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And, it's well-documented that it doesn't work.
Bruce In Bangkok wrote: I would disagree with you. In one case I witnessed the individual who "confessed" admitting that he was beaten until he confessed, in a second, an individual who stated he witnessed the act said that it worked and several descriptions I have read of WW II British agents in Occupied France specifically state that the Germans gained sufficient information from partisans that they were able to capture others in the group. As well there are fairly well documented cases in Russia of people who, for some reason, confessed to outlandish crimes and were executed. Generally attributed to torture. In short the "it doesn't work" argument needs a lot of qualification to be wholly correct. Oh, I don't think so. Crime confessions obtained by torture, where the primary proof of guilt is the confession, doesn't make the info accurate. Only that you punished somebody for a crime. That covers the Russian incident you refer to... As for the Nazis, well they may have caught some partisans by using info gained by torture, but they did not eradicate the Resistance... in fact the Resistance grew steadily. And in the end, who won? So yeah, the evidence seems very strong that torture doesn't work.... thanks Bruce! DSK |
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