A more interesting wording for this poll would have been "Is torture ever an effective interrogation tactic?"
If they capture enemy combatants from overseas that was actively engaging in "terrorist" activities.. maybe.. but if they just kidnap some baker of a bakery in the middle of the night, then yes. there would be a problem.
If they capture enemy combatants from overseas that was actively engaging in "terrorist" activities.. maybe.. but if they just kidnap some baker of a bakery in the middle of the night, then yes. there would be a problem.
It would be more interesting, but also more manipulative by distorting the perspective. I could have also rephrased "torture" as "Enhanced Interrogation Tactics" as a way to validate the methods performed by simply altering its phrasing. Processed Meat sounds less disgusting (but still somewhat disgusting to a few) than "Pink Slime". Policy and Contract insinuate the idea that something is Legal. It is just as much Policy for a Loan Shark to break someones kneecaps, despite the actions of the Policy not being deemed legal, unless youre a Cop. It is the phrasing that is critically important, and I am doing my best to not sugar coat it at all.
If you want, we can try a different "phrasing" in a separate poll, and instead of not sugar coating it, go the other way and sugar coat it and fluff it up as much as is possible. I think the differences in the outcomes may be quite different than those in this poll...
But really that 1 in 100 time it might be necessary, so I don't rule out it out.
All presumptive evidence of felony should be admitted cautiously; for the law holds it better that ten guilty persons escape, than that one innocent party suffer.
There certainly are scenarios where torture and all sorts of other brutalities may be justified. If there really is a ticking bomb scenario with a person in custody who knows where it is and hundreds or even thousands of innocent lives in the balance, torture might be the way to go. The thing is, life isn't an episode of 24, regardless of how much neocons want to convince us it is.
You don't have enough information to truly declare that the results of torture under these circumstances wouldn't match what was needed to be justified under your moral calculus.
you would have to be an immoral person to the core to think torture in this context is somehow justified.
You can give me all the possible scenarios you want, and it would still be immoral.