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Insight From a Reader

Gabe Rottman,
Legislative Counsel,
勛圖眻畦 Washington Legislative Office
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May 29, 2007

A reader responds to the . Not just eloquent but spot on:

In real life the problem is that you typically don璽砂┤ know what you don璽砂┤ know, so there is no such tension. [Indeed, if the Bush administration were a Wagnerian opera, 璽玳how can we do meaningful review when you don璽砂┤ know what you don璽砂┤ know?璽玲 would probably be the leitmotiv.] If torture is permitted in the hypothetical 璽玳ticking time bomb璽玲 scenario, then one starts to perceive every terrorism investigation as a ticking time bomb. Indeed, the entire 璽玳war on terrorism璽玲 can be framed as a giant ticking time bomb scenario 璽玲 and in a sense that璽砂┬ the only scale at which one can be readily know that there is a ticking time bomb. Thus, the more relevant question isn璽砂┤ whether torture should be used in the 璽玳ticking time bomb璽玲 scenario that is usually hypothesized as a thought experiment, but whether it should be used as a routine matter in terrorism investigation.I think this question must consider whether using torture as a routine matter is consistent with American ethical norms and whether torture has a proven record of effectiveness in interrogation. On both grounds, the answer seems to be 璽畋no.璽砂

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