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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines various authors’ opinions to see whether or not torture is justified. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVTrture.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
possible to understand why someone might consider torture, especially if they are sure that the other person has information vital to their survival, the survival of their family or the
nation, its still hard to justify-it reduces the torturer to the level of the person hes interrogating. However, many people are now suggesting that in some cases, torture is justified;
others remain very uneasy and adamantly opposed to the idea. In his book War Crimes and Just War, Larry May devotes a chapter to torturing prisoners of war. He notes
that while most people object to torture, and in particular torturing prisoners of war, when we are dealing with terrorists something changes in peoples thinking (May, 2007). Terrorists use sneak
attacks against civilians to achieve their aims, and the havoc they create and the innocent blood they spill seems to put them in a category of adversary where rules no
longer apply. But this, he argues, is not true; and its especially untrue when the enemy personnel are no longer combatants, but prisoners (May, 2007). When armies are on the
battlefield, there is no civilian authority, no law to whom anyone is answerable, but once a soldier is taken prisoner, everything changes: "... once ... off the battlefield ... it
is no longer justifiable to punish those who have not been convicted of a crime" (May, 2007, p. 144). In addition, prisoners of war are unarmed and utterly dependent
on their captors, in ways they are not during the course of a battle (May, 2007). Because of this, May argues that arguments must be scrupulously maintained that prisoners be
treated humanely-even in those cases where captors know, or have reasonable cause to believe, that the prisoners have information that can be used against them or their comrades (May, 2007).
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