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The Torture : A Critique Of The Ticking Bomb Argument

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applied by the Nazis. I completely disagree because there is no way to compare the atrocities of the Nazis to few cases of enhanced interrogation by the United States. My interpretation of Hunsingher’s conclusion is that it goes to high extremes because the methods used by the Nazis were far more inhumane. According to Jessica Wolfendale, the author of the article “Training Torture: A Critique of the Ticking Bomb Argument,” “We have every reason to doubt that military and political authorities will use torture only in extreme cases” (Wolfendale 270). In other words, she states that if torture becomes acceptable, the government will find different ways to apply it to everyone with no exceptions or restrictions to achieve a goal. My interpretation of Wolfendale’s statements is that an individual has the right to question and demand answers. She is right to assume that torture is not going to stop in extreme cases. I agree with her view that it will get out of hand, because the government seem to look for new ways to apply laws. In communities where the use of torture is a controversial, most people would agree that it is wrong and it should not be applied. According to an article “Torture in the Public Mind,” written by Mivaslov, Ninic and Jennifer, Ramos, they state: “70 percent of who participated in a study said that torture is wrong” (Ninic and Ramos 242). To put this in other words Ninic and Ramos state that people have negative views of torture, and think

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