"Torture persuasive" Essays and Research Papers

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    the Use Torture Ever Justified? According time in the follow Asian‚ Middle East and other countries have used torture as a tool of murder for over two thousand years. Dictators believed that torture is a way to rule their country. “Is torture ever justified?” this question was asked on ABC News in 2004. In that poll sixty three percent of respondent believed that torture should be abolished‚ thirty one percent agreed with torture but with limits‚ and seven percent agree torture without

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    Legalizing Torture Torture is always brought into discussion when a country enters into a war or a civil dispute.  It is often argued whether it is right or wrong to use torture to obtain information.  The “ticking bomb” theory is also refuted on the basis that these scenarios are rarely as dire as they seem‚ and usually even if torture was used‚ the information would most likely be obtained too late to avoid the event. In light of the recent events such as the War on Terrorism and the war in Iraq

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    violation Torture is a serious human rights violation and is strictly prohibited by international law however it still does continue in majority of the countries around the world. Torture is an act of deliberately inflicting severe pain on someone without any legal causes. Torture is not only physical pain but also includes the act of causing mental pain as well such as threats to family or loved ones. Torture has been used as a punishment to intimidate or control a person. The term torture includes

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    Torture is practiced in more than 90% of all countries in all regions of the world‚ big or small‚ dictatorship or democracy. Torture was a legitimate way to obtain testimonies and confessions from suspects for use in legal inquiries and trials. "What strikes us most in considering the medieval tortures is not so much their diabolical barbarity as the extraordinary variety‚ and what may be termed the artistic skill‚ they displayed. They represent a condition of thought in which men had pondered long

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    Definition of Torture The definition of torture is the “Deliberate‚ systematic‚ cruel and wanton infliction of physical or mental suffering by one or more torturers in an attempt to force another person to give up information‚ to make a confession‚ as part of a punishment or for any other reason.” Torture devices are tools used to inflict unbearable agony on a victim. The objectives of torture were to intimidate‚ or punish‚ Or as a tool or a method for the extraction of information or confessions

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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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    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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    of Torture in Counterterrorism Robert Reitenauer Pennsylvania State University Abstract The use of torture in the world is not a new idea. The use of torture in the world dates back to the 530 AD Roman Empire where Roman jurists viewed the virtues of torture as “the highest forms of truth (Ross‚ 2005).” The United States though has a long history of humane practices of prisoners captured during war. In the Revolutionary War‚ General George Washington ordered that his troops never torture British

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    Terrorism and Torture In the threat of national security‚ the debate on torture is confronted with legal and moral dilemmas of permissibility. In the hypothetical case of the ticking-bomb terrorist‚ torture is perceived as either an advantageous means of national security‚ or a violation of human rights. Although it is a “slippery slope‚” in order to preserve the balance between national security and civil liberties in a democratic society‚ torture should be prohibited. Considering terrorist

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