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Torture's Political Invisibility
That U.S. military personnel -- and their superiors -- supported the torture of enemy combatants elicits disturbingly little outrage among most voters. Human beings seldom torture those they regard as like themselves. Humans need and crave community, but throughout history narrow definitions of community and exaggerated claims on its behalf have occasioned grave injustices.
The most widely accepted defense of torture is a limited one: a nation possesses a sovereign right to torture a terrorist who purportedly knows the whereabouts of a ticking time bomb. If authorities had solid reason to know that an individual possessed such knowledge, it would present a serious moral dilemma.
Torture, however, has been employed well beyond those extreme parameters. Jane Mayer argues in her new book "The Dark Side" that after 9-11 the government emphasized "interrogation over due process to pre-empt future attacks" even before any ticking bombs were even being made.
In Portland Phoenix articles, Lance Tapley points out that about 35,000 U.S. citizens are held in solitary confinement at "Supermaxes" (including Maine's). Many are subjected to torture in the form of beating, sleep deprivation and mental abuse that rival practices at Guantanamo, according to Tapley.
Torture's political invisibility is remarkable given its counterproductive consequences. Tapley points out that the torture of Supermax prisoners, most of whom are mentally ill, leads to high rates of recidivism and poses great public risk.
Frank Rich, commenting on Mayer, suggests: "torture may well be enabling future attacks... false confessions and [an] avalanche of misinformation since 9-11... compromised prosecutions, allowed other culprits to escape and sent the American military on wild-goose chases."
Some Americans do oppose torture, but even many who are opposed won't acknowledge that "we" torture individuals not privy to secret bomb information. For example, prison authorities, major media and political leaders have not challenged Tapley's specific factual assertions. Nonetheless, none have acted on his findings. Many national leaders even engage in tortuous redefinitions of torture.
These responses may have deep origins. Our world now presents shrinking employment options, rapid changes in neighborhoods and complex interdependence. Social turmoil leads many Americans, steeped in traditional notions of the U.S. as "a city upon a hill" in possession of unique truth, to embrace a problematic conviction: individuals whose differences in religion, lifestyle or ethnicity pose no direct threat really are dangerous.
The world is seen as irrevocably divided between a virtuous "us" and a dangerous "them." We would never torture or would do so only for overwhelming reasons. When victims of our torture attack or murder us, their actions merely confirm our conviction that they are "basically evil."
Greater equality and adequate security might blunt xenophobic responses to economic crisis. Nonetheless, especially in a world becoming ever more multicultural, achieving progressive reforms is unlikely without also challenging some prevalent forms of fundamentalism. These dogmatic and exclusionary creeds blind us to the limits of our own intelligence, deny opportunities for full self-development, and preclude social justice movements across racial and religious lines.
For the sake of others and ourselves, we need dialogues to explore sympathetically the deeper -- and inherently contestable -- assertions about God, truth and morality that underlie major religious, national and ethnic communities. Nations also must acknowledge that they can no longer manage all that goes on even within their own borders. "Multinational" corporations constrain national governments.
Nations should acknowledge the contributions that transnational labor and environmental activists can make by adding labor and environmental standards to the corporate protections in trade agreements. Our willingness to articulate, collectively revise and live by international civil liberties standards would also lead more of the world's people to disclose terrorist criminal conspiracies.
What if, as James Der Derian, director of the Global Security Program at Brown University, has argued, "border guards, concrete barriers and earthen levees not only prove inadequate but act as force multipliers, producing automated bungling that transform isolated events and singular attacks into global disasters." We must, he argues, "ask if such mega-catastrophes are no longer an exception but part of densely networked systems that defy national management."
Our support of torture and our desperate efforts to deny its prevalence -- like defenses of slavery -- bespeak an arrogant disregard of humans who may be different but are no less worthy. They also emanate from and intensify a false sense of security that poses increased risks to us all.


21 Comments so far
Show AllOnly cowards need to use torture. So it's no surprise that torture has been sanctioned by George Bush. Bush is worse than a political whore. He's a political pimp.
Hoa binh
The humiliation contained in the picture of a hooded Iraqi prisoner hooked up to electrical wires will cause far more damage to American interests compared to whatever was trying to be achieved.
Having a President who lies about or redefines the word torture has not been helpful.
1. Israel. A Jewish dominated MSM.
2. For decades Arabs subtly dehumanized, portrayed as fools.
3. Israel. And Now Arabs are Islamo-Fascists.
4. NeoCONS-ISRAEL, drove us into the Iraq war=One Million Dead Arabs+Arabs Now Systematically TORTURED.
5. Why? Because it promotes the Zionist agenda.
Who cares, they are Arabs. ISRAEL. TORTURE. Let's not be confused about where the hatred of Arabs comes from and the desire to see them wiped out. Evidence GazaPalestine.
Only subhumans sacks of shit torture other humans beings. The Americans have shown their true face, and it is the devils
Americans seem fine with torture if it is against a terrorist or who the media and our government deems our enemy.
Our culture is based on Bullyism. You see this in school yards so obviously kids pick up on it. It is drummed in our movies etc. Incivility and being a bully runs rampant in America. Examples include road rage, attacks on African Americans and people who take drugs only hurting themselves. The media investigating Edward's private life which is none of our business and shouldn't be front page news suddenly has become just that. Where is the rage against this? Isn't this called Slander?
Compassion is missing and civility. America is the bully of the world. We have military bases in everyone's back yard to 'keep them in line' and make sure they don't do anything we wouldn't want them to do. Torture becomes a justifiable extension to this type of thinking.
Torture is scary stuff and to hear so called 'Christian' people sanctioning this behavior is scary indeed. I have heard many so called Christians justifying torture because it protects our Freedom. Ya right.
The hatred drumming by our Government and Christians against Muslims and other cultures is scary! We have to become a country that is more compassionate of others, and restore our constitution that embraces the differences in people and accepts diversity. It is time to take back our country from the religious right who are filled with hatred towards others and the neo-cons who would sell out our principles for a buck. Do we want to become a theocracy or do we want a Republic? We need to decide before it is too late.
Take back America NOW! Restore all our Freedoms! Keep religion out of government! Fight Back!
Torture has a very long history in this country, not only for investigation and punishment of crimes, but also for labor discipline, i.e. slaves, sailors, apprentices, indentured servants, wives and children.
Torture has always been a tool used by at best, second rate rulers. That the USA has willingly lowered itself to this at the lying instigation of Dubya, Cheney, & Co. will hopefully incite in the future the same sort of awkward questions in history class that slavery now elicits.
Amendment V: "No person...shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself..."
Amendment VIII: "...cruel and unusual punishments [shall not be] inflicted..."
There is, imo, no need for academic hand-wringing; we need, first of all, even before defunding war, to restore the Constitution.
Impeachment would be nice too
Back in the fall of 2004 when George Bush came to my home town campaigning for re-election, his speech at the downtown civic center was gloriously picketed by a large crowd of local peace activists, labor people, and the other usual suspects.
My personal contribution to the street theatre was posing in a black gown and hood on top of a crate, brandishing electrical cords in one hand, and a placard sign that read "Torture is a sin" in the other. Needless to say, I am deeply opposed to torture, and profoundly ashamed of the hypocritical torture state that George Bush and his despicable lawyer enablers have successfully managed to erect in America's name during the last seven years.
I also agree with Mr. Buell's basic analysis of why torture is universally wrong, and why torture should be universally prohibited:
1. It is immoral and inhumane;
2. It seeks to justify itself by reference to a "ticking bomb" scenario that never actually arises in a real world setting;
3. It generates false confessions, false accusations, and false propaganda narratives for the state;
4. It coarsens and debases the culture and domestic corrections systems of nation-states that engage in it; and
5. Over the long term, torture generates a continuous flow of radicalized former torture victims (and their loved ones and polititical supporters), many of whom are potential terrorists suddenly far more prone to seek violent righteous vengeance back against the torture state itself, even if such action might well mean martyrdom.
That said, John Buell's succinct, timely lament that "Torture's political invisibility is remarkable" merits further discussion.
Like it or not, modern America has two major political parties, mediated by a mass media spectrum that continually filters out and marginalizes some issues (like torture) that are too jarring and unpleasant, simply too much in stark contradiction with the popular narrative of America the good, America the just, America the beacon of hope and liberty.
Yet, sometimes really unsavory misbehavior at odds with the narrative of American exceptionalism by high government officials(like blow jobs in the Oval office) do slip through the filter nonetheless, and enter into the public discourse. As the great social critic Molly Ivins once quipped about torture specifically, it really is okay for grown ups to talk about such things.
Even though Gitmo, Alberto Gonzales' secret legal memos to Bush, the Abu Ghraib photo scandal, and the blowback anti-American demonstrations and riots in the Muslim world that left scores dead and injured were all matters of historical record in the public domain by the fall of 2004, the Kerry presidential campaign uttered not a single word about the Geneva Conventions or torture as official US policy - not one single word - letting George Bush skate totally free of all potential political accountability. How on earth did this happen?
In hindsight, it appears to me that the loyal opposition Democrats inside the DC beltway chose to hold John McCain's coat on the whole torture issue, in order to create the appearance of a bipartisan front against the Bush/Cheney White House.
Congress condemned and outlawed torture, and Bush promptly enacted the measure with an appended signing statement that neutralized the prohibition. Later legislation (that McCain and many Democrats supported) outlawed torture techniques for the US military, but simultaneously authorized the same styles of torture when carried out by the CIA or CIA surrogates instead.
So here we are in 2008. Much as I hate to admit it, with John McCain now the GOP nominee to replace Bush, I see no possible way for Barack Obama or the Democratic Party to cogently raise torture as a "moral values issue" in the current presidential campaign.
The historical moment to hold George Bush and the GOP torture enablers politically accountable has past.
We are now stuck with the invisibility, and stuck with the inevitable blowback.
Molly Ivins must be tossing and turning angrily in her grave.
Bill from Saginaw
Torture, mistakenly, is viewed in light of who the "good" guys or the "bad" guys are. When "good" guys torture "bad" guys it is not thought to be so bad. On the other hand, when "bad" guys torture "good" guys then it is reprehensible. When will the jingoistic smoke of retribution and nationalism clear enough for all of us to see the blood on our hands? When will the obscuring mirror of victimization be turned about enabling us to see ourselves as others see us?
"Molly Ivins must be tossing and turning angrily in her grave."
Molly is typing furiously as we read this, I'm just sorry we can't be privy to what she is saying.
Oh please. The truth is that a significant number of Americans relish the idea of torture. If they didn't it wouldn't be featured so regularly on tv shows and in films, employed by the "heroes" to circumvent spineless left wing humanitarian instincts and get the bad guys back. It isn't even about the ticking bomb scenario. It's about feeling good because people you hate are hurting. Torture is politically invisible because it's a populist vote winner. That's why the Democrats go along with it, and why Obama will too. The average guy, pious and church going though he may be, just doesn't see it as morally infensible, not when those subhuman criminals and Arabs and other perverts who would otherwise be protected by laws enacted by effete liberals are getting what they deserve because of it. Just as policies that pander to racism and hatred of immigrants are vote winners in Europe, even when the votes belong to pious christians there too. Tackle the inability of liberalism to civilise the average Joe and you might just do away with capital punishment and brutalising prison conditions as well as torture. But I don't think it can be done: brutality is just a basic part of the human psyche, and democracy can't help but court it for its vote.
Thank you John Buell - and you are a Mainer, too - may more speak out in the Media such as you have.
Torture is practiced in US Prisons - always has been - I know. The practices of imprisoning those accused of victimless crimes for long sentences - the isolation - the unchecked and encouraged violence rampant in our prisons - Sadistic Guards - Rapes of females & males - the outrageous numbers of prisoners we have incarcerated. How many families broken up and impoverished?
Most of you 'normal' people haven't got even a clue as to the environment inside a prison - it will literally kill your soul. These people in solitary confinement...for years ! in Guantanamo...Official Torture techniques...it's a Horror worse than anything Kafka wrote about.
And now..it's "invisible"?? We are doomed, indeed.
America's worst elements - which have grown exponentially over the last 50 years as our commericialized, God-Loves-Us-More-Than-The-Rest-Of-The-World mentality has grown - blossomed under the rule of the neo-cons these last 7 years. They appealed to our lowest common denominator, and they found it very rich soil indeed to sow their rotten seeds. Or rather, to simply nourish the poisoned elements already growing.
America is simply fulfilling it's true destiny. We are a nation of cowboys, of "fuck the rest of the world" nationalistic egos, of lazy and intellectually uninterested goombahs who look for the path of least resistance always, of couch potatoes who are more interested in Britney's pussycat than in the rule of law.
America is the darkness. It is the blackhole that draws all light into it from the rest of the world. It is the empire, the conquerer, the bully, the military behemoth that prefers the steel fist over the gloved hand. And it will eventually fall like all evil empires do, under the weight of its own greed, avarice, smugness, and hypocrisy.
The sooner the better.
The Old "US and them" Once again. That child like tendency for people to want to think they are special. Be it "Gods Chosen people" or the "Worlds one Indispensible Nation" it is that belief that leads to the worlds greatest of crimes.
There is Only WE. Like everything else we are all connected.
Torture does not reflect how bad the victims are as when Rumsfeld suggested "These are the worse of the worse". Torture reflects on the character of those who are committing the torture.
The ticking bomb scenario is not a reason to torture people. What it is would be a Group of people who WANT to torture others looking for a reason to do so.
militantliberal is right that torture has a long history, if I may clarify my earlier post I was noting only that Arabs are the current victims and from whence this comes.
Native Americans were the first to be tortured.
Slaves.
Then Central and South Americans.
Asians.
Now Arabs.
Not a blonde hair in the bunch, no blue eye or fair skin.
Time for a new motto:
Instead of 'In God We Trust'
to 'The Devil Made Me Do It'
get real- torture (violence) works. escape from the morilizations and other "value" judgements, it works. i don't see any armed struggle in the u.s. no masses of people stopping tanks and storming police stations and cia offices. we are all (me too!) afraid of the pain and fear and hopelessness that the powerful threaten us with. all powerful people, all, eventually resort to vilence and intimidation. in the u.s. with its pampered and coddled populace it simply takes the mention of incaceration, violence and torture to keep everyone in line. everyone. do you want to be the next jose padilla. see it worked.
lisa3210peace August 19th, 2008 7:27 pm
militantliberal is right that torture has a long history, if I may clarify my earlier post I was noting only that Arabs are the current victims and from whence this comes.
Native Americans were the first to be tortured.
Slaves.
Then Central and South Americans.
Asians.
Now Arabs.
Not a blonde hair in the bunch, no blue eye or fair skin.
__________________________________________________________________________
Actually you are Wrong. This kind of think caused the assasination of Malcolm X by the NOI. Meet us, the blonde haired, greene eyed followers of al Islam, harrassed at every turn post 9/11, unless we were in Istanbul or Bursa and such, this is the same as saying everyone from the ME[most of Israel exempt]are Arabic. Turks aren't Arabs, Iranian's aren't Arabs. This country is way too F$$Ked up anymore, when[IF]the MURDERER is gone I do hope the dollar comes back up a bit, Amsterdam, or Dusseldorf, maybe Berlin. I hope aka husband gets through okay upon return from Turkey through JFK, the Department is harrassing all, Citizens too. They are way far out of control, ICE and such, the MURDERER reading the Far LEFT LEANING LIBERAL Blogospheres trapped emails and using our damn posts! Shaking that drunken coke addled finger at Russia, "You have illegally invaded a Sovereign Nation, you cannot Occupy that Nation! This is against all this world stands for!! Geez Louise, he could have mixed it up a bit yet he cannot even pronounce Nuke-U-lar, biggest ass WMD about.
He just wrote his ass a PD, I think #12888 to exempt them all, now they are immune from prosecution for all they've done? Uh-UH, not as long as I have a breath in my body, Nope, No damn way. The PD was not an implication that this was connected to the immunity, that PD was for another thing. It did have to do with Torture or trap and tap. I have a screen shot AT&T batch emailed to all of their employess right after we got screwed on FISA/retroactive immunity, HR6304, "Ms. Suspicious, she doesn't have anything to hide....", I'd put it up but they'd fucking moderate me CD the best moderator's in town. The guys friend works for AT&T and got a screen shot and emailed it to his friend which he happily shared. I want to try and see if it gets through, I'll do it after this post.
OldBadger is onto something. The Christian right has made Bush's criminality possible with its strong support for wars of aggression, slaughter of hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians, torture, massive fraud and war profiteering by presidential cronies, irresponsible environmental policy, disastrous economic policies including massive deficit spending and huge tax breaks for millionaires and big corporations leading to a recession, and other horrors. We have seen their moral values in action, and they have a lot more to do with Nietzsche, Machiavelli and Muhammad than with Jesus.
OldBadgertoo writes (and AlexLawyer concurs) "The truth is that a significant number of Americans relish the idea of torture..... It's about feeling good because people you hate are hurting. Torture is politically invisible because it's a populist vote winner."
I challenge the accuracy of these broad assertions. I doubt that if the issue of torture were ever openly discussed fully and then put to a vote, that advocacy of torture would be a majoritarian vote winner with the American public.
At a subjective level, I wholeheartedly agree that there is a cathartic reward for torturers, that they "feel good" internally by hurting and debasing folks they hate and demonize. Individual members of lynch mobs no doubt experience a similar emotional rush. Some potential rapists also probably gain some measure of subjective gratification when titillated by violent rape scenes as depicted in movies and on television.
But that is a far cry from claiming it is some self-evident truth that a significant number of Americans would love to take part in a lynching, or that sadism and misogyny are not really psychologically deviant behavior, but instead are normal traits of average people (even average males). Do you really think a majority of the US electorate would vote to not only legalize lynching and forcible rape, but authorize government officials to undertake the lynching and the raping in the name of the law?
The point I was trying to make in my earlier post was that the 2004 presidential election presented a golden opportunity to actually test the "truth" of OldBadger's dark and depressing view of what populism would embrace in contemporary American culture.
George W. Bush campaigned against Al Gore in 2000 as a born again Christian pledged to restore morality to the Oval Office. Four years later when Bush stood for re-election, the entire world had been made painfully aware that the conditions of detainee confinement in US military prisons included piling and posing naked Arab men in shit stained, homoerotic tableaus, taunting their religion and sexual identity as a warm up for possible waterboarding and/or electroshock interrogation.
John Kerry and the Democratic Party should have offered to debate George Bush on torture policy any time, any where - indeed, why not in front of a whole mega-church congregation made up of evangelical Christians, all of whom incessantly trumpet their adherence to traditional moral values? What would Jesus say about torture, after all?
This pristine "moral values issue" was handed to the Kerry campaign upon a silver platter, and they gave Little George and the GOP's torture enablers a complete pass. Perhaps the Dems' beltway brain trust did a little poll testing, and suspected OldBadger might indeed be on to something. But if that was the tactical logic that came into play in 2004, then that stupid partisan calculation marked a tragic betrayal of what democracy, and what government by consent of the governed, is supposed to be all about.
The historical moment for political accountability came and passed.
Now, of course, we may never know if OldBadger's dismal view of American populism is true or false.
Bill from Saginaw