

Post by Sam Or I »

Where do you personally draw the line for "torture" for interagation purposes? What methods are and are not considered torture to you?
User avatar
Singular Intellect
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2392
Joined: 2006-09-19 03:12pm
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Re: The line for torture

Post by Singular Intellect »

Sam Or I wrote:Where do you personally draw the line for "torture" for interagation purposes?
If I were going to bother torturing anyone, you may was well go all out. The person I wanted information from wouldn't get touched. It would be their loved ones they'd be forced to watch get tortured instead, whereas torture would be infliction of pain and serious injury.
What methods are and are not considered torture to you?
At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
User avatar
Vendetta
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 10895
Joined: 2002-07-07 04:57pm
Location: Sheffield, UK

Post by Vendetta »

Since information obtained by torture is useless in any case, as the victim will say anything they think the captors want to hear, I would draw the line somewhere before the start.
User avatar
Cao Cao
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2011
Joined: 2004-07-20 12:36pm
Location: In my own little world

Post by Cao Cao »

If psychological methods (not including things like brainwashing) are considered torture, I would draw the line at that.
Physical torture is only really useful to people with a predetermined agenda, which is useless for genuine interrogation.
Image
"I do not understand why everything in this script must inevitably explode."~Teal'c
User avatar
wolveraptor
Sith Marauder
Posts: 4042
Joined: 2004-12-18 06:09pm

Post by wolveraptor »

At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
That's pretty broad. I mean, even fining someone could fall under that, if it's a large enough sum to cause significant distress. I don't believe that falls under the common use of the word. There must be some sort of threshold that separates punishment and torture.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."

- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
User avatar
Knife
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 15769
Joined: 2002-08-30 02:40pm
Location: Behind the Zion Curtain

Post by Knife »

Well, one can make an argument that locking some one up in prison is torture, so you've got a large, broad spectrum to work with.

Inflicting pain to illicite information is pretty much useless, so I'd throw it out. Now phycological effects are even meaner than physical ones if you ask me, but I don't know the success rate of such things.

So; physical torture for info, no. Perhaps for deterent though. Phycological torture? I really don't know. Off the top of my head, making some asshole listen to Britney Spears doesn't really bug me much, but a total mind fuck type thing would probably.
They say, "the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots." I suppose it never occurred to them that they are the tyrants, not the patriots. Those weapons are not being used to fight some kind of tyranny; they are bringing them to an event where people are getting together to talk. -Mike Wong

But as far as board culture in general, I do think that young male overaggression is a contributing factor to the general atmosphere of hostility. It's not SOS and the Mess throwing hand grenades all over the forum- Red
User avatar
Napoleon the Clown
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2446
Joined: 2007-05-05 02:54pm
Location: Minneso'a

Re: The line for torture

Post by Napoleon the Clown »

Bubble Boy wrote:At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
From what I've heard, getting handcuffed can be painful. Getting tasered or mace sure as hell is painful. Getting a ticket can bruise a non-neglegible percent of the population. I guess police torture more people per year than the kind folks at Guantanamo Bay.


IMO, torture begins at the point where pain (physical or otherwise) is being inflicted on the victim for no other point than to cause distress. Submission holds fail to fall under this because the intent is restraint. Of course, if the hold isn't being used in an actual fight or sparring match it can be torture. There's more to it, but I don't care to list the various cases where it is or isn't torture. It'd be a damn long list.

Torture is one of those shades of grey things, really. There are just too many variables for one single definition.
Sig images are for people who aren't fucking lazy.
User avatar
Stark
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 36169
Joined: 2002-07-03 09:56pm
Location: Brisbane, Australia

Post by Stark »

What kind of interrogation? Sorry, the police have rules and they better stick to them: assaulting or harming a suspect can ruin a case, and rightly so.

I imagine, however, you're talking about all this 'zomg terrorist' business. I hear rules and laws don't apply to that situation.
Enforcer Talen
Warlock
Posts: 10285
Joined: 2002-07-05 02:28am
Location: Boston
Contact:

Post by Enforcer Talen »

I like psych games, myself. The Army Manual on Interrogation talks about raising or lowerign fear level, playing good cop bad cop, saying your friends are betraying you, your parents are ashamed of you, or you can help your family, etc.

Lots of games you can play. You just need to reinforce certain premade dispositions/loyalties - no need to take his fingers off with bolt cutters.
Image
This day is Fantastic!
Myers Briggs: ENTJ
Political Compass: -3/-6
DOOMer WoW
"I really hate it when the guy you were pegging as Mr. Worst Case starts saying, "Oh, I was wrong, it's going to be much worse." " - Adrian Laguna
User avatar
Singular Intellect
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2392
Joined: 2006-09-19 03:12pm
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Re: The line for torture

Post by Singular Intellect »

Napoleon the Clown wrote:
Bubble Boy wrote:At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
From what I've heard, getting handcuffed can be painful.
Hence why I specified 'serious' pain. Not 'pain' that qualifies as merely being a whiny bitch.
Getting tasered or mace sure as hell is painful.
If either of those options was employed in an interrogation scenario, they'd certainly qualify as torture in my estimation.
Getting a ticket can bruise a non-neglegible percent of the population.
Then maybe those people should obey the law. I fail to see how any rational person can confuse lawful punishment intented to keep society safe with 'torture'. :roll:
I guess police torture more people per year than the kind folks at Guantanamo Bay.
Only if you insist on being obtuse and interpreting my comment outside of what should be an extremely obvious context.
User avatar
CmdrWilkens
Emperor's Hand
Posts: 9093
Joined: 2002-07-06 01:24am
Location: Land of the Crabcake
Contact:

Post by CmdrWilkens »

Well lets start this whole thing by very broadly (and quickly) categorizing torture into two categories: Psychological and Physical. Now obviously this ignores when the physical can cause psychological and vice versa btu I'm going to assume that anytime you reach the point that phgysical actions cause lasting psychological issues or vice versa then you've corssed the line.

Physical: If you are inflicting physical harm in the attempt to force a person to give information so that the harm can end then there really is no point. Let me in fact narrow this down even more, if you are going to use physical force then its just pontless. The captive (regardless of whom) is going to almost automatically start to block out parts of their mind simply to avoid dealing with the physical assualt (its one of the reasons we curl into the fetal position, our mind just stops working full throttle to mount a defense or evasion) and then you have an immensly less valuable source of information. Simply put any time that the intent is to create physical harm which the subject would surrender informaiton to have the harm stopped is going to be ineffective AND crosses the line. The line here is when it is no longer restraint but harm, if you have to body tackle the guy to keep him in his cell fine but you can't go slapping him around to get him to talk.

Psychological: Now this is a tricky category because we understand so litle about long term consequences of mental damage and how it starts etc. Honestly this is the category that most interrogaiton should fall into but doesn't because it takes time. You have to ask questions a thousand times, alter day/night cycles, offer regularity and positive reinforcement for quality information and irregularity when information is haphazard. The worry is when are you affecting too much a person's long term mental state. I think the line here has to be that when the psychological pressure manifests itself as lasting physical pain (not just a one day tummyache or bowel problmes because meal times changed) OR when the intent is to degrade the captive then it is torture. the latter is the tougher category because there has to be a bad cop playing against the good cop as there must be negative to go with positive reinforcement but the negative can't be greater than the positive.
Image
SDNet World Nation: Wilkonia
Armourer of the WARWOLVES
ASVS Vet's Association (Class of 2000)
Former C.S. Strowbridge Gold Ego Award Winner
MEMBER of the Anti-PETA Anti-Facist LEAGUE

"I put no stock in religion. By the word religion I have seen the lunacy of fanatics of every denomination be called the will of god. I have seen too much religion in the eyes of too many murderers. Holiness is in right action, and courage on behalf of those who cannot defend themselves, and goodness. "
-Kingdom of Heaven
User avatar
Napoleon the Clown
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2446
Joined: 2007-05-05 02:54pm
Location: Minneso'a

Re: The line for torture

Post by Napoleon the Clown »

Bubble Boy wrote:At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
That's a pretty fucking vague definition, Bubble Boy. Clarification would have taken, what, all of a minute?
I fail to see how any rational person can confuse lawful punishment intented to keep society safe with 'torture'.
I'm gonna be a dick and point out the flaw with this: Going by that, it isn't torture to rip out someone's fingernails for committing some crime, so log as that's the punishment described by law.
Sig images are for people who aren't fucking lazy.
User avatar
Singular Intellect
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2392
Joined: 2006-09-19 03:12pm
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Re: The line for torture

Post by Singular Intellect »

Napoleon the Clown wrote:
Bubble Boy wrote:At any point where serious pain is inflicted, physically or physcologically, I'd call that torture.
That's a pretty fucking vague definition, Bubble Boy. Clarification would have taken, what, all of a minute?
It's only 'vague' to someone who thinks tickets and handcuffs qualify as torture. :roll:
I fail to see how any rational person can confuse lawful punishment intented to keep society safe with 'torture'.
I'm gonna be a dick and point out the flaw with this: Going by that, it isn't torture to rip out someone's fingernails for committing some crime, so log as that's the punishment described by law.
If and when I assert any law enacted by any society is always fair and just, be sure to let me know. :roll:

All the examples you provided were inadaquate and had no relation to torture. The intentions and purposes behind any act have significant bearing on defining the act. That's why if someone shoots their lover in a heated arguement, it's called murder. But if someone shoots a violent criminal intent on murder, it's called self defensive. The act itself did not change, only the intent behind it.

Using one of your examples, that's why tazering a violent offender trying to attack a police officer is law enforcement, while tazoring someone tied up in a basement for kicks or information would be considered torture.

This isn't fucking rocket science.
petesampras
Jedi Knight
Posts: 541
Joined: 2005-05-19 12:06pm

Post by petesampras »

Vendetta wrote:Since information obtained by torture is useless in any case, as the victim will say anything they think the captors want to hear, I would draw the line somewhere before the start.
Whilst I believe that torture has no place in a civilised society, I'm not sure that this is entirely true.

In terms of 'confessions' I'd agree, but in terms of intelligence information...

You (the torturers) could well have a situation where you know some information, but not all. You start by asking about stuff you do know. If they answer incorrectly, you apply whatever torture method you are using. Provided they are uncertain about what you do or do not know, and the torture you use is effective, they are going to be more inclined to answer correctly. You won't be able to trust the information 100%, but at the same time, it could be used to give you leads on things. Especially if you have multiple victims to corroberate what is said.

There are better reasons why torture is wrong. Such as the fact that it is a violation of basic human rights and devalues the society that endorses it.
weemadando
SMAKIBBFB
Posts: 19195
Joined: 2002-07-28 12:30pm
Contact:

Post by weemadando »

petesampras wrote:
Vendetta wrote:Since information obtained by torture is useless in any case, as the victim will say anything they think the captors want to hear, I would draw the line somewhere before the start.
Whilst I believe that torture has no place in a civilised society, I'm not sure that this is entirely true.

In terms of 'confessions' I'd agree, but in terms of intelligence information...

You (the torturers) could well have a situation where you know some information, but not all. You start by asking about stuff you do know. If they answer incorrectly, you apply whatever torture method you are using. Provided they are uncertain about what you do or do not know, and the torture you use is effective, they are going to be more inclined to answer correctly. You won't be able to trust the information 100%, but at the same time, it could be used to give you leads on things. Especially if you have multiple victims to corroberate what is said.

There are better reasons why torture is wrong. Such as the fact that it is a violation of basic human rights and devalues the society that endorses it.
Intelligence gained from torture is as useless as a confession. They will still give you any answer to any question you ask. They just want the pain to stop.
User avatar
Lord Poe
Sith Apprentice
Posts: 6988
Joined: 2002-07-14 03:15am
Location: Callyfornia
Contact:

Post by Lord Poe »

weemadando wrote:Intelligence gained from torture is as useless as a confession. They will still give you any answer to any question you ask. They just want the pain to stop.
That's not universally true. If someone kidnapped your kid, and you tortured him to gain your child's location, you'd know soon enough if the intel was good or not.
Image

"Brian, if I parked a supertanker in Central Park, painted it neon orange, and set it on fire, it would be less obvious than your stupidity." --RedImperator
User avatar
Singular Intellect
Jedi Council Member
Posts: 2392
Joined: 2006-09-19 03:12pm
Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Post by Singular Intellect »

Lord Poe wrote:
weemadando wrote:Intelligence gained from torture is as useless as a confession. They will still give you any answer to any question you ask. They just want the pain to stop.
That's not universally true. If someone kidnapped your kid, and you tortured him to gain your child's location, you'd know soon enough if the intel was good or not.
In other words, if the information is verifiable and the victim knows it, then by the logic they "just want the pain to stop" they'll be more inclined to give that information. Which is typically the point for torture in that type of scenario.
User avatar
Starglider
Miles Dyson
Posts: 8709
Joined: 2007-04-05 09:44pm
Location: Isle of Dogs
Contact:

Post by Starglider »

weemadando wrote:Intelligence gained from torture is as useless as a confession. They will still give you any answer to any question you ask. They just want the pain to stop.
Multiple posters keep repeating this fallacy like a chorus of broken records. Do you think professional interrogators don't know this? Do you think the CIA planners, who've spent countless billions researching the best ways to interrogate subjects, don't allow for this? Do you really think you know more about what people will say under torture than experts who train for it for years and then do it every day?

I am not defending the use of torture; generally the limited gains from using it in the very few truly justifiable situations are not worth the very serious dangers (and to a lesser extent, PR fallout) of compromising a blanket ban. But while amateurs may use it for the wrong reasons, experienced professional interrogators have a very good idea of when torture is likely to get them useful information and when it is likely to produce useless confabulation. Petesampras begins to outline this above but I'm sure intelligence agency training manuals around the world cover the subject in exquisite detail.
Post Reply