Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Torture and the ticking bomb

A fascinating moral, ethical and legal question.

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Citizen Katzenjammer by dangardner on 12/31/08

Five years ago, I travelled to Egypt, Turkey, and Uzbekistan to study torture. (Yes, it was depressing. Thanks for asking.) Out of that came a series of articles examining the issues from a number of angles.

 

One of these deals with the arguments in favour of torture in exceptional circumstances. "What about the ticking bomb scenario?" a reader asks in a comment to a post below. That's here. And much else.

 

(Apologies for the length of the post. The piece isn't available online so I can't link to it.)

 

A choice of evils.
The Ottawa Citizen
Friday, February 6, 2004
Dan Gardner
Series: The Face of Torture.

"Suppose a terrorist has hidden an atomic bomb on Manhattan Island which will detonate at noon on July 4," wrote philosopher Michael Levin. "Suppose further that he is caught at 10 a.m. of the fateful day, but -- preferring death to failure -- won't disclose where the bomb is. What do we do? If we follow due process -- wait for his lawyer, arraign him -- millions of people will die. If the only way to save those lives is to subject the terrorist to the most excruciating possible pain, what grounds can there be for not doing it? I suggest there are none."

Mr. Levin wrote this provocative passage in 1982. At the time, and for almost two decades after, the debate about whether torture may sometimes be justified was a popular exercise in moral philosophy classes but it was seldom heard anywhere else. Most people didn't imagine extreme situations such as Mr. Levin's ticking-bomb scenario. Torture was simply wrong. And that consensus was enshrined in the 1984 United Nations Convention Against Torture, which forbids the deliberate infliction of pain or suffering under any and all circumstances: Not even a ticking atomic bomb can legally justify torture.

Then came Sept. 11, 2001. The terrorist attacks that day revealed to anyone with a television the depth of Islamist fanaticism and the terrible carnage that can be inflicted by people whose greatest desire is to kill and die. Suddenly, whether torture is always wrong was no academic exercise.

The first hint of the coming debate appeared in the media shortly after Sept. 11, when anonymous FBI agents were quoted saying they may need the authority to torture to prevent another catastrophe. Not long after, Alan Dershowitz, the renowned civil libertarian and law professor at Harvard University, received widespread attention for his suggestion that the law allow for "torture warrants" to be made available in extreme situations. Many others joined in to suggest that while torture may be awful, sometimes it is just. Even Richard Posner, an esteemed judge of the U.S. federal court of appeals, wrote in The New Republic magazine, that "if the stakes are high enough, torture is permissible. No one who denies that that is the case should be in a position of responsibility."

The revisionist talk even reached the various human rights bodies of the United Nations, says Malcolm Evans, a professor of international law at the University of Bristol in England. "This is deeply worrying, coming from these levels."

It seemed torture was creeping toward some degree of legitimacy in the Western countries which had firmly rejected and condemned it. Human rights activists were appalled and fought back. Arguments flared up repeatedly on television, in newspapers, book reviews and intellectual magazines.

Still, neither international nor domestic law has changed. Torture continues to be forbidden under any and all circumstances.

Should it be? Michael Levin's imagined scenario makes the issue seem simple and clear: If a terrorist bomb is ticking and torture is the only way to save a city, it's hard not to believe we must torture. Others, thinking of the Sept. 11 attacks, would go further: If we want to stop the terrorists from obtaining that bomb in the first place -- or preparing any other deadly plots -- counter-terrorism officials should be free to torture terrorists whenever necessary.

But quick conclusions would not be wise. More than two years after Sept. 11, the debate about torture has played out repeatedly, argument has been met with counter-argument, and the only thing that has become absolutely certain is that the debate is not simple and clear. Like torture itself, it is complex and troubling, no matter which side of the issue one takes.

- - -

Two arguments have been heard that would short-circuit the whole discussion. The first of these is the idea -- common to some schools of philosophy -- that an evil act remains evil even if it has very good consequences. Torture is always wrong and must always be forbidden, this reasoning goes, even if a particular act of torture were to save many lives. It's a view summed up in the Roman maxim, "let justice endure though the world should perish," and while that may be satisfying to some philosophers, it's not to the great majority of us who do consider the consequences of an act in deciding whether that act is right. So few people would stop the discussion here.

Another attempted short-circuit is the idea that so-called "stress-and-duress" interrogation techniques -- sleep and food deprivation, constant noise, forcing prisoners into awkward positions, etc. -- could be used. This shouldn't trouble us morally, some say, because these techniques don't cause enough suffering to be "real torture," as one writer put it. This argument is simply wrong -- stress-and-duress does inflict terrible suffering and it is torture. Also, stress-and-duress methods take time, so they would be useless in the classic ticking-bomb scenario. The debate cannot be dodged this way.

Alex Neve, secretary-general of Amnesty International Canada, suggests the starting point of the debate must be a very basic question: Does torture work? If the answer is no, after all, there's no reason to even consider using it. And Mr. Neve is certain the answer is no. "The notion that you can beat the truth out of someone in that kind of highly charged situation is false and misguided. When you start beating and torturing people they'll say anything to get the pain to stop."

This objection to torture dates back to ancient times and it was a key argument in the 18th century, when the modern anti-torture movement was launched. There is literally centuries of evidence to support it, the very latest example being Maher Arar, who insists that his confession during his Syrian imprisonment was a lie he told simply to stop his captors from beating him.

Similar stories are told by torture victims the world over. In an Egyptian case that recently came to light, torture caused a father to "confess" to the murder of his daughter, who later turned up alive and well. During an interrogation in Apartheid South Africa, a mixup in code names resulted in a tortured political prisoner admitting that he had murdered himself.

The tendency of torture to produce false information is so well documented no one seriously disputes it, but that doesn't prove that torture never produces valid information. In a ruling that forbade the use of stress-and-duress techniques, for example, the Israeli Supreme Court accepted that some terrorist attacks had been foiled by the use of the techniques in interrogations.

Alan Dershowitz says another success story is a case from the mid-1990s in which Filipino soldiers "arrested a Muslim terrorist who had on him plans, and they tortured him for 40-something days and they got him to admit there was a plan to kill the Pope and also a plan to blow up various western airliners going across the Pacific. They didn't believe him, as they should not," says Mr. Dershowitz, who agrees that torture often generates false information. Instead, the interrogators demanded the suspect provide proof of his claims or they would continue with the torture. "He led them to a tailor who was making the robe that was going to be worn by the terrorist that had pockets in it for the explosives and showed them the equipment that was going to be used to blow up the plane. When that happens, you believe it."

Torture can be effective, Mr. Dershowitz says, provided interrogators always insist on corroboration. "It has to be self-proving. He has to lead you to hard evidence."

Defenders of the absolute ban on torture also argue the debate is too narrowly focused, that it's not enough to say that the benefits of torture in something like a ticking-bomb scenario -- the lives saved -- outweigh the sheer inhumanity of committing torture. Any use of torture also carries the risk of hidden costs, and these have to be weighed against any alleged benefit.

"Torturing radical Islamists makes them more violent," Dr. Suzan Fayed, an Egyptian psychiatrist and human rights activist told the British newspaper The Guardian. The most infamous example is that of Dr. Ayman al-Zawahiri, an Egyptian Islamist arrested and tortured following the murder of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat in 1981. Many who knew Dr. al-Zawahiri are convinced the torture radicalized his views: After his release, Dr. al-Zawahiri left for Afghanistan, where he met Osama bin Laden and ultimately became the No. 2 man in al-Qaeda.

Torture can also radicalize whole peoples, as victims become "living martyrs" for their cause and their families, clans and tribes are driven into opposition. Torture can convince moderates "that the regime deserves destroying because it does not respect the dignity of people," Hafiz Abu Sa'eda, the head of the Egyptian Organization for Human Rights, told The Guardian. Many observers feel this is exactly what happened in Algeria in the 1950s and 1960s: The French military successfully used torture to crack terrorist rings, but the brutality drove the previously passive Algerian population into mass rebellion.

Torture was similarly counter-productive in Turkey and Northern Ireland. "Whenever people are tortured," says Alex Neve, "that contributes to the ongoing cycles of violence and repression and grievance and revenge which fuel not only human rights violations, but lead to civil war and provide the fertile ground in which extremist groups take hold. It ultimately leads to men, women and children around the world being more insecure, not more secure."

Mr. Neve argues that for a Western government to even suggest that it may use torture would inflict another major cost. "It undermines the ability of the Canadian or American government to make clear and forceful representations to any other governments that may be engaged in torture. Representations that torture must come to an end are dramatically undermined if a government has taken steps to allow torture to take place." It wouldn't matter if we were to say our use of torture would be only in extreme cases of national security, Mr. Neve insists. "Those are precisely the kinds of excuses and justifications that repressive governments around the world use to justify their misdeeds and actions. (For Western governments) to use that same language and those same excuses will simply fuel and encourage that practice elsewhere."

Many fear this is already happening as a result of the published reports indicating the United States is using stress-and-duress techniques in its terrorism interrogations. An Amnesty International report called American behaviour "the threat of a bad example" and human rights activists interviewed by the Citizen in Egypt and Turkey unanimously agreed that the allegations about stress-and-duress has made it harder for them to fight torture in their countries.

Still, it can be argued, an exception to the ban on torture could be narrowly crafted to avoid at least some of these "hidden" costs. And in dire emergencies, we still may decide that even the hidden costs of torture do not outweigh the terrible loss of life that will happen if we do not torture. In that case, we would still demand an exception to the ban, although it would be a very narrow exception to be used in only the most extreme emergencies, such as an atomic bomb ticking in Manhattan.

Malcolm Evans says it's tempting to think such a narrow exception is possible, "but even in that ticking-bomb situation, once you accept the legitimacy of (torture), it spills out into society." This "spilling out" could happen several ways.

First, there's the problem of certainty. The ticking-bomb scenario assumes the police know with absolute certainty that there is a bomb and they have the man who placed it. But, says William Aceves, a law professor at California Western School of Law in San Diego, "the problem is you probably will never find a case where you know for a fact that that bomb is there or that this person has that information."

What's much more likely is a situation in which the police are fairly certain, although not 100-per-cent certain. Should they torture under those circumstances? "It becomes very easy to say, well, let's require an 80-per-cent chance that we have the right guy. That sounds reasonable. But what if it's 50 per cent? What if it's 40 per cent? What if it's five per cent? I think the reality of law enforcement is we are never sure of anything, and I think that if you justify torture at that one extreme, it becomes easy to lower the standard for when we are prepared to torture someone."

Another standard that risks dropping is the potential harm required to justify torture. In Michael Levin's scenario, millions could be killed. But in the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the worst terrorist atrocities in history, around 3,000 died. Would torture have been justified in order to save those lives? And if 3,000, what about 300? Thirty? Three? If torture is deemed legitimate to save many lives, we may ultimately say it is legitimate to save even one life.

Alan Dershowitz cites a recent, troubling case in Germany in which police arrested a man believed to have kidnapped the son of an industrialist. "The guy admitted he was the kidnapper. There was no doubt about it. He just gloated and wouldn't tell them where the boy was. And they got (illegal) authorization to torture him, and as soon as they showed him the authorization, he told them where the boy was. Unfortunately, the boy was dead. But it started a great debate in Germany as to whether or not torture is justified in order to save one innocent life."

Alex Neve worries about another way that a narrow exception could spill out into something wider. "If it's OK to torture this person because you're pretty sure they know where the bomb is, does that mean that you should be able to torture the person you're pretty sure knows where to find the person you're pretty sure knows where the bomb is?

"Does it mean you're allowed to torture someone from their family, because certainly they'll have some information? Does it mean you're allowed to torture all members of their political organization? Or their religious faith? Some of these possibilities may start to sound extreme, but that's exactly the pattern of human rights abuses we see around the world."

Michael Levin understood that making an exception for something as extreme as a ticking bomb sets up a logic that pushes for more and more exceptions. In fact, he argued in favour of following that logic to its conclusion. "Once you concede that torture is justified in extreme cases, you have admitted that the decision to use torture is a matter of balancing innocent lives against the means needed to save them." Mr. Levin applied that calculation to less-extreme scenarios. By the end of his article, he concluded that torture should be used against the "obviously guilty" in any situation where it could save an innocent life -- even routine kidnappings.

Alan Dershowitz does not support such a radical position, despite many media reports to the contrary. "I would say 90 per cent of the articles that have been written about my position have totally and completely distorted my view and made me out to be a strong supporter of torture."

Mr. Dershowitz says he's not trying to resolve whether torture is morally right in some circumstances. "My position is that torture will, in fact, occur," particularly in a major crisis like a ticking-bomb scenario. "And for me, the issue is, if it's going to happen, is it worse to have it happen the way we're doing it in the United States now, surreptitiously, with deniability, in secret locations, without any approval? Or is it worse to authorize it by judicial or executive warrant, so there's accountability?"

Mr. Dershowitz's "torture warrants" would only be available in true ticking-bomb crises where there was "absolute certainty, the kind of certainty that is required to execute somebody." Having clear, fixed criteria for obtaining a warrant would keep it under tight control and ensure torture wouldn't spread, Mr. Dershowitz feels.

During the Middle Ages, both England and France permitted torture, Mr. Dershowitz says, "but England required a torture warrant and there was much less (torture) and it was much more subject to control. And when England decided to abolish it, it was much easier to abolish, because you just had to publish a rule saying no more warrants would be given."

Richard Posner thinks Mr. Dershowitz's argument is too narrowly logical and ignores how people really behave. "If rules are promulgated permitting torture in defined circumstances," Judge Posner wrote in The New Republic, "some officials are bound to want to explore the outer bounds of the rules." Even bright lines can be stretched.

Worse, wrote Judge Posner, torture warrants would legitimize torture, and one way or another, that will inevitably lead to more of it. "Having been regularized, the practice will become regular."

Israeli experience suggests Judge Posner is right. In 1987, Israel authorized its General Security Service (the Shin Bet) to use what are now known as stress-and-duress techniques -- including sleep-deprivation, forced awkward positions, and "a moderate measure of physical force" -- during interrogations. Guidelines detailed methods and carefully defined when they could be used, and a high-level committee monitored compliance. The ticking-bomb scenario was constantly cited in support of this change, but despite all the safeguards, the use of these techniques rapidly proliferated so that an emergency measure became something close to routine practice.

In 1999, the Israeli supreme court ruled that all the stress-and-duress techniques were illegal and their use declined.

- - -

It seems that defenders of the absolute ban on torture have been successful in showing that any exception to the ban would carry serious, even terrible, costs. But still they have to face the brutal scenario that began this essay. What if there is an atomic bomb ticking in Manhattan and the police know, with great certainty, they have the perpetrator under arrest? However bad the costs of torturing may be, surely, in these rare, extreme circumstances, they are outweighed by the costs of not torturing. So what should the police do?

Malcolm Evans sighs when he's asked about this ultimate choice between evils. "It would be a very brave person who could actually say with complete moral certainty that if they were put in that position that they would not be prepared to (torture)," he says. "I think one simply does what one does and then throw the case to the judgement of society. What else can one do?"

Under these circumstances, it's not likely a police officer would be punished for saving countless lives, writes Henry Shue, an ethicist at Cornell University who supports the absolute ban on torture. "If the situation approximates those in the imaginary examples in which torture seems possible to justify," he writes, "a judge can surely be expected to suspend the sentence."

But this expectation must never be turned into an official ticking-bomb exception, argues Slavo Zizek, a Slovenian social theorist. Only by keeping the total ban "do we retain the sense of guilt, the awareness of the inadmissibility of what we have done."

In its ruling forbidding stress-and-duress techniques, Israel's supreme court acknowledged the challenge of the ticking-bomb scenario, but suggested an officer charged with torture under those circumstance could claim the defence of necessity at trial.

Canadian law, too, has a defence of necessity under which a person is acquitted for doing something that's normally illegal if it was necessary to save lives -- such as a mother who robs a store because she was ordered to by a kidnapper who holds her daughter. Mercy can also be granted by the federal justice minister. Whether either mechanism would clash with the absolute ban on torture under international law is unclear.

But as Sanford Levinson, a law professor at the University of Texas, points out, this solution basically admits there are forms of "morally permissible torture." And if a trial actually resulted in an acquittal, a suspended sentence, or a grant of mercy, it would give "formal imprimatur" to actions that are supposedly forbidden. In other words, even this position risks legitimizing torture.

"There are no happy solutions," says Alan Dershowitz, which is probably the only thing that everyone involved in this debate agrees on.

"This is a choice of evils. And a choice of evils requires articulation. Bring it to the surface. That's what's important about this debate."


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Monday, December 29, 2008

Holiday Reading

Books I've read over the holidays:
  • Numerati, by Stephen Baker. An easy introduction into the implications of data warehousing and BI on the varying spheres of life - from consumer to citizen.
  • Abstinence Teacher by Tom Perrotta. While I liked his efforts to explain and empathize with why people join evangelical churches, I didn't find the characters that believable. The story and plot, though, moved along fast.
  • Survive! by Les Stroud. Yep, Survivorman in book form. It's what it is. As they say, if that's the sort of thing you like, then it's the sort of thing you'd like.
  • All the Colours of Darkness, Peter Robinson. A Chief Inspector Banks mystery where Othello meets up with MI6 - or is it MI5? Either way, it delivers a reasonably satisfying mystery read, but not as good as his Dry Season.
  • Killing Circle, by Andrew Pyper. A taut suspense/thriller/horror set in and near Toronto, with familiar landmarks - but is really quite creepy.
  • Why Mexicans Don't Drink Molson, by Andrea Mandel-Campbell. While I was already aware of most of the anecdotes in the book, reading them over and over at one setting is a depressing litany of Canadian business failures, both abroad and at home. It's interesting, though, trying to parse the varying contradictions in the stance of pro-business advocates, from support (read: subsidize) us, to encourage mergers/no don't....
  • The Rest is Noise, by Alex Ross. A history of 20th century classical music. Reading this is tough - not having the musical background meant I kept scurrying onto the Internet to find correct intro to the pieces he describes. While I haven't finished, it's satisfying trying to understand the linkages between, say, Strauss & Mahler. How one symphony is a rhetorical answer to the other Viennese composer's pieces.
  • Richard Hofstadter, An Intellectual Biography by David S Brown. One of the great public intellectuals who stood between the American progressive movement and mid-century American liberalism, Hofstadter was also the author of an essay that inspired a course at Queen's - The Paranoid Style in American Politics. It's difficult to think of a comparably, more recent single essay doing that.
  • The Turnaround, by George Pelecanos. Bad things continue to happen then and now in Washington DC, involving class, race and power. I think I liked the Night Gardener better.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Happy Holidays!

I was looking through some photos and found these.

Merry Xmas!

Monday, December 22, 2008

Let's Hope He Can Up Off His Knees

Payback time

Re: What are you doing today?

Looks like a smile?
Get back to work!!

I'm going back to sleep. 




On 22-Dec-08, at 11:48, "Paul Skafel" <paul@skafel.com> wrote:

Ironically... it looks like a smile too!!

On Mon, Dec 22, 2008 at 11:34 AM, nigel <nigel.wallis@gmail.com> wrote:
So painfully true.

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Indexed by Jessica on 12/22/08


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Re: What are you doing today?

Ironically... it looks like a smile too!!

On Mon, Dec 22, 2008 at 11:34 AM, nigel <nigel.wallis@gmail.com> wrote:
So painfully true.

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Indexed by Jessica on 12/22/08


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

What are you doing today?

So painfully true.

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Indexed by Jessica on 12/22/08


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Historicist: Worshipping in the Open Air



 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Torontoist by Kevin Plummer on 12/20/08

Every Saturday morning Historicist looks back at the events, places, and characters—good and bad—that have shaped Toronto into the city we know today.

HighParkTobogganf1244_it0438.jpg
High Park Toboggan Runs, ca. 1906-1910. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 438."

After a month and a half of acrimonious debate, on February 19, 1912, City Council passed a by-law outlawing tobogganing in public parks on Sundays. Many councillors took their cue from the Lord's Day Alliance and similar organizations. They felt that the Sabbath was such a grave moral issue that public engagement in business, sporting activities, and other entertainments needed to be curtailed not only to encourage church-going but also to ensure workers had a day's rest. The city's labour movement, however, took exception to religious groups speaking for them and rallied to vigorously defend Sunday tobogganing. Despite a massive public outcry, however, the Sunday sledding ban was passed by a large majority at City Council with only Mayor George Reginald Geary and six aldermen dissenting. The controversy surrounding the issue reflected how, at the turn of the twentieth century, Toronto's social and religious establishment felt under siege in the rapidly growing city by the forces of industrialization and immigration and by the growing strength of the labour movement.

Crowdf1244_it0441a.jpg
High Park Toboggan Runs, 1914. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 441A."

In the late Victorian era, an immigration-fuelled population boom dumped most newcomers and industrial workers into the city's crowded, squalid slums. Reformers raised concerns that a lack of recreational opportunities for residents of these districts might breed disorder, vice, and delinquency. From the late 1890s, city-run recreational programs and leisure facilities became important public issues.

With the two hundred yard drop to the valley floor in Riverdale Park and the massive hill in the undeveloped wilderness of High Park, tobogganing had been a favoured winter pastime for Torontonians since private operators had begun running toboggan slides at both locations in the 1880s. By the turn of the century, overcrowding had raised concerns about safety. Even after lights were added when the city assumed responsibility for the toboggan slides in the winter of 1906, some reformers still questioned whether the city was doing enough. When, in 1907, thousands of resourceful kids began to use the slopes just west of Queen's Park for sledding, they were chased away by University of Toronto officials. This prompted newspaperman and social reformer J.J. Kelso to call for an expansion of city-run free sliding facilities for children. In response to this and The Star's 1909 criticisms about safety at the park slides, the municipal government upgraded the slides and assigned police to supervise. As historian Gene Homel writes in his October 1981 article in the Urban History Review, by 1912 "Toronto now had a fancy new system of public tobogganing, and its residents flocked to the slides seven days a week."

TopOfHillHighParkf1244_it0439.jpg
The Beginning of the Toboggan Run, High Park, ca. 1906-1910. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 439."

In January 1912, the Ministerial Association took exception to the Sunday crowds on the snowy slopes and issued a proclamation condemning city officials for encouraging the desecration of the Sabbath by keeping the toboggan slides open. Initially, Mayor Geary and the Board of Control paid little notice, and the public continued to flock to the hills of Riverdale Park and High Park each week. But, as other religious and moral-reform organizations rushed to defend Toronto's Christian morality, City Council couldn't ignore the barrage of petitions they received demanding that the slides be closed on the Lord's Day.

Sabbatarianism was a well-established political force in Toronto. Based on the notion that, in a Christian society, all people needed one day of rest for their moral and spiritual well-being, Sabbatarianism had gained strength as a movement in the 1880s with the establishment of national church organizations and the Lord's Day Alliance. On a national level, they'd succeeded in petitioning the federal government to pass the Lord's Day Act in 1906, which prevented all non-essential and non-charitable Sunday activity. Locally, the Sabbatarians had led a long, protracted fight in the 1890s against allowing streetcars to run on Sundays, as recounted in Christopher Armstrong and H.V. Nelles's The Revenge of the Methodist Bicycle Company (Peter Martin Associates Limited, 1977). With the support of the working class, the Sabbatarians won civic plebiscites on the streetcar issue in 1892 and 1893. But eventually labour leaders defected because, although a few people might now have to work, Sunday service presented the best opportunity for workingmen and their families to escape their unhygienic and over-crowded neighbourhoods for healthy recreation in the parks and suburbs. In a close referendum vote in 1897, streetcars were finally allowed to run on Sundays.

GroupOfSleddersf1244_it0478a.jpgOn the issue of Sunday sledding in 1912, labour and religious groups once again fell into opposing camps. In a January 16 deputation before the Board of Control, Presbyterian clergyman W.H. Rochester expressed the genuine religious sentiment fuelling the Sabbatarian cause. He argued that "the city is secularizing the day and the city enters into direct competition with the church, the Sunday school and the home." He also argued that the sledding could lead to commercial activities and therefore the seven day work week that some of Toronto's larger industries desired. An almost unspoken undercurrent to the Sabbatarian argument, however, was the desire for moral and social control. Newcomers, some felt, needed to be acculturated into developing proper Sabbath habits. Toronto's blue laws, Armstrong and Nelles argue, provided an institutional means for controlling immigrants, workers, and other "unruly elements in the community."

The case in favour of Sunday tobogganing was made before the Board of Control on the same day by prominent labour leader J.D. O'Donoghue. Sunday, the labour argument went, was the only day that workingmen could actually make use of toboggan slides in city parks. Closures would therefore be unfair and harmful for the very group who most required healthy recreational activity. More importantly, union leaders were incisively critical of the hypocrisy of the Sabbatarian position—an indication of the deepening schism between twentieth century labour and moral reformers—whereby the religious folk invoked working men's interests for their cause but thought nothing of engaging their own chauffeurs in Sunday work. The critiques of labour advocates towards Sabbatarians could therefore take a pretty biting tone. Phillips Thompson, a radical, called for workers to unite against "a few noisy fanatics...of this priest and parson-ridden city." A supportive newspaper opined that Sabbatarians had "just enough religion to miss all the fun in this world and get a lot of painful surprises in the next." Union leader L.H. Gibbons was more articulate. He argued that recreation and religion need not be in conflict because people "can worship in the open air or anywhere, as well as inside the four walls of a church."

CrashDetailf1244_it0440.jpg
High Park Toboggan Runs, ca. 1908-1912. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 440."

Newspapers were filled with letters supporting Sunday sledding. The Star reiterated that the safety of sledders was cause enough to keep the slides open because the by-law might drive winter enthusiasts from the specially designed slopes to more dangerous ravines and hills. Even business interests ardently opposed a prohibition on tobogganing—albeit because they didn't want to deepen class cleavages by antagonizing those who worked in their factories and workshops. Business leaders, according to a petition published in the papers, even recognized that the proposed prohibition was merely discriminatory "class legislation." While those against the Sabbatarian proposal were probably more numerous and agitated than during the streetcar debates, Homel argues, they weren't as united and lacked the organization and institutional weight of the church groups. Nor was there a single corporate entity, like the Street Railway Company, backing the opposition as there had been in 1897.

And so where the debate mattered most—in the council chamber—Sabbatarian-influenced councillors were not swayed by the popular outcry. One of the few dissenters, Alderman Samuel McBride twice failed in his attempt to have the city hold a plebiscite on the issue. On February 19, the new by-law was passed. It stated: "No person shall on the Sabbath in any public park, square, garden or place for exhibition in the City, slide upon or use any of the public slides constructed or maintained by the Corporation." Ironically, ever-resourceful Torontonians simply shifted their winter recreational activities to comply with the law. Rather than tobogganing, each Sunday thousands simply availed themselves of Grenadier Pond in High Park and the city's other skating rinks—which had grown in number from one or two in 1890 to over thirty in 1912.

Observance of the Sabbath remained so strong throughout the 1930s and 1940s—although restrictions were slowly diluted to allow the opening of the museum and art gallery—that the quirks of Toronto's notorious blue laws required repeated explanation in guidebooks. Organized games, team sports, and tobogganing in city parks continued to be banned on Sunday. Even after the park slides were phased out of existence in the 1940s and 1950s, the edict against tobogganing remained on the books until December 1961.

Image of Group on Toboggan, ca. 1911. City of Toronto Archives, Fonds 1244, Item 478A."



Add to digg Email this Article Add to Facebook Add to Google

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Friday, December 19, 2008

Standing on the Shoulders of Giants



 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via The Torch by Babbling Brooks on 12/19/08

I was corresponding with one of my grandfathers by e-mail earlier today. He's a WWII veteran, with experiences in a Lancaster bomber that he cannot speak of even to this day. He was commenting on the family picture we sent to my grandmother and him, saying he never expected to make it to over eighty years old, and certainly didn't expect to meet his great-grandchildren, the eighth generation of Canadians in our line.

I reminded him that we're pretty proud of where we come from. When I was at Air Force Indoctrination school at CFB Comox more than fifteen years ago, our class was shown a poem. Much of it remained with me over the years, but I wanted to make sure I got it right before I sent it to him.

Luckily, I found it online. I suspect Miles Selby picked the poem up the same place I did:

Every man has leaned upon the past.
Every liberty we enjoy has been bought at incredible cost.
There is not a privilege nor an opportunity
that is not the product of other men's labors.

We drink every day from wells we have not dug;
we live by liberties we have not won;
we are protected by institutions we have not set up.

No man lives by himself alone. All the past is invested in him.


We stand on the shoulders of giants. If you're lucky enough, as I am, to still have some of them to visit with, make sure you do it this holiday season.

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Immigration to the US



 
 

Sent to you by nwallis via Google Reader:

 
 

via The Big Picture by Barry Ritholtz on 12/11/08

Fascinating animation:


Immigration to the US, 1820-2007 v2 from Ian S on Vimeo.


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Happy Prorogation Day



 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via CalgaryGrit by calgarygrit on 12/4/08


(I'll be updating this thread if anything interesting happens today...)

I know every newscast these days has a constitutional expert citing precedence (that, and streeters with angry Albertans). But the fact of the matter is, this is unprecedented. Michaelle Jean is today setting the precedence future scholars will cite.

And, because of that, she needs to be very careful. Allowing a Prime Minister to escape a confidence vote in the House through prorogation allows a Prime Minister to govern without the confidence of the House. In my opinion, this breaks a fundamental rule of our parliamentary system.

What's worse, it sets a terrible precedence. Can you imagine Paul Martin proroguing in May or December 2005 to escape confidence votes? Who knows how this power could be abused in the future.

Because of this, I firmly believe that the Governor General has a duty to turn down Harper's request, and force him to face the House on Monday. That said, I won't blame her if she agrees to it, since Harper has placed her in a Kobayashi Maru by asking her to do something he should not have asked her to do.

But, from a principled perspective, the proper and responsible decision would be to deny prorogation until Harper demonstrates that he has earned the confidence of the House - something he clearly does not enjoy at this moment.

10:50 am: They've been in there for over 75 minutes now and still no word on what the hell is going on. I suppose it's a good sign that they're actually talking this over in detail, but I'm anxious to see how this horrifying experiment in democracy turns out.

11:45 am: CTV is reporting that Jean has approved Harper's request to prorogue.

12:25 pm: And thus concludes another productive session of parliament! See ya'll on January 26th.

I think I've been more than charitable to Harper throughout this entire ordeal. But any good will I had towards him has gone out the window with this move. You simply cannot govern in our system without the support of the House and that's what he'll be doing.

 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Small schools face closure: TDSB chair

Some interesting schools in that pile that may be closed. Danforth Tech, a bunch in Etobicoke, etc. That won't bode well for home values, which won't bode well for trustee re-elections.

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Posted Toronto by Rob Roberts on 12/2/08

By Natalie Alcoba, National Post

The chair of Toronto's public school board says he will use his second term to push a controversial plan to close small schools in order to build new ones, and win over unhappy parents.

John Campbell, a five-year Etobicoke trustee who was acclaimed on Tuesday in his bid for reelection, said he is bracing for opposition from parents who cling to the "romantic" notion of a neighbourhood school. But he said too many buildings are sitting half empty and sucking the Toronto District School Board dry of cash.

An inventory of schools released in June showed 92 of 533 public schools in Toronto have an enrollment of less than 60% (see chart after the jump). Before it recessed for the summer, the board approved a plan that set a target size of 450 students in consolidated elementary schools, and 1,200 at the high school level. The plan also recommends phasing out middle schools. The TDSB has long suffered from declining enrollment; it loses about 4,000 students every year.

"What parents have to understand is that what we're trying to do is enable schools that have larger student populations and more programming options, and also cut down on costs so that we can afford to reinvest in better schools, and build new libraries and gymnasiums and additions to schools," Mr. Campbell said in an interview on Tuesday. The under enrolled secondary schools, some with only 300 students, can hardly offer a variety of programs, he said; many don't have basketball teams, there is no music teacher or Latin class.

"It all sounds very logical, the problem is when emotions get into play, tempers get frayed and people get a little irrational."

Those sentiments are already playing out in places like Oakville, the scene of a bitter battle over whether or not to close four schools so that a new one can be built. It has pitted parents against parents, neighbourhood against neighbourhood, and now the provincial government has stepped in to ensure local trustees followed the rules when they decided to shutter four schools.

Mr. Campbell expects parents to dig in their heels in support of neighbourhood schools in Toronto, too.

"It's not easy to get parents happy about the idea of closing schools, particularly if it's your own child's school," said Annie Kidder, executive director of People for Education.

"If you can offer parents something that is much better, there may be a way of getting parents on board."

She said enrolment is declining across the province, and there is no question that some schools will have to close in Toronto.

"To think it's not going to be controversial is maybe being a bit too optimistic," said Ms. Kidder, who is focusing her attention on how it will be done.
In some cases, it may make more sense for a board to admit up front that a particular school must close, and then invite parents to help brainstorm what they would like to see in its place. There are also other ways to deal with excess space, Ms. Kidder said, like the approach favoured by Toronto-Danforth trustee Cathy Dandy, who says schools could become hubs that house a range of other services.

At the end of the day, however, Mr. Campbell said the board has to sell property to be able to afford the kind of state-of-the-art schools that are sprouting up in
places like York Region, where enrolment is on the rise.

The process is a long one — it's unlikely the TDSB will shutter 15 or 20 schools in one fell swoop.

But if things go according to plan, Mr. Campbell would like to see the first one or two properties to close in the next year or two.

"It will be incumbent upon us to win the support of local communities and convince them that their students will be far better off in new learning environments."

 


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

On the stupidity of torture...

I think the best sentence is "[the] benefits it delivers are purely tactical and short-term. The costs are strategic and lasting."

 
 

Sent to you by nigel via Google Reader:

 
 

via Citizen Katzenjammer by dangardner on 12/2/08

The evil of torture should be clear to anyone with a functioning conscience, but far too many observers have managed to convince themselves that torture in a struggle against evil is acceptable. I don't think any argument will convince them otherwise. The human brain is a powerful rationalizer.

 

But the stupidity of torture may be another matter.

 

"I learned in Iraq that the No. 1 reason foreign fighters flocked there to fight were the abuses carried out at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Our policy of torture was directly and swiftly recruiting fighters for al-Qaeda in Iraq. The large majority of suicide bombings in Iraq are still carried out by these foreigners. They are also involved in most of the attacks on U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq. It's no exaggeration to say that at least half of our losses and casualties in that country have come at the hands of foreigners who joined the fray because of our program of detainee abuse. The number of U.S. soldiers who have died because of our torture policy will never be definitively known, but it is fair to say that it is close to the number of lives lost on Sept. 11, 2001. How anyone can say that torture keeps Americans safe is beyond me -- unless you don't count American soldiers as Americans."

 

The author of that passage -- published this past Sunday in the Washington Post -- is Matthew Alexander, a retired air force officer who worked as a senior interrogator in Iraq at the height of the insurgency. It was Alexander's team that tracked down Al Qaeda's psychopathic leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi -- and they did it the way smart interrogators have always done it. 

 

"I taught the members of my unit a new methodology -- one based on building rapport with suspects, showing cultural understanding and using good old-fashioned brainpower to tease out information. I personally conducted more than 300 interrogations, and I supervised more than 1,000. The methods my team used are not classified (they're listed in the unclassified Field Manual), but the way we used them was, I like to think, unique. We got to know our enemies, we learned to negotiate with them, and we adapted criminal investigative techniques to our work (something that the Field Manual permits, under the concept of "ruses and trickery"). It worked. Our efforts started a chain of successes that ultimately led to Zarqawi."

 

In 2003, I travelled to Egypt, Turkey, and Uzbekistan to study torture. I expected it to be brutal and depressing. It was. But I wasn't expecting to discover that torture is the preferred method of the lazy and stupid.

 

In Egypt, the police routinely respond to crimes by going to the scene and sweeping up everyone they can get their hands on. These people are taken back to the station, beaten mercilessly, and ordered to give up more names of people who may or may not be involved. Those named are then arrested, beaten, and ordered to give up names. Eventually, the police decide, almost arbitrarily, that someone or other is guilty and that person confesses after an extra stiff dose of "investigation."

 

This is not the most efficient investigative method, at least not if one is concerned with accurately identifying the guilty parties. In a case that came to light around the time I was in Egypt, a young woman went missing. The police did their thing and the father of the woman duly confessed to murdering her. Then the daughter showed up and asked what all the fuss was about.

 

As tough-talkers like to say, torture really does work. Even a vicious terrorist will inevitably break down and talk. You want to hear about the plot? Sure. He'll tell you all about it. He'll also tell you about how he kidnapped the Lindbergh baby, framed the Rosenbergs, and shot JFK. And that's a problem.

 

The torturer may want to hear only the truth but the victim isn't interested in telling the truth. He wants to say whatever will convince the torturer to stop. Those two categories seldom overlap completely. In many cases, they may not overlap at all. 

 

So the torturer will get reams of information and no way of knowing what is true and what is a lie told by a man desperate to please his tormentors. In Apartheid South Africa, a mix-up with code names once resulted in a tortured suspect admitting that he murdered himself.

 

And this is to say nothing of the wider ramifications of torture. Whatever benefits it delivers are purely tactical and short-term. The costs are strategic and lasting. Torture radicalizes opponents and alienates peoples. It destroys the reputation of the torturer. As Matthew Alexander noted, these dynamics ultimately cost the lives of American soldiers in Iraq.

 

Alexander also demonstrated that the harm done by torture can come in subtler forms.

 

As a result of switching to more intelligent, less brutal interrogation tactics, "our attitudes changed. We no longer saw our prisoners as the stereotypical al-Qaeda evildoers we had been repeatedly briefed to expect; we saw them as Sunni Iraqis, often family men protecting themselves from Shiite militias and trying to ensure that their fellow Sunnis would still have some access to wealth and power in the new Iraq. Most surprisingly, they turned out to despise al-Qaeda in Iraq as much as they despised us, but Zarqawi and his thugs were willing to provide them with arms and money. I pointed this out to Gen. George Casey, the former top U.S. commander in Iraq, when he visited my prison in the summer of 2006. He did not respond."

 

Eventually, the brass did realize this and it became the basis for the current relative success in Iraq. But the delay cost thousands upon thousands of lives.

 

That's the stupidity of torture. And if the evil of torture doesn't convince us to reject torture absolutely, surely that will.


 
 

Things you can do from here: