Posted on 12/17/2014 4:24:07 PM PST by Kaslin
In an interview on Sunday, NBC's Chuck Todd asked former Vice President Dick Cheney whether he is "OK" with the fact that a quarter of the suspected terrorists held in secret CIA prisons during the Bush administration "turned out to be innocent." Todd noted that one of those mistakenly detained men died of hypothermia after being doused with water and left chained to a concrete wall, naked from the waist down, in a cell as cold as a meat locker. Cheney replied that the end -- to "get the guys who did 9/11" and "avoid another attack against the United States" -- justified the means. "I have no problem as long as we achieve our objective," he said.
Charles Fried, a Harvard law professor who served as solicitor general during the Reagan administration, and his son, Gregory, a philosophy professor at Suffolk University, offer a bracing alternative to Cheney's creepy consequentialism in their 2010 book, "Because It Is Wrong." They argue that torture is wrong not just when it is inflicted on innocents -- and not just when it fails to produce lifesaving information -- but always and everywhere.
That claim is bolder than it may seem. As the Frieds note, most commentators "make an exception for grave emergencies," as in "the so-called ticking-bomb scenario," in which torturing a terrorist is the only way to prevent an imminent explosion that would kill many people. "These arguments try to have it both ways," they write. "Torture is never justified, but then in some cases it might be justified after all." The contradiction is reconciled "by supposing that the justifying circumstances will never come up."
The Senate Intelligence Committee's report released last week, for instance, argues that the CIA's brutal methods did not yield valuable information that could not have been obtained through other means. In fact, it says, waterboarding and the other "enhanced interrogation techniques" were often counterproductive, eliciting false information or discouraging cooperation.
Maybe that's true, but it's awfully convenient. If torture is never useful, eschewing it entails no trade-offs. It is a cost-free commitment.
The Frieds' argument requires no such assumption. They acknowledge that torture may save lives but reject it anyway, arguing that "there are things worse than death." They offer an example that most people would consider beyond the pale: Suppose the most effective way to elicit lifesaving information from a terrorist is to torture his child. Is that tactic morally acceptable, provided the payoff is big enough?
If not, then certain forms of torture are absolutely wrong. The Frieds go further, contending that "innocence and guilt are irrelevant to torture," which desecrates "the image of God" or, in the secular version of the argument, "the ultimate value of the human form as it is incorporated in every person."
The Frieds argue that we lose our humanity by denying someone else's, by treating him as an animal to be beaten into submission or an object to be bent or broken at will. "To make him writhe in pain, to injure, smear, mutilate, render loathsome and disgusting the envelope of what is most precious to each of us," they write, "is to be the agent of ultimate evil -- no matter how great the evil we hope to avert by what we do."
That is just a taste of the Frieds' argument, which deserves to be considered at length. It surely will not convince Dick Cheney, but it goes beyond mere squeamishness in an attempt to articulate the moral intuition underlying legal bans on torture and other forms of degrading treatment.
If the Frieds' reliance on the concept of sacredness strikes you as superstitious, consider what can happen when nothing is sacred. During a 2005 debate, John Yoo, who helped formulate the legal rationale for the interrogation techniques the Frieds condemn, was asked whether encouraging a prisoner's cooperation by crushing his child's testicles would be legal, as well. Yoo replied that "it depends on why the president thinks he needs to do that."
Yes, next question
Every time I hear about this or Abu Grahib and all the rest, I have to wonder why have I never ever been able to find anything written about how our POW are treated by Al Qaeda etc.
no one said it was moral, it was necessary.
Of course it’s morally acceptable - it’s not torture.
If God doesn’t endorse torture, why did he give us pain and suffering?
Would it have been moral for the paki government to water board some one with guilty knowledge to prevent the murders of 141 students and teachers?
Yes, if you make certain to waterboard Charlie Rangel while you’re at it. You know, just on general principle...
The only immoral part is that after getting all the information possible they weren’t taken out back and shot.
Yes.
Does Chuck ask similar questions to pro-abortion guests on his show?
Hmmm. If flying planes into buildings and killing 140 plus people in Peshwar works, does that make it morally acceptable? Seems like they pick on anybody. Regardless of whether or not they have a role. We, on the other hand seem to pick on the ones that perpetrate these acts. At least for the most part.
Do you want to descend to their level?
We were somehow able to win World War II without subjecting enemy POWs to something like the Bataan Death March.
As an aside, monotheists are all alike, Jews, Christians and Muslims...wait, no...Christians and Muslim kill to advance their causes. At least Jews are comfortable with their victim status.
Once again, as an agnostic I just don't know who is correct, but I will continue to seek truth where ever I go. :{)
Ask the Cubans— obamaumao thinks they’re OK, just like all his commie pals who torture and run police states.
See, a LEFTwing police state is a GOOD one. Stalin for example— ideal.
And we’re worried about the morality of it all...when they stone women, lop off heads, kill 140 students and ram planes into the embassies and towers and blow up innocents and on and on.
According to Dr. Mitchell, who helped develop and administer the interrogation program used on the terrorists, it probably doesn’t matter if it worked or not - the effectiveness of the program was in the leadup to the waterboarding, and getting the subject to decide to try to avoid it - Mitchell says indeed subjects will say any sort of crazy thing while actually being waterboarding to get the interrogators to stop, but will be much more likely to give valid information to try to avoid going under the procedure again - so whether it works or not is a moot question - it’s moral.....
I thought liberals were all about the ends justifying the means?
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