Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Oh look ... the bad people found the button

Fair warning: The following post discusses torture, politics, and spirituality.



There has been some debate over whether waterboarding constitutes torture or not. This enterprising fellow decided to test it on himself to determine the truth of the matter. After a few tries that were merely somewhat unpleasant, he discovered one that revealed the secret:

Waterboarding gets you to the point where you draw water up your respiratory tract triggering the drowning reflex.


Conclusion: torture.

I said "bad people" in the title of this post because, once you start torturing people, you officially become one of the Bad Guys.

I've been aware of the U.S. torturing people for some time. I generally disapprove of the practice. It's a sword without a hilt; unless you know exactly what you're doing, it does more harm than good -- not just to the hapless victim, but also to the torturer and allies. It's too hard to get right and too easy to get wrong. Someone who knows he will be tortured can do things to mangle the information, even if he eventually breaks. Sorting out usable truths from "will say anything to make it stop" requires an extraordinary grasp of human psychology and biology. No self-preserving despotic organization will let that information into the hands of their torturers. They don't dare: it reveals them for what they are, causes defection, makes the possessor difficult or impossible to control, and generally qualifies as one of those records that breaks the record player. They'll give the torturers just enough information to do serious damage to self and victim ... but not the organization. Of course sometimes people discover the rest of it on their own...

A brilliant fictional example of high-quality torture, its benefits and backlash, may be found in the science fiction novel An Exchange of Hostages by Susan R. Matthews.

Now about that "button" I mentioned ... here's where spirituality comes in. The world contains a number of souls, most of them fairly ordinary. It contains some holy people, most of them active in their vocation. Some are small and quiet. A few are so holy and so powerful that everybody knows what they are even while they're alive: prophets, saints, messiahs, and so forth. Different cultures have different names for them. Some good examples include the Dalai Lama and Mother Theresa. Then there are the hidden ones, petty saints and latent saints and sleeping messiahs and such. They live good, quiet lives ...

... unless somebody else pushes the button. Because they've got an auxiliary vocation that only actives under extreme circumstances. You know, in case of emergency, break glass. Then all sorts of interesting new abilities become available. A newly awakened holy person can change the world; indeed, that's their purpose. Gandhi was a quietly decent fellow until pushed too far, whereupon he snapped -- in a dramatically nonviolent way -- and sparked a revolution.

Not all activists or revolutionaries are holy people, of course; but holy people make awesomely powerful opponents. Different people have different activation parameters, but the big one is the threshold of death. When the soul is stretched away from the body by extreme circumstances, for a split second it touches both this world and the next. That's enough to trigger the emergency upgrade function for a latent saint.

Suddenly, there's not just a helpless victim there, but someone who can smack your lights out soul-to-soul, or pull your guts out through your ears with a few choice words. You do not want to be leaning over a newly awakened saint with a bucket of water. Really.

Scholars of religion and history may be familiar with this effect. It's been recorded. It doesn't happen often, because latent saints are rare. You can torture a fair number of people before you hit one, and right up to that point you may think torture is safe for the torturer. But the possibility is always there. If recognized by an astute observer, the awakened saint is usually killed. Occasionally that even stops the cause, although it more often just creates a martyr. Usually they aren't recognized, though, and are eventually let where they can talk to people, and then mayhem ensues.

I happen to have a science fiction character of my own who's a master torturer. He calls it "the Leviathan Effect." It's like when you go fishing for tuna and hook a shark that smashes your boat to flinders. And it's really, truly a gamble of the odds. Chances are you won't hook a latent saint ... but if you keep fishing, sooner or later you will, and you will not enjoy the results.

For the non-religious, set aside the spiritual connotations of "saint" and simply consider that any population contains some extraordinary individuals, some of whom will only be notable as such under extreme conditions. Think of it, if you will, as the psychological equivalent of being able to lift a car off a trapped child. Human beings are strange creatures and we don't understand all of their abilities.

So there's the threshold of death, the big red shiny button marked "Do Not Push." And now I know that the U.S. troops are not just fooling around with moderately miserable pressure tactics that constitute so much of torture -- no, they're jumping up and down on the red button. Routinely. In addition to watching the continual scroll of human rights violations and political fallout, I'm now watching for something else: the ripples in the wake of an awakened saint.
Tags: politics, science fiction, spirituality
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  • 6 comments
Wow, again. You are indeed well versed. I agree that the more compassion a person on the recieving end of some torture or evil has towards his/her attacker the less effective the attacker will be, the more confused and guilt stricken. I feel a great amount of awe for the holy people, and the regular folk for that matter, that can turn the other cheek and yet still reach the goal they set out to achieve. You are completely and utterly right when you pointed out that a person can snap either way. I apologize for focusing more on the bad kind of "snaps". In this world nowadays I, and many others, have a hard time remembering or even seeing the good that can come from conflict. Thank you for pointing it out to me!
I share the admiration for holy people.

It's easy to forget the transcendent snap because those tend to be rare, and often hidden. Violent snaps get more attention, and are more common, thus are better known.