The Ethics of Interrogation
Subject
: Torture—Moral and ethical aspects, Terrorism—Prevention
Publisher
: Georgetown University Press
Summary :Toward the end of his book Democracy and Tradition, Jeffrey Stout argues
that the virtues necessary to sustain traditions of democratic practice
in the United States will be sorely tested in the coming years by the
struggle against terrorism. Fear and resentment are the enemy of critical
self-reflection, and democracy cannot flourish where self-reflection
and the virtues that sustain such scrutiny are absent. Yet terrorism is
designed precisely to induce fear, and fear can paralyze thought. I agree
with Stout on this point, as well as with his contention that we had better
be prepared to demand from our leaders and our fellow citizens reasons
for actions taken in the “war” against terror, if we are to have any
hope of prevailing in this struggle.1 Fear not only paralyzes thought; it
breeds violence and division.
This volume takes seriously Stout’s argument that democracy is a
tradition in which asking for and being prepared to give ethical reasons
for our own and each other’s actions is central. You may know
a prophet by his fruits, but you will know a democrat by how he reasons
in addition to how he behaves. How, then, are Americans doing in critically engaging terrorism with the resources of democracy? In
raising this question, I am not asking how the US military is faring in
Iraq or Afghanistan. Nor am I questioning how, say, the Department of
Homeland Security is doing in preparing to deal with terrorist attacks.
Instead, I am asking about something more amorphous, but no less
important. How are citizens thinking and reasoning about the struggle
against terrorism, and how is this reasoning manifest in their actions?
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