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THE Torture Thread (merged)

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:04:26

BTW, I love the way the Google advertising-machine cued in on this with something about "pain at the pump"!
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:06:52

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', 'W')e are hard wired to do bad things to others. This is why the elite believe we need to be governed...they are saving us from ourselves.

Then why have the elite practiced so much torture throughout history . . . right down to Bush II?
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Roccland » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:09:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', 'W')e are hard wired to do bad things to others. This is why the elite believe we need to be governed...they are saving us from ourselves.
Then why have the elite practiced so much torture throughout history . . . right down to Bush II?

Because they believe in what Jack said.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Serial_Worrier » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:12:02

The most disturbing thing is that someone is probably being tortured in some basement in a neighborhood you live in. Think about it!
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:20:11

It certainly disturbs me, Warrior.

The horrors we know about are only the iceberg's tip compared with what happens and is never discovered.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:21:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', 'W')e are hard wired to do bad things to others. This is why the elite believe we need to be governed...they are saving us from ourselves.
Then why have the elite practiced so much torture throughout history . . . right down to Bush II?
Because they believe in what Jack said.

I don't make the connection, because I don't view torture as saving us from ourselves. I see it as having the opposite effect.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Roccland » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:27:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', 'W')e are hard wired to do bad things to others. This is why the elite believe we need to be governed...they are saving us from ourselves.
Then why have the elite practiced so much torture throughout history . . . right down to Bush II?
Because they believe in what Jack said.
I don't make the connection, because I don't view torture as saving us from ourselves. I see it as having the opposite effect.

Those who torture lie about the moral trade off...there is no moral trade off...we are hard wired to torture and cheat...we just lie to make it sound as though it is for a higher good.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:32:55

I agree about the lying part, Roccland.

Not so sure about the hard-wiring.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby threadbear » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:41:48

I flew off the handle and smacked somebody once. It felt good. I hope this doesn't put me in the same league as Alberto Gonzales.

Torture though? It's so awful I don't even want to imagine it. I don't think it's normal or natural, regardless of what people say. It is the pathological response of a pathology within a society.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Jack » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:43:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') don't think torture is always a means to an end---or, if it is, that the means is justified by the end in 99.9% of cases. To me the barbarous and cowardly act of torture transcends almost any reasonable "end."

No - it transcends almost any reasonable end from your perspective. That does not mean it exceeds it from the perspective of the torturer, or those who direct the torturer.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'T')he ends to which torture are often put are not a "greater good." Think gangsters, for example. I bet if you asked a gangster practicing torture if he's doing it for a "greater good," he'd laugh in your face.

Again, no. In the case of the gangster, the greater good might be an example to others not to squeal, or to pay their drug debts, or not to steal from the gang or gangster. Unless you don't regard a sawed-off baseball bat a useful torture implement? They're easier to conceal in an attache case that way...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'T')orture is practiced not only to extract information (often for nefarious or meaningless purposes), but also for revenge or sheer enjoyment.

Revenge can easily be redefined as the greater good. Sheer enjoyment merely requires that the torturer values his (or her) gratification above the pain of the victim.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Roccland » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 00:49:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') agree about the lying part, Roccland. Not so sure about the hard-wiring.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')uman behavior is a product of our genes and our environment (culture). Jay has often pointed out that culture is only relevant so long as it has the ability to punish. Many of the dieoff.org viewpoints are difficult to envision let alone accept (like a 50%+ human dieoff in the coming decades). Yet Jay Hanson has connected many dots with research and insight difficult to refute. Below is Jay's farewell summary to his dieoff listserv from 2003. It offers a unique perspective on societies possible reactions to a decline in energy availability.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he human brain comes from the factory with a set of empirically designed pre-programs that have historically (over a billion years) tended to maximize "inclusive fitness". One of these pre-programs was specifically designed to inhibit self-knowledge with respect to social issues. By remaining unaware of our true motives, we are much more effective at deceiving others. We evolved this way because the more convincing liar has the advantage in sexual competition (e.g., Bill Clinton).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ndividuals come from the factory pre-programmed to seek inclusive fitness in ways that have actually worked in the past. In modern society, economic growth serves as a proxy for increasing fitness. This is why we "feel good" when we make money, buy a new SUV, and so on. Unfortunately, when our pre-program determines that inclusive fitness is best served by violating social norms, we will violate those norms and seek a fitness advantage. This explains the higher crime rates in our lower income populations and why nations go to war.
Societies can remain reasonably stable as long as their economies continue to grow -- continue to serve inclusive fitness for the majority. But when economic growth becomes physically impossible -- as it must -- societies will disintegrate into anarchy and war, as individuals and groups seek advantage.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here are absolutely no humane solutions available to the ruling elite because it is impossible to solve the problem of human corruption (i.e., the genetic pre-program to violate norms and seek advantage). Unfortunately, the best the poor can hope for is a painless death.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby hamlet » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 02:12:09

We torture because our genes enable us to derive pleasure from it.

Torture serves social fitness, helps determine in-groups and out-groups, hierarchies, dominance, etc.

You don't need to teach a kid to pull legs off a spider or the wings off a fly. He does it spontaneously, joyously. A gaggle of junior high girls destroy the fat girl with taunts. Your brother gives you the indian rope burn, monkey bumps, a wedgie. College freshmen glued to lampposts. A leader endorses water-boarding... Nobody teaches them to do this, it comes naturally.

Ultimately, torture is fun. We're going to see a lot more of it when anarchy ensues, and social norms break down. We will return to our natural state, with scant supervision. If you are old, small, or weak, you're gonna want something in your pocket to level the playing field.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby dinopello » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 02:18:59

Torture means we have too much spare time on our hands. Other animals are too busy foraging for food, sex and sleep.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Ayame » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 02:53:59

Hey Heinkein,

You should read these line of children books they have here in the uk Horrible HistoriesYou learn a lot like people having molten lead poured down their throats in Roman times and people being boiled alive in oil etc. Last time I felt queasy and throughly disgusted with the human species reading through one.

Oh god I just found this website on top 10 horrible methods of execution Wish I never woke up this morning now.

Anyway I don't think all torture can have a point because how could we then explain happy slapping incidents on strangers, farm workers throwing chickens into building walls and stomping on them for fun, and as someone mentioned tying fireworks to cats/dogs. Unless the point is that they are feeling angry/frustratated and it makes them feel better by causing pain for someone/something else. I personally witnessed as a small girl (and I will never forget) two boys my age picking up a grasshopper and repeatedly impaling it onto a cactus for absolutely no reason, and they seemed to derive some perverse pleasure from doing so.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby alokin » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 04:03:49

I found the responses of you guy pretty scary. That PO aware people who should have a bit more in their brains than Mr everyoneelse, think this way.
Usually people who torture are moraly broken often tortured themselves. It has always been a mean of those who are in power.

The US is so far away from what is was meant to be, torture now seems to be simply a part of live. All what were the values of our Western civilization is gone.
If you want to learn about torture and if it is the way you think or not look at the pages of amnesty international.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Micki » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 04:30:49

There are of course many "justifications" or reasons for using torture;
- Getting the truth out of someone (highly questionable outcome)
- Getting someone to agree to something (highly questionable if it is agreement in heart that is desired)
- Making an example
- Sadistic pleasure or satisfaction from revenge
- Childrens play. The latter one more becasue of age as the child hasn't developed sense of what we consider right or wrong.
Usually a child who get good interaction with animals is more unlikely to want to harm that or another animal.

What is interesting though how perception of pain has changed into modern times. Today we have painkillers, medicin, dentists, hospitals etc. If you go back just a little in time, people often had to live large part of their life in pain and because of this pain didn't used to be thought of as anything strange.
It could be tooth ache that kept you awake everynight for years, if could a broken leg that didn't heal well and so on.
So a normal beating would generally not be considered as harsh as it is today.
Today, becasue we have such man ways of avoiding pain, we have grown extremely afraid of it.

For our Swedish visitors I can recommend all of Peter Englunds books. He is a historian who spent quit a lot of effort on looking int thigs like what was humour, what was scary, what did people think about death etc. in the past.
One of the anecdotes that stuck to mind becasue it is so perverse with our measures, was about a little boy who had caught a cat and was slownly grilling it alive. As the cat cried out in pain, people gathered around and laughed. This had been described in a letter and in a dry way as if there was nothing strange about it.

And you probably see the same pattern in the world today.
Those of us who have had good lifes are generally more concerned both about animal and human wellfare than people from poor conditions that themselves have experienced or seen hardship. They are sort of desensiticed since birth.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby alokin » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 06:11:34

Abandoning torture and death penalty, acknowledging human rights are the cornerstones of what we are calling Western Civilization. That's what all the revolutions where fought for.

Children must be educated that they fit in the society. There is no excuse for torture.

Maybe some individuals saw too much brutal films and this influenced the thinking and what is thought to be normal.

Micky you're right that pain is now unnormal but toothache and torture are two different things! With toothache you're lying in your bed feeling safe only this bloody tooth aches horribly. Torture is about breaking someone in a way that if the victim survives he will never be the same mostly he will not be able to live a normal live anymore, which is possible after the painfull tooth extraction.

I thought our society has some values left at least some very basic.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 08:51:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jack', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') don't think torture is always a means to an end---or, if it is, that the means is justified by the end in 99.9% of cases. To me the barbarous and cowardly act of torture transcends almost any reasonable "end."

No - it transcends almost any reasonable end from your perspective. That does not mean it exceeds it from the perspective of the torturer, or those who direct the torturer.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'T')he ends to which torture are often put are not a "greater good." Think gangsters, for example. I bet if you asked a gangster practicing torture if he's doing it for a "greater good," he'd laugh in your face.
Again, no. In the case of the gangster, the greater good might be an example to others not to squeal, or to pay their drug debts, or not to steal from the gang or gangster. Unless you don't regard a sawed-off baseball bat a useful torture implement? They're easier to conceal in an attache case that way...

You're splitting hairs, friend Jack. Obviously, any behavior under the sun can be "justified" by the perpetrator. The person whose intestines are being unwound out of his body might have a different point of view. Or a generally civilized society in which the event takes place.

Gangsters torturing other gangsters to teach "lessons" is not a "greater good." It's a manifestation of a localized evil. Part of the same filthy stew.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Heineken » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 09:03:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') agree about the lying part, Roccland. Not so sure about the hard-wiring.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')uman behavior is a product of our genes and our environment (culture). Jay has often pointed out that culture is only relevant so long as it has the ability to punish. Many of the dieoff.org viewpoints are difficult to envision let alone accept (like a 50%+ human dieoff in the coming decades). Yet Jay Hanson has connected many dots with research and insight difficult to refute. Below is Jay's farewell summary to his dieoff listserv from 2003. It offers a unique perspective on societies possible reactions to a decline in energy availability.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he human brain comes from the factory with a set of empirically designed pre-programs that have historically (over a billion years) tended to maximize "inclusive fitness". One of these pre-programs was specifically designed to inhibit self-knowledge with respect to social issues. By remaining unaware of our true motives, we are much more effective at deceiving others. We evolved this way because the more convincing liar has the advantage in sexual competition (e.g., Bill Clinton).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ndividuals come from the factory pre-programmed to seek inclusive fitness in ways that have actually worked in the past. In modern society, economic growth serves as a proxy for increasing fitness. This is why we "feel good" when we make money, buy a new SUV, and so on. Unfortunately, when our pre-program determines that inclusive fitness is best served by violating social norms, we will violate those norms and seek a fitness advantage. This explains the higher crime rates in our lower income populations and why nations go to war. Societies can remain reasonably stable as long as their economies continue to grow -- continue to serve inclusive fitness for the majority. But when economic growth becomes physically impossible -- as it must -- societies will disintegrate into anarchy and war, as individuals and groups seek advantage.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here are absolutely no humane solutions available to the ruling elite because it is impossible to solve the problem of human corruption (i.e., the genetic pre-program to violate norms and seek advantage). Unfortunately, the best the poor can hope for is a painless death.By Jay Hanson... Jay Hanson and Dieoff.org:TOD
Too many people don't fit the factory mold, Roccland. I know I don't. I'm the type who rescues earthworms stranded on sidewalks.

Yes, I've sometimes lied and deceived, but it's TORTURE we're discussing here. Miles away from a simple lie.
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Re: Torture . . . oh, what monsters we be

Postby Roccland » Thu 28 Aug 2008, 09:07:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roccland', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'I') agree about the lying part, Roccland. Not so sure about the hard-wiring.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ocieties can remain reasonably stable as long as their economies continue to grow -- continue to serve inclusive fitness for the majority. But when economic growth becomes physically impossible -- as it must -- societies will disintegrate into anarchy and war, as individuals and groups seek advantage.
Too many people don't fit the factory mold, Roccland. I know I don't. I'm the type who rescues earthworms stranded on sidewalks. Yes, I've sometimes lied and deceived, but it's TORTURE we're discussing here. Miles away from a simple lie.

Jay writes above that the reason people are good is because they are well fed. When that changes people get nasty.

When well fed people torture...they lie about the morality of it.
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