"To torture or not to torture phil 201" Essays and Research Papers

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    Gaston Havandjian Professor Hubbell English Comp I Essay Four 11/13/12 Human Nature: Another Tool For Torture? Driving your car to a dinner with friends you go by hundreds of advertisement slogans at the side of the road. Reading them seems to be a good way to entertain your mind with all those miles ahead and since you didn’t decide what are you going to order yet you think that maybe some of them will give you an idea. One of them captures

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    acts to establish justice. Some cases such as the Prison in Guantanamo where many terrorists were sadistic torture to get information and dismantle this group that committed many crimes against society. The Bush administration used torture as an interrogation tactic. Despite President Bush negated the accusation of this immoral interrogation‚ former vice president Cheney affirmed the use of torture was a legal‚ essential‚

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    had a terrorist who knew of the attack but would not talk? How far do you go to potentially save the lives of thousands? In critical situations‚ the torture of a terrorist is mandatory. Although it is inhumane and cruel‚ torture is the only way to get information out of a terrorist who would rather die then cooperate. This is the reason why the torture of terrorists is essential to gathering crucial

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    experienced torturers are available only if torture is institutionalised. 3. Torture by unskilled and inexperienced torturers is always unjustified. 4. However‚ institutionalising torture has very bad consequences; it will mean that torture will metastasise instead of being limited to one-off cases. 5. Conclusion: Torture is never justified (one should never torture). This can be an additional argument for the theory of deontology‚ as are we professional tortures? Nowadays‚ a lot of the governments in

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    translates over to those doing the torture and those against it. Those that conduct the torture believe that they are obtaining valuable information where as those that oppose it see it as a large violation of human rights. In the above articles information was used form both scholarly and non scholarly articles. All of the articles helped to provide information about the use of torture and if it is‚ or isn’t‚ necessary. They all helped to prove that when talking about torture there is no black and white

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    atrocities are committed. They then report back to the United Nations‚ who then decides if action is necessary. In the case of Margaret Atwood’s poem “Footnote to the Amnesty Report on Torture‚” the amnesty report is delivered in a very different way. This poem is about‚ in short‚ someone’s perception of a torture chamber. It is a less-than-glorified description of the room and the events that occur there. The speaker is really just a narrator; there is absolutely nothing to learn about him/her

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    Should We Ban Torture All Together? NO‚ WE SHOULDN’T. WHY? No‚ we shouldn’t get rid of Torture because it gives certain people power‚ it can give people power over other people and can also get information out of people‚ if someone were to have a secret that you need to know one way of getting it out of them can be torture. Torture can be used in a productive and good way - e.g. If someone were to have a national secret and the good people need to know it because it can break the whole world one

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    Torture and fear in the handmaid’s tale. torture noun 1. 1. the action or practice of inflicting severe pain on someone as a punishment or to force them to do or say something‚ or for the pleasure of the person inflicting the pain. The handmaids tale is a novel by Margaret Atwood‚ It describes the life of a woman who is documenting her life as it goes on‚ As the book progresses we are able to see the amount of torture (physical and mental) that the woman of Gilead receive. Offred and other

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    states “Excessive bail shall not be required‚ nor excessive fines imposed‚ nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted”‚ however‚ torture is definitively a cruel punishment. In a treaty signed during the Convention Against Torture‚ which the United States of America signed on April 18th 1988 and ratified October 21 1994‚ the word “torture” is defined: “... The term "torture" means any act by which severe pain or suffering‚ whether

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    In “The Truth about Torture‚” Charles Krauthammer critically analyzes the John McCain‚ an individual with tremendous moral influence who was tortured by the North Vietnamese‚ amendment. This amendment would prohibit all forms of torture from being executed on war prisoners of America. In response‚ Krauthammer states that in certain scenarios‚ torture is not “just permissible‚ but also morally required.” He divides the war prisoners into the following three classifications: ordinary soldiers arrested

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