Jonathan Schell on torture
Here is Jonathan Schell, in an article that will appear in The Nation, on why torture is wrong:
Torture is not wrong because someone else thinks it is wrong or because others, in retaliation for torture by Americans, may torture Americans. It is the torture that is wrong. Torture is wrong because it inflicts unspeakable pain upon the body of a fellow human being who is entirely at our mercy. The tortured person is bound and helpless. The torturer stands over him with his instruments. There is no question of "unilateral disarmament," because the victim bears no arms, lacking even the use of the two arms he was born with. The inequality is total. To abuse or kill a person in such a circumstance is as radical a denial of common humanity as is possible. It is repugnant to learn that one's country's military forces are engaging in torture. It is worse to learn that the torture is widespread. It is worse still to learn that the torture was rationalized and sanctioned in long memorandums written by people at the highest level of the government. But worst of all would be ratification of this record by a vote to confirm one of its chief authors to the highest legal office in the executive branch of the government.
Torture destroys the soul of the torturer even as it destroys the body of his victim. The boundary between humane treatment of prisoners and torture is perhaps the clearest boundary in existence between civilization and barbarism. Whether the elected representatives of the people of the United States are now ready to cross that line is the deepest question before the Senate as it votes on the nomination of Alberto Gonzales.
2 Comments:
It is so insane that anyone has to waste their breath spelling out "why torture is wrong".
Ask any child who has seen the horrors of war. Unfortunately, there are many such children. Not only is torture insane...truly insane...so is the question:
"Is torture wrong?" But some don't get it and are therefore suffering a form of insanity themselves even if they are not the direct perpetrators. And so, others must "waste" their breath in a valient attempt to counter the horror of it all.
duh
Thanks, as always for a great blog.
It is insane, isn't it? And the US thinks of itself as a civilized country. (I didn't mean that in an anti-American way, but on human rights issues, your leaders are really giving your country a bad name, even moreso than before).
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