killing someone serves an end goal that can only be achieved via killing; to remove them from society and the gene pool. Torture is different. The only function unique to torture is "prolonging death" - the other functions (information) are not only pretty poor in quality, but also can be achieved via other means. There are reasons to kill. There are no reasons to torture.
That would be at least close to a valid point if torture actually got accurate information. But it doesn't. And that's not how we're using it. And it doesn't address the after-affects.
The real irony here is that the same people supporting US torture and saying that it's different because "we're not torturing due to beliefs or religion" are (in other threads) consistently relating the "war on terror" to religion. Very rarely people say "Iraqis" or "Afghanis" here. It's "muslims".
But once again, a large part of it is that once you find yourself making these distinctions about motivation for torture, it relies on everyone to making the
exact same conclusions about the motivation. Because otherwise they won't have to listen when you come crying that they're torturing people...or maybe even your soldiers. It creates an ambiguity that will always cause problems.
Everyone always thinks their
reason to torture is just. Otherwise they wouldn't be doing it.
I do not find them equal but I find them both disgusting and approve of neither. It's not about 'moral equivalents', it's about rule of law and the precedent that we set that other countries follow. Even if it was about 'moral equivalents' something being
more moral than another action doesn't make it moral or ok.
Plus once again, you're assuming that torture will get the information AT ALL. Though I hate to turn the discussion towards effective vs. not (because it doesn't fucking matter, it's torture and it's illegal), it can't be ignored that the motivation doesn't matter if the action isn't effective.
I think it's a different part of the same discussion. It just has a nasty habit of being what gets talked about the most when it's included, even though it's the least important to the underlying problems.
Yeah I know.
This has nothing to do with the analogy, you know exactly what I meant.
If we're really going to be anal retentive about this,
you can inject cocaine, at which point it is still better than heroin, but still
not a thing to 'sample'