Abu Ghraib held one of the most notorious prisons whereby executions, torture and appalling living conditions existed. Abu Ghraib became a U.S. military prison for criminals after its original regime collapsed. To much concern, after America had taken over this prison and replaced all of its inmates, Major General Antonio M. Tuguba found that there were numerous cases of abuse at Abu Ghraib. These illegal instances of abuse were actioned by members…
You Can’t Be a Sweet Cucumber in a Vinegar Barrel Zimbardo presents a large piece of information about the situations and factors causing people behave violently and the relation between the knowledge of such factors and the ability to judge the Abu Ghraib scandal adequately. The author tries to investigate the causes of evil behavior of some people and attempts to determine whether the initial characteristics of a person make his/her behave in an unacceptable way, or certain conditions,…
You awaken in a dark room, with no recollection of how you got there. You realize that you sit across from a few men, with a table separating from you. Next to the men you see a bucket filled with water and a rag. You are blinded by a bright white light and one of the men bangs on the table and says, “We know you are with the terrorists. So where are they hiding?” You answer almost immediately saying that you’re not a terrorist and have no idea. The men ask again and you give the same answer.…
investigations and aggressive interrogation practices to get information or confessions out of a person that may not know anything, but will lie to get out of the situation. Although aggressive interrogation by police is not as aggressive as what happened in Abu Ghraib it has the same idea. Situations like these should have much more repercussions then it currently has and systems should not be blindly allowing these situations to…
photographs that served as proof of prisoner torture were discovered from the site of Abu Ghraib in Iraq and leaked to the public. In the camps, these photos were used to humiliate prisoners, frighten other detainees, and to intimidate the prisoners’ families and communities; some prisoners felt degraded to the point of depression and some became suicidal (McClintock 59). If events like this occurred in Abu Ghraib, it was possible that they were occurring at Guantánamo Bay and other detention…
by the name of Phillip Zimbardo conducted the Stanford Prison Study. Zimbardo researched the Abu Ghraib Prison problem took place in Iraq in 2003 and was made aware to the United States citizens in 2004. In fact, “the driving force behind this book was the need to better understand the how and why of the physical and psychological abuses perpetrated on the prisoners by American Military at the Abu Ghraib Prison in Iraq.” (Zimbardo 2007, p. 18) Zimbardo expressed that he believes we’re all…
outrage-it appears to be subjecting to this offense distinctive with torment might a chance to be justifiable. Torment might be a moral need in the war for fear. To instance, in the consequence about Abu Ghraib, this is not a pleasant position will have publicly received.There may be most likely that Ghraib might have been absurd also that it need initiated the…
She explains in depth her thoughts on the infamous prison of Saddam Hussein, Abu Ghraib, and the raw and graphic photographs that were published from the war in Iraq. These pictures graphically depicted prisoners being abused, both sexually and physically by American soldiers who proudly stood beside their prisoners, smiling, notoriously…
Speaking from a personal perspective, being plagued with the wrong identity labels could lead me to commit acts of evil. Both the SPE and group identity formed in terrorism shows the effects of how having certain associations could mislead me to commit acts I would not have committed otherwise. Because of possible horrors that could result from flawed personal identification, it is essential that I remain conscious of what my identifications are. Furthermore, it is crucial that my beliefs…
Marianne Szegedy-Maszak’s “The Abu Ghraib Prison Scandal: Sources of Sadism” and Dr. Zimbardo’s “The Stanford Prison Experiment” are not considered extremely recent; still they retain relevance and applicability today. Szegedy-Maszak proposes that the Abu Ghraib scandal possesses three key aspects conducive to a torture driven environment: authorization, routinization, and dehumanization. Szegedy-Maszak attempts to provide an explanation for the inhumane actions of American soldiers toward Iraqi…